(SUPREME COURT OF INDIA)
Ram Phal Kundu
Vs
Kamal Sharma
HON'BLE JUSTICE S. B. SINHA AND HON'BLE JUSTICE A. S. LAKSHMANAN
23/01/2004
Civil Appeal No. 4262 of 2003
JUDGMENT
The Judgment was delivered by
G.P. MATHUR, J.
- This appeal under Section 116A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951
(hereinafter referrred to as 'the Act') has been preferred by the returned
candidate Ram Phal Kundu against the judgment and order dated 8.5.2003 of High
Court of Punjab and Haryana by which the election petition preferred by Kamal
Sharma was allowed and the election of the appellant from 50-Safidon Assembly
Constituency to the Haryana Vidhan Sabha was set aside and a direction was
issued to the Election Commission of India to hold a fresh election for the
said constituency.
2. The Election Commission of India issued a notification on 24.1.2000 calling
upon the electors of Haryana to elect 90 members to the Haryana Vidhan Sabha
including that from 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency (Distt. Jind). The
schedule for holding the elections was as under:
Filing of nomination papers : 27.1.2000 to 3.2.2000
Scrutiny of nomination papers : 4.2.2000
Last date for withdrawal of candidature : 7.2.2000
Allotment of Symbols : 7.2.2000 after 3.00 p.m.
Date of polling, if necessary : 22.2.2000
Counting of votes : 25.2.2000
3. The appellant Ram Phal Kundu filed his nomination paper as a candidate of
Indian National Lok Dal Party (hereinafter referred to as 'Lok Dal Party'). The
respondent Kamal Sharma and Bachan Singh, both filed their nomination papers
claiming to be candidates of Indian National Congress Party (hereinafter
referred to as 'Congress Party'). The Returning Officer accepted the nomination
paper of Bachan Singh as candidate of Congress Party and rejected that of Kamal
Sharma. The election was held on 22.2.2000 as scheduled and the appellant Ram
Phal Kundu secured the highest number of valid votes and was declared to have
been elected. Kamal Sharma then filed an election petition under Sections 80,
81 read with Section 100 of the Act for setting aside the election of the
appellant Ram Phal Kundu and for declaring his election as void. A further
prayer was made that the Election Commission be directed to hold a fresh
election to the said Assembly Constituency. After trial of the petition, the
High Court allowed the election petition on the ground that the nomination
paper of Kamal Sharma was wrongly rejected. Accordingly, the election of the
appellant Ram Phal Kundu was set aside and the Election Commission was directed
to hold a fresh election.
4. The case set up by Kamal Sharma in the election petition is as follows:
The election petitioner applied to the Congress Committee for sponsoring his
name for 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency to contest the election as a
candidate of the said party. The Central Election Committee of the party vide
Press release dated 2.2.2000 selected him as its candidate for the said
Constituency. Shri Motilal Vora, General Secretary of the party issued Form A
in the name of Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda, President, Haryana Pradesh Congress
Committee as the authorised person to intimate the names of the candidates to
be set up by the party in the election. Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda then
communicated to the Returning Officer, 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency the
name of the election petitioner Kamal Sharma as an approved candidate of the
Congress Party in Form B. The election petitioner filed this nomination paper
as a candidate of Congress Party at 12.20 p.m. on 3.2.2000 before the Returning
Officer. During the course of scrutiny proceedings on 4.2.2000 it was revealed
that another candidate, namely, Bachan Singh had also filed his nomination
paper at 2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000 claiming himself as a candidate set up by the
Congress Party. The scrutiny proceedings were adjourned to 5.2.2000. Shri
Bhupinder Singh Hooda filed an affidavit dated 4.2.2000 before the Returning
Officer that the election petitioner Kamal Sharma was the only person nominated
as a candidate of the Congress Party and any other unsealed authorisation
letter of the party submitted by someone else was not valid. Shri Bhupinder
Singh Hooda also wrote to the Chief Election Commissioner, New Delhi that Kamal
Sharma was the only officially approved candidate of the Congress Party. The
scrutiny proceedings were conducted by the Returning Officer on 5.2.2000, who
after hearing counsel for the parties, wrote out a hand written order
dismissing the objection filed by the election petitioner Kamal Sharma and
rejecting his nomination paper. The nomination paper of Bachan Singh as a
candidate of the Congress Party was accepted. The election petitioner was the
only official candidate of the Congress Party as Forms A and B submitted by him
along with his nomination paper were duly signed and stamped by the seal of the
party, whereas Form B submitted by Bachan Singh did not bear the seal of the
party and was consequently invalid. The Returning Officer committed a grave
illegality in overlooking another essential requirement of law that Form B
submitted by Bachan Singh had not reached the office of the Chief Electoral
Officer, Haryana within the prescribed time limit. The election petitioner then
filed a petition before the Chief Election Commissioner, New Delhi on 6.2.2000,
who by order dated 7.2.2000 set aside the order dated 5.2.2000 passed by the
Returning Officer and directed him to conduct a fresh scrutiny at 10.00 a.m. on
8.2.2000. The Returning Officer, thereafter, gave notice to election petitioner
Kamal Sharma, Bachan Singh and Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda, who appeared before
him and stated that Form B furnished by Bachan Singh was not issued by his
approval and that the election petitioner was the only authorised candidate of
the party. However, the Returning Officer passed an order at 4.30 p.m. on
8.2.2000 dismissing the objection raised by the election petitioner and
allotted the Symbol of the Congress Party to Bachan Singh. The result of the
election was declared on 25.2.2000 and out of 85,742/- valid votes polled, the
appellant Ram Phal Kundu secured 45,382 valid votes and was declared as
elected. In para 25 of the petition it is pleaded that there was no proper
authorisation by the Congress Party in favour of Bachan Singh as the Form B
submitted by him did not contain the seal of the party and on account of
wrongful rejection of the nomination paper of the election petitioner Kamal
Sharma, the election of Ram Phal Kundu was vitiated. *
5. The appellant Ram Phal Kundu contested the election petition on the ground,
inter alia, that though the election petitioner produced Forms A and B before
the Returning Officer that he is the nominee of the Congress Party, but
subsequently Bachan Singh produced Forms A and B that he had been nominated by
the Congress Party as a candidate for 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency. In Form
B submitted by Bachan Singh the nomination of the election petitioner Kamal
Sharma was rescinded and it was specifically mentioned that the Congress Party
had changed its candidate and had nominated Bachan Singh as its official
candidate. The notice in Form B as per amended Clause 13 of Election Symbols
(Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968 (hereinafter referred to as 'the
Symbols Order') is required to be produced before the Returning Officer before
3.00 p.m. and there is no requirement that the same should also reach or
produced before the Chief Electoral Officer. The nomination paper of election
petitioner was filed along with requisite forms at 12.20 p.m. on 3.2.2000
whereas Bachan Singh had filed his nomination paper at 2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000
and had submitted Forms A and B. Thereafter, no further notice in Form B was
received by the Returning Officer. The Form B submitted by the election
petitioner is dated 2.2.2000 whereas the Form B submitted by Bachan Singh at
2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000 wherein Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda had himself mentioned
that the candidature of the election petitioner Kamal Sharma was rescinded is
dated 3.2.2000. It is further pleaded that the letter of Shri Bhupinder Singh
Hooda said to have been submitted on 4.2.2000 before the Returning Officer, is
of no consequence and could not be taken into consideration in view of paras 13
and 13A of the Symbols Order which provide that the notice in writing in Form B
regarding the declaration of the official candidate has to be made and
submitted before the Returning Officer up to 3.00 p.m. on the last date of
filing nomination papers and not thereafter. Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda had not
denied his signature on the authorisation Form B in favour of Bachan Singh in
the affidavits filed by him on 4th and 5th February, 2000 and the same having
been filed subsequent to 3.00 p.m. on the last date of filing of the nomination
paper were of no consequence. The fact that the seal of the party was not
present in Form B of Bachan Singh was of no consequence as it is not a defect
of substantial character and under paras 13 and 13 A of the Symbols Order only
the signature of the authorised person is required and it is nowhere provided
that the Form must contain the seal of the party. It is also pleaded that the
Election Commission of India has no authority to set aside the order of the
Returning Officer rejecting a nomination paper and to direct him to reconsider
the matter. No appeal or revision lies to the Election Commission of India
against an order rejecting a nomination paper. In para 22 it is pleaded that
Bachan Singh contested the election as a candidate of the Congress Party and
the appellant won the said election by a margin of 8,324 votes, having secured
more than 55% of the actual votes polled. The nominee of the Congress Party was
very much there in the election fray but the appellant was declared as elected.
All the important leaders of Congress Party at the State level and the national
level, including Shri Motilal Vora and others had campaigned for Bachan Singh.
In the newspapers of 3.2.2000 it had been reported that the Congress Party had
changed its candidate from Kamal Sharma to Bachan Singh.
6. It may be mentioned at the very outset that the election petitioner Kamal
Sharma impleaded the returned candidate Ram Phal Kundu as the sole respondent
and no other person was joined as party to the election petition. Though there
is not even a whisper against the appellant Ram Phal Kundu and the entire
allegations are against Bachan Singh but he was not arrayed as a party to the
election petition. # Strictly speaking it is not a case of rejection of
nomination paper but of ascertaining who was the candidate of Congress Party as
two persons had filed nomination papers claiming to be the candidate of the
said party. Since only one person can be a candidate of a political party
and after acceptance of the candidature of Bachan Singh, the nomination paper
the election petitioner Kamal Sharma could be treated as that on an independent
candidate. But as it was not subscribed by 10 proposers being electors of the
Constituency, it had to be rejected in view of First Proviso to Sub-section (1)
of Section 33 of the Act. The non-joining of Bachan Singh may not result in
dismissal of the election petition in terms of Section 82 of the Act. However
in absence of Bachan Singh having been joined as party to the election
petition, an extremely difficult burden has been placed upon the appellant Ram
Phal Kundu, who belongs to rival party (Lok Dal), to lead evidence regarding
the internal affairs of Congress Party and to show that the nomination made in
favour of Kamal Sharma had been subsequently rescinded and the party had set up
Dachan Singh as its official candidate.
#
7. The main question which requires consideration is as to which of the two
persons, namely, Kamal Sharma or Bachan Singh had been set up by the Congress
Party. Paras 13 and 13A of Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order,
1968, as amended by Clause 3 of Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment)
(Amendment) Order, 1999, which came into force on 20.5.1999, which govern the
situation read as under:
"13. When a candidate shall be deemed to be set up by a political party
- For the purposes of an election from any parliamentary or assembly
constituency to which this Order applies, a candidate shall be deemed to be set
up by a political party in any such parliamentary or assembly constituency, if,
and only if -
(a) the candidate has made the prescribed declaration to this effect in his
nomination paper;
(b) a notice by the political party in writing, in Form B, to that effect has,
not later than 3 p.m. on the last date of making nominations, been delivered to
the Returning Officer of the constituency;
(c) the said notice in Form B is signed by the President, the Secretary or any
other office bearer of the party, and the President, Secretary or such other
office bearer sending the notice has been authorised by the party to send the
notice;
(d) the name and specimen signature of such authorised person are communicated
by the party, in Form A, to the Returning Officer of the constituency, and to
the Chief Electoral Officer of the State or Union Territory concerned, not
later than 3 p.m. on the last date for making nominations; and
(e) Forms A and B are signed, in ink only, by the said office bearer or person
authorised by the party:
Provided that no fascimile signature or signature by means of rubber stamp,
etc. of any such office bearer or authorised person shall be accepted and no
form transmitted by fax shall be accepted.
13A. Substitution of a candidate by a political party - For the removal of any
doubt, it is hereby clarified that a political party which has given a notice
in Form B under paragraph 13 in favour of a candidate may rescind that notice
and may give a revised notice in Form B in favour of another candidate for the
constituency:
Provided that the revised notice in Form B, clearly indicating therein that the
earlier notice in From B has been rescinded, reaches the Returning Officer of
the constituency, not later than 3 p.m. on the last date for making
nominations, and the said revised notice in Form B is signed by the authorised
person referred to in clause (d) of paragraph 13: *
Provided further that in case more than one notice in Form B is received by
the Returning Officer in respect of two or more candidates, and the political
party fails to indicate in such notices in Form B that the earlier notice or
notices in Form B, has or have been rescinded, the Returning Officer shall
accept the notice in Form B in respect of the candidate whose nomination paper
was first delivered to him, and the remaining candidate or candidates in respect
of whom also notice or notices in Form B has or have been received by him,
shall not be treated as candidates set up by such political party." *
In terms of paras 13 and 13A of the Symbols Orders, a candidate shall be deemed
to be set up by a political party if the following conditions are fulfilled:
(1) The candidate has made the prescribed declaration to that effect in his
nomination paper.
(2) A notice by the political party in Form B to that effect has been delivered
to the Returning Officer not later than 3.00 p.m. on the last date for making
nomination.
(3) The notice in Form B is signed by the President, Secretary or any other
office bearer of the party and such person sending the notice has been
authorised by the party to send the notice.
(4) The name and specimen signature of such authorised persons are communicated
by the party in Form A to (i), the Returning Officer; and (ii) the Chief
Electoral Officer of the State or Union Territory concerned not later than 3.00
p.m. on the last date for making nomination.
(5) A political party which has given a notice in Form B in favour of candidate
may rescind that notice and may give a revised notice in form B in favour of
another candidate, provided such revised notice in Form B clearly indicating therein
that the earlier notice in Form B has been rescinded, reaches the Returning
Officer not later than 3.00 p.m. on the last date for making nomination and
such revised notice in Form B is signed by the authorised person referred to in
Clause (d) of para 13.
(6) Forms A and B have to be signed in ink only by the office bearer or
authorised person. No fascimile signature or signature by means of rubber stamp
and no form transmitted by fax shall be accepted.
It may be noted that while Form A has to be submitted to both the Returning
Officer of the Constituency and to the Chief Electoral Officer of the State,
but there is no such requirement with regard to Form B. From B has to be
delivered only to the Returning Officer of the Constituency. The Symbols Order
has made a specific provision that Forms A and B have to be signed in ink only
and signature by means of rubber stamp, etc. shall not be accepted. In terms of
the language used in paras 13 and 13A of the Symbols Order there is no
requirement of putting the seal of the party in Forms A and B.
#
8. There is no dispute that Shri Motilal Vora, General Secretary of the
Congress Party had sent a communication in Form A that Shri Bhupinder Singh
Hooda had been authorised by the Indian National Congress to intimate the names
of the candidates proposed to be set up by the party at the election and the
said document Ex. PW2/M is on the record. A notice in Form B in favour of
'Kamal' dated 2.2.2000 signed in ink by Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda was given by
the election petitioner to the Returning Officer at 12.20 p.m. and it is marked
as Ex. PW2/L. Another notice in Form B dated 3.2.2000 in favour of Bachan Singh
and signed in ink by Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda was given by Bachan Singh to
the Returning Officer at 2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000 and it is marked as Ex. PW4/A.
At the bottom of this form it is mentioned as under:
"The notice in 'Form B' given earlier in favour of Shri Kamal s/o
Janardhan as party's approved candidate, Smt. Kusum w/o Kamal as party's
substituted candidate is hereby rescinded."
*
Below this writing there is signature of Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda. In his
cross-examination PW5 Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda has admitted that From B in
favour of Bachan Singh contains his signature. He stated as under:
".... It is correct that document Ex. PW4/A which is Form B in favour
of Shri Bachan Singh Arya bears my signatures. Volunteered I am admitting only
any signatures and not the contents of the Form...." *
Towards the end of his cross-examination he stated as under:
"On Form B issued to Shri Bachan Singh Arya I only own signature on
this Form but I do not own the contents given in it."
Thus, there is no dispute that Form B submitted by Bachan Singh contained a
categorical statement to the effect that the notice given in Form B earlier in
favour of Kamal Sharma as party's approved candidate and Smt. Kusum w/o Shri
Kamal as party's substitute candidate is rescinded and the said Form B had been
signed in ink by Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda, who had been nominated as
authorised person of the Congress Party. There is also no dispute that the Form
B submitted by Bachan Singh was later in point of time and had been given at
2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000 when the last time and date for filing of the nomination
paper was 3.00 p.m. on 3.2.2000.
*
9. In his statement PW6 Kamal Sharma has stated that in the list released by
All India Congress Committee on 2.2.2000 his name was mentioned as a candidate
for 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency. In the night he collected Forms A and B
from the Camp Office and submitted his nomination paper along with Forms A and
B to the Returning Officer. A letter written by Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda
wherein it was mentioned that Kamal Sharma is the candidate of Congress Party
from Safidon Constituency and no one else was a candidate, was delivered to the
Returning Officer on 4.2.2000. This letter is on the record as Ex. PW2/J and it
bears an endorsement by the Returning Officer that the same was received by him
at 11.00 a.m. on 4.2.2000. He has also stated that the Returning Officer had a
telephonic talk with Shri Hooda and thereafter an affidavit duly sworn by him
on 4.2.2000 that Kamal is the only nominated candidate of the Congress Party,
was also given. This affidavit also bears the endorsement of the Returning
Officer that the same was received by him at 11.00 a.m. on 4.2.2000. PW5 Shri
Bhupinder Singh Hooda has deposed that the name of Bachan Singh was under
consideration as a Congress candidate but it was never finalised and therefore,
no Form B was issued to him and that Kamal Sharma was the candidate of the
party. At about 3.30 p.m. on the last date of filing nomination, he received
information that two nomination forms had been submitted on behalf of the
Congress Party and thereafter he sent a letter through special messenger to the
Returning Officer that Kamal Sharma is the official candidate. After receiving
a telephonic call from the Returning Officer on 4.2.2000, he informed him that
Kamal Sharma is the official candidate and thereafter he sent an affidavit to
that effect. He has further deposed that he wrote a letter to the Chief
Election Commissioner and Chief Electoral Officer in this regard. Thus, the
election petitioner Kamal Sharma has led evidence to show that after it had
been revealed that Bachan Singh had also filed his nomination paper as a
candidate of the Congress Party, he lodged a protest before the Returning
Officer on the next day i.e. 4.2.2000 and Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda telephoned
to him and also sent a letter and an affidavit that only Kamal Sharma was the
official candidate. But all these letters and affidavits etc. were received by
the Returning Officer on 4.2.2000 and on subsequent dates.
10. The question that arises is whether this evidence, which is all subsequent
to the last date of filing of the nomination paper, can be looked into in order
to ascertain as to who had been set up as a candidate by the Congress Party.
11. The Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968 has been made
in exercise of power conferred by Article 324 of the Constitution read with
Section 29A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and Rules 5 to 10 of
the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961 and all other powers enabling it is in this
behalf by the Election Commission of India. In Sadiq Ali vs. Election
Commission of India and others, , the Court explained the reasons which
led to the introduction of the Symbols and it was said that the object is to
ensure that the process of election is as general and fair as possible and that
no elector should suffer from any handicap in casting his vote in favour of a
candidate of his choice. In Roop Lal Sathi vs. Nachhattar Singh , it has
been held that the Symbols Order is an order made under the Act.
12. Paras 13 and 13A of the Symbols Order lay down the mechanism for
ascertaining when a candidate shall be deemed to be set up by a political party
and also the procedure for substitution of a candidate. The opening part of
para 13 says in unequivocal terms that for the purpose of an election for any
Parliamentary or Assembly Constituency a candidate shall be deemed to to be set
up by a political party if and only if the conditions mentioned in
sub-paragraphs (a) to (e) are satisfied. Para 13A lays down the procedure for
substitution of a candidate and also the requirements of a revised notice in
Form B. The second proviso to this paragraph takes care of a situation where
more than one notice in Form B is received by the Returning Officer and the
political party fails to indicate in such notices in Form B that the earlier
notice or notices have been rescinded. Thus, paras 13 and 13A are exhaustive
and lay down the complete procedure for determining whether a candidate has
been set up by a political party. The Rule laid down in Taylor vs. Taylor 1876
(1) Ch(D) 426 that where a power is given to do a certain thing in a certain
way, the thing must be done in that way or not at all and that other methods of
performance are necessarily forbidden was adopted for the first time in India
by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Nazir Ahmad vs. King
Emperor 1936 AIR(PC) 253. The question for consideration was whether the
oral evidence of a Magistrate regarding the confession made by an accused,
which had not been recorded in accordance with the statutory provisions viz.
Section 164 Cr.P.C. would be admissible. The First Class Magistrate made rough
notes of the confessional statements of the accused which he made on the spot
and thereafter he prepared a memo from the rough notes which was put in
evidence. The Magistrate also gave oral evidence of the confession made to him
by the accused. The procedure of recording confession in accordance with
Section 164 Cr.P.C. had not been followed. It was held that Section 164 Cr.P.C.
having made specific provision for recording of the confession, oral evidence
of the Magistrate and the memorandum made by him could not be taken into
consideration and had to be rejected. In State of U.P. vs. Singhara
Singh , a Second Class Magistrate not specially empowered had recorded
confessional statement of the accused under Section 164 Cr.P.C. The said
confession being inadmissible, the prosecution sought to prove the same by the
oral evidence of the Magistrate, who deposed about the statement given by the
accused. Relying upon the rule laid down in Taylor vs. Taylor (supra) and Nazir
Ahmad vs. King Emperor (supra) it was held that Section 164 Cr.P.C. which
conferred on a Magistrate the power to record statements or confessions, by
necessary implication, prohibited a Magistrate from giving oral evidence of the
statements or confessions made to him. This principle has been approved by this
Court in a series of decisions and the latest being a Constitution Bench in
Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Anjum M.H. Ghaswala 05
(para 27). Applying the said principle, we are of the opinion that the
question as to who shall be deemed to have set up by a political party has to
be determined strictly in accordance with paras 13 and 13A of the Symbols Order
and extrinsic evidence cannot be looked into for this purpose unless it is
pleaded that the signature of the authorised person on Form B had been obtained
from him under threat or by playing fraud upon him. Where signature is obtained
under threat or by playing fraud, it will be a nullity in the eyes of law and
the document would be void. #
13. The issue can be examined from another angle. In a case where more than one
notice in Form B has been received by the Returning Officer in respect of two
or more candidates and the political party fails to indicate in such notices
that the earlier notice or notices in Form B has or have been rescinded, the
decision of controversy by extrinsic evidence would make the second proviso to
para 13A wholly redundant. It is well settled principle of interpretation that
the legislature is deemed not to waste its words or to say anything in vain.
The Courts always presume that the legislature inserted every part of the
Statute for a purpose and the legislative intention is that every part of the
Statute should have effect. (See J.K. Cotton Spinning & Weaving Mills Co.
vs. State of U.P. , Moh. Ali Khan vs. The Commissioner of Wealth Tax 9 and C.I.T. vs. Kanpur Coal Syndicate .
14. If instead of deciding the matter in accordance with paras 13 and 13A of
the Symbols Order, it is decided on the basis of extrinsic evidence (oral or
documentary) given subsequent to the last date of filing of nomination paper,
it is capable of good deal of misuse. # Government are sometimes formed
with razor thin majority or with the support of a small splinter group or of
independent candidates. A political party may adopt a device of filing
nomination papers of two candidates. If the candidate of the party wins well as
good, but if the candidate loses, the other candidate whose nomination paper
would have been rejected may file an election petition, lead extrinsic evidence
to show that he was the real candidate of the party and thereby get the
election of the returned candidate set aside.
15. An election is not just a contest between two persons. The whole
constituency is involved in the election process which has to send its
representative to the Assembly or Parliament. The entire governmental machinery
has to work for smooth holding of the election and huge expenditure is incurred
from the public exchequer. The date of polling is declared a public holiday
when all government offices, commercial establishments and institutions are
closed, resulting in loss of productivity. Public interest demands that
there should be no vagueness or uncertainty regarding the candidature of a
person seeking to contest the election as a candidate of a recognised political
party. Therefore, this exercise should be done strictly in accordance with
paras 13 and 13A of the Symbols Order and extrinsic evidence given in
derogation thereof cannot be looked into. #
16. There is no dispute that along with his nomination paper which was filed at
2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000 Bachan Singh had submitted Forms A and B and thereafter
no further notice in Form B was received by the Returning Officer. Shri Motilal
Vora, General Secretary of the Congress Party had issued Form A in the name of
Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda authorising him to intimate the names of the
candidates to be set up by the Congress Party in the election. This Form
contained the signature of Shri Motilal Vora and also three signatures of Shri
Bhupinder Singh Hooda. In Form B it was mentioned that the notice in Form B
given earlier in favour of Kamal Sharma is rescinded and this was signed in ink
by Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda. Therefore, in terms of paras 13 and 13A of the
Symbols Order Bachan Singh became the candidate of the Congress Party. In his
order dated 5.2.2000 passed by the Returning Officer, he said that Bachan Singh
had submitted Forms A and B at 2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000 and thereafter no other
nomination paper or Form had been submitted by any person and neither Kamal
Sharma nor Shri Hooda had raised any objection regarding the signature on Form
B and the only objection was that the same did not contain the seal of the
Congress Party. It being not a defect of substantial character, the revised
Forms A and B submitted by Bachan Singh will have to be accepted and
accordingly Bachan Singh shall be treated as the candidate of the Congress
Party. In pursuance of the Order passed by the Chief Election Commissioner on
7.2.2000 the Returning Officer heard the matter again where both the parties
appeared with their respective counsel and Shri Hooda was also present. Shri
Hooda admitted his signature on Form B submitted by Bachan Singh but stated
that he had instructed the person concerned not to give the said Form to Bachan
Singh till he gave his consent for the same on telephone and that he never gave
any such consent. He also said that as the said Form B did not bear the seal of
the Congress Party, it was liable to be rejected and Kamal was the official
candidate of the Congress Party. The Returning Officer held that the acceptance
of signature on Form B by Shri Hooda established that the same had been issued
by him and the explanation offered by him for treating Kamal as the official
candidate, was an internal matter of the Congress Party. He accordingly held
that Form B submitted by Bachan Singh was perfectly valid and accordingly he
shall be treated as the official candidate of the Congress Party and
consequently the nomination paper of Kamal Sharma was rightly rejected. We
are of the opinion that the view taken by the Returning Officer in his orders
dated 5.2.2000 and 8.2.2000 being in accordance with law was perfectly correct.
#
17. Learned counsel for the respondents has laid great stress upon the fact
that there was no seal of Congress Party on Form B which was submitted by
Bachan Singh to the Returning Officer and consequently his nomination paper was
invalid. It may be noticed that para 13 of the Symbols Order does not prescribe
that Form B should also contain the seal of the party. In fact, it lays
emphasis upon the signature of the person authorised by the party and says that
the same should be in ink and that no fascimile signature or signature by means
of rubber stamp, etc. shall be accepted and no form transmitted by fax shall be
accepted. In the proforma of Form B given in the Symbols Order a note has been
appended at the end of the Form which reads as under:
"N.B.
1. This must be delivered to the Returning Officer not later than 3 p.m. on the
last date for making nominations.
2. Form must be signed in ink by the office bearer(s) mentioned above. No
fascimile signature or signature by means of rubber stamp, etc. of any office
bearer shall be accepted.
3. No form transmitted by fax shall be accepted.
4. Para 2 of the Form must be scored off, if not applicable, or must be
properly filled, if applicable."
The Form B which has been submitted by Kamal Sharma no doubt bears seal of the
Congress Party, which has been done by an ordinary rubber stamp with the
commonly used blue ink pad and there is nothing special about it. Such a seal
can easily be prepared or procured by a little effort. It is not a type of seal
which may be difficult to emulate and is kept in a safe custody under the
charge of a responsible person, which may not be available to anyone. What is
important and decisive is the signature in ink of the authorised person and not
the seal of the party which can be made by an ordinary rubber stamp by any one.
Section 36(4) of the Act lays down that the Returning Officer shall not reject
any nomination paper on the ground of any defect which is not of a substantial
character. The absence of the seal of the Congress Party in the nomination
paper of Bachan Singh cannot be said to be a defect of a substantial character
so as to render it invalid. *
18. The learned counsel for the respondent has submitted that Form B of Bachan
Singh did not reach the office of Chief Electoral Officer and, therefore, there
was no valid nomination of his. The High Court has gone to the extent of saying
that though Bachan Singh had submitted Form A and Form B along with his
nomination paper before the Returning Officer but no Form A in respect of his
candidature was submitted by him to the Chief Electoral Officer and, therefore,
the same would not have the effect of rescinding the candidature of Kamal
Sharma. Learned counsel for the respondent has also referred to the amendment
in Handbook for Returning Officers by which para 10.3(i) was substituted by the
following sub-para:
"Nomination paper filed by a candidate in which he has claimed to have
been set up by a recognised National or State Party and which is subscribed by
only one elector as proposer will be rejected, if a notice in writing to that
effect has not been delivered to the Returning Officer of the Constituency and
the Chief Electoral Officer of the State by an authorised office-bearer of that
political party by 3.00 P.M. on the last date for making nominations (Notice in
Form 'A' is required to be submitted to the Chief Electoral Officer and the
Returning Officer concerned and notice in Form 'B' is to be submitted to the
Returning Officer)."
On the basis of the above amendment of the Handbook it has been urged that Form
B was also required to be submitted to the Chief Electoral Officer and as the
same had been done by Bachan Singh, his candidature could not be regarded as
valid. *
19. We are unable to accept the submission made. The requirement of paras 13
and 13A of the Symbols Order is that From B should be submitted to the
Returning Officer. There is no requirement of the submission of the said Form
to the Chief Electoral Officer. The Handbook for Returning Officers contains
instructions which have been issued by the Election Commission for the smooth
holding of the election and being merely instructions cannot override the
provisions of the Statute, Rules or the Order. In fact in the very first para
of the first page of the Handbook in Chapter I titled as
"PRELIMINARY" it is written as under:
"However, please note that this Handbook cannot be treated as
exhaustive in all respects and as substitute for various provisions of election
law governing the conduct of election."
The language used in the bracket in the substituted sub-para 10.3(i) clearly
mentions that notice in Form B is to be submitted to the Returning Officer
alone, which is also the mandate of para 13(b) of the Symbols Order. The
requirement of para 13(d) of the Symbols Order is that the party has to
communicate the name and specimen signature of the authorised person in Form A
to the Returning Officer of the Constituency and to the Chief Electoral Officer
of the State and admittedly this had been done.
*
20. In view of our finding that Form B submitted by Bachan Singh was perfectly
valid and as the same was submitted in the last at 2.50 p.m. on 3.2.2000 and it
contained a clear recital that notice in Form B given earlier in favour Kamal
Sharma is rescinded, he became the candidate of the Congress Party. The
nomination paper of Kamal Sharma, was, therefore, rightly rejected. The appeal
consequently deserves to be allowed and the High Court judgment is liable to be
set aside. However, as the learned counsel have made submissions on the merits
of the case, we will also examine whether the election petitioner has been able
to established the case set up by him.
21. Learned counsel for the respondent has submitted that Central Election
Committee of the Congress Party had selected the candidates for contesting the
election and from 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency, the name of Kamal Sharma
had been decided. For this reliance is placed on the testimony of PW4 Punnu Ram
who claims to be working as clear in the office of Haryana Pradesh Congress
Committee since 1970 and PW5 Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda. PW4 has deposed that
the parliamentary body of All India Congress Committee selects the candidates
while PW5 has deposed that the candidature is finally decided by the Central
Election Committee of the Congress Party. PW4 has proved a list Ex. PW.4 /C of
candidates dated 2.2.2000 which bears the signature of Shri Oscar Fernandes,
General Secretary, AICC. At the top of the list it is mentioned - 'AICC
Press Release" * . It is not an original copy but a photocopy. The
case of the appellant is that the aforesaid list was not a final list but was
some kind of a tentative list and subsequently the Central Election Committee
of the Congress Party decided the candidature of Bachan Singh Arya. PW 2 Ravi
Shankar, Election Kanungo, District Election Office, Jind has proved a list of
the candidates which was submitted by Bachan Singh before the Returning Officer
and is marked as Ex.PW2/S. In this list the name of Bachan Singh Arya is shown
as a candidate for 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency. This list also bears the
seal of Indian National Congress. It is important to note here that in the list
Ex.PW4/C, the names of the candidates for three Constituencies, viz., Nos.2-Naraingarh,
53-Ballabhgarh and 54-Palwal were not mentioned and for Constituency No.
51-Faridabad, the name of Gyan Chand was shown. However, the list PW2/S,
wherein the name of Bachan Singh Arya has bee shown, is a complete list of all
the 90 Constituencies wherein the names of the candidates for Constituency
Nos.2, 53 and 54 have also been mentioned. The name of A.C. Chaudhary is shown
for Constituency No.51 - Faridabad after deletion of the name of Gyan Chand.
Both PW4 Punnu Ram and PW5 Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda have admitted in their
statement that the candidature of Gyan Chand was changed and finally A.C.
Chaudhary has contested the election as an official candidate for the Congress
Party for 51-Faridabad Constituency. PW5 has further admitted that three persons
whose names are mentioned in the list Ex.PW2/S for Constituency Nos. 2, 53 and
54 actually contested the Election as the official candidates for Congress
Party. This conclusively establishes that the list dated 2.2.2000 (Ex. PW4/C)
wherein the name of Kamal Sharma is mentioned as candidate, was not the final
list but was some sort of a tentative list and the list was finalised later on.
Both the lists, Ex. PW4/C and P:W2/S prima facie appear to have been prepared
on the same computer as the letters and method of typing are exactly similar.
At the top of Ex. PW2/S it is mentioned - "The Central Election
Committee has selected the following candidates for the ensuing Assembly
Elections from Haryana." * There appears to be no reason to doubt the
correctness of list Ex. PW2/S which shows the name of Bachan Singh Arya and not
that of Kamal Sharma. When Kamal Sharma was confronted with the situation that
in the lists submitted by him (Ex. PW4/C) names of only 87 candidates were
mentioned, he replied that he was not aware whether there were three
constituencies regarding which decision had not been taken. When further
confronted, he stated that it is true that there were 90 constituencies in
Haryana. Regarding 51-Faridabad Constituency, he mentioned the name of Gyan
Chand Ahuja as Congress candidate. When further cross-examined, he said that he
cannot say whether Shri A.C. Chaudhary had fought the election. This shows that
he has scant regard to truth and can go to any extent for supporting the list
filed by him.
22. It is pleaded by Kamal Sharma is the election petition that after
conclusion of the scrutiny proceedings, the Returning Officer passed a detailed
order on 5.2.2000 rejecting his nomination paper and, thereafter he preferred a
petition before the Chief Election Commission, New Delhi on 6.2.2000. The
Election Commission vide its order dated 7.2.2000 accepted his petition and set
aside the order dated 5.2.2000 of the Returning Officer and further directed
him to hold fresh scrutiny on 8.2.2000 after giving notice and ensuring the
presence of Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda. Learned counsel for the respondent has
submitted that when the re-scrutiny was done by the Returning Officer, Shri
Bhupinder Singh Hooda was present and he made a statement before him that
though Form B submitted by Bachan Singh contained his signature but the same
was never validity issued by his office or by the party and that Kamal Sharma
was the official candidate of the Congress Party. It has been urged that in
view of this clear and categorical stand of Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda, the
Returning Officer committed manifest error of law in maintaining his earlier
order wherein the candidature of Kamal Sharma had been rejected. The High Court
while dealing with this aspect of the case has observed that "After the
categorical stand adopted by Shri Hooda before the Returning Officer and in
view of the explicit directions issued by the Election Commission of India vide
order Ex. PW1/1 the Returning Officer had really no option but to accept the
statement of Shri Hooda and threat the petitioner as an official candidate of
the Congress Party." After noticing the statement of Shri Bhupinder Singh
Hooda, the High Court held as under:
"The said function was apparently a quasi judicial function and once
the re-scrutiny was ordered by the Election Commission of India and the same
was conducted in the presence of the various candidates and in the presence of
the authorised person of the Congress Party, namely, Shri Bhupinder Singh
Hooda, then the Returning Officer was expected to decide the matter keeping in
view the various facts and circumstances of the case and the documents on the
record and the statement made by Shri Hooda. Apparently, he has not done so. In
this view of the matter the order dated February 8, 2000 Ex. PW2/H passed by
him, whereby the nomination papers of the petitioner have been rejected, is
clearly unsustainable in law and improper under the circumstances of the
case." *
In order to appreciate the contention raised by the learned counsel and for
judging the correctness of the reasoning given by the High Court, it is
necessary to refer to the order of the Election Commission.
23. Kamal Sharma had presented a petition before the Chief Election
Commissioner of India on 6.2.2000 praying that the order of the Returning
Officer dated 5.2.2000 may be set aside, the objections raised by him be
accepted and the candidature of Bachan Singh may be set aside. It was further
prayed that he may be declared as official candidate of the Congress Party. The
Election Commission passed a detailed order on the very next day i.e. on
7.2.2000 and after noticing the submissions made in the petition issued a
direction to the Returning Office to conduct a re-scrutiny. The operative
portion of the Order reads as under:
"Now, therefore, the Election Commission hereby directs that the
Returning Office for the said 50 Safidon Constituency shall cause a re-scrutiny
of the nomination papers of the aforesaid candidates, namely, Shri Kamal and
Shri Bachan Singh in accordance with the relevant provisions of the
Constitution, Representation of the People Act, 1951 and the Election Symbols
(Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968 and the pronouncements of the Hon'ble
Supreme Court, particularly the pronouncement in the case of Rakesh Kumar vs.
Sunil Kumar (1999 (2) SCC 489), on the aforementioned issue as to who should be
treated as the official candidate of the Indian National Congress. The
Returning Officer on re-scrutinising the nomination papers of the aforesaid candidates,
shall also take under consequential steps as may become necessary, by treating
all earlier proceedings in relation to said candidates, as initio void and
redraw the list of validly nominated candidates." *
For passing the aforementioned order, the Election Commission basically relied
upon a decision of this Court in Rakesh Kumar vs. Sunil Kumar . It is
important to note that in this case the last date of filing nominations was
20.1.1997 and the date of polling was 6.2.1997 and, therefore, the case related
to a period prior to the amendment of Symbols Order on 20.5.1999 by which para
13A has been added. Here, two persons, namely, Sunil Kumar and Veer Abhimanyu
had submitted Forms A and B claiming to be candidate of Bhartiya Janta Party.
At the time of scrutiny, the Returning Officer suo moto raised an objection to
the effect that since BJP had set up more than one candidate, therefore, none
could be treated as a candidate of said political party and rejected the
nomination papers of both Sunil Kumar and Veer Abhimanyu. Sunil Kumar made an
application stating that he was the official candidate of the party and he
requested for 24 hours time to produce an official confirmation of his
candidature but the application was rejected and no time was given, though no
other candidate (including Veer Abhimanyu) had raised any objection. It was in
these circumstances that it was held by this Court that the Returning Officer
ought to have granted him time to meet the objection in the interest of justice
and fair play. This authority can have no application now on account of
amendment to the Symbols Order which lays down a complete procedure for
acceptance of nomination paper of a candidate set up by a recognised political
party and substitution of a candidate. The factual situation here is also
different.
24. It may be noticed that the petition by Kamal Sharma was filed on 6.2.2000
and the same was allowed by the Election Commission very next
day i.e. on 7.2.2000 by which a direction was issued to the Returning Officer
to hold a fresh scrutiny. There is nothing on record to indicate nor it appears
probable that before passing the order, the Election Commission issued by
notice to Bachan Singh. Apparently the order was passed behind his back. The
order of the Election Commission to the effect that the Returning Officer shall
take further consequential steps as may become necessary, by treating all
earlier proceedings in relation to said candidates, as ab initio void and
redraw the list of validly nominated candidates could not have been passed
without giving an opportunity of hearing to Bachan Singh. That apart, it has
been held by a catena of decisions of this Court that once the nomination paper
of a candidate is rejected, the Act provides for only one remedy, that remedy
being by an election petition to be presented after the election is over, and
there is no remedy provided at any intermediate stage. (See N.P. Punnuswami v.
Returning Officer , Mohinder Singh Gill v. Chief Election Commission
Election Commission v. Shivaji ). Therefore, the order passed by the
Election Commission on 7.2.2000 was not only illegal but was also without
jurisdiction and the respondent Kamal Sharma can get no advantage from the
same. There inference drawn and the findings recorded by the High Court on the
basis of the order of the Election Commission, therefore, cannot be sustained.
25. Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda as admitted in his cross-examination that Bachan
Singh Arya had contested the election from 50-Safidon Assembly Constituency and
had won. He was a Minister when the congress Party was in power. he had also
contested in the year 1996 as a Congress candidate but had lost. The statements
of PW4 and PW5 show that it is the Central Election Committee of the Congress
Party which is the final authority to select a candidate to contest the
election. Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda, being President of the Party, was a
member of the Central Election Committee. he, no doubt, supported the
candidature of Kamal Sharma but no other member of the Central Election
Committee was examined as a witness to prove that he was the final choice of
the party. Shri Hooda has admitted that the name of Bachan Singh was under
consideration. Before the Returning Officer he had stated that though Form B of
Bachan Singh contained his signature but he had instructed that the same should
not be issued to him till he gave instructions in that regard on telephone
which he never gave, which also shows that there was uncertainty about the
candidature. The success or defeat of a political party is good deal attributed
to the President of the party. Shri Hooda being the President of Haryana
Pradesh Congress Party would certainly be interested in having the election of
the winning candidate of the rival party set aside, more so here when he seems
to be very much interested in Kamal Sharma. There can be differences amongst
the members regarding the choice of a candidate. In this background, Kamal
Sharma should have examined other members of the Central Election Committee of
Congress Party to substantiate his case that the Party had finally selected him
as its candidate and his candidature was never changed. The appellant being of
a rival party Lok Dal and having defeated the Congress candidate could not have
led this kind of evidence.
26. the election petitioner has examined in all six witnesses, out of whom PW1
Bernard John is Under Secretary of the Election Commission of India, PW 2 Ravi
Shankar is the Election Kanungo in the District Election Office, Jind and PW3
Som Nath Luthra is the Assistant Chief Election Officer, Haryana and these
witnesses have no personal knowledge of the controversy raised but have merely
proved some documents. Apart from himself, the election petitioner has strongly
relied upon the testimony of PW4 Punnu Ram and PW5 Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda.
PW4 Punu Ram, who claims to be Clerk in the officer of Haryana Pradesh Congress
Committee since 1970, went to the extent of denying the signature of Shri
Bhupinder Singh Hooda in Form B which was submitted by Bachan Singh though Shri
Hooda himself admitted his signature on the said form at three different places
during the course of his cross-examination. When questioned, he stated in his
cross-examination that he did not know whether Bachan Singh had earlier contested
election from 50-Safidon Constituency or had ever fought election as a
candidate of the Congress Party. He further stated that he did not know whether
Bachan Singh had ever remained a Minister. It is not possible to believe that a
person who had been serving as a Clerk in the Congress office at Chandigarh for
30 years would not be knowing that Bachan Singh had earlier contested election
as a Congress candidate twice and had remained a Minister. This shows that he
has scant regard for truth and can go to any extent to help the election
petitioner. It will, therefore, not be safe to rely upon his testimony. Shri
Bhupinder Singh Hooda being President of Haryana Congress Party would not be
favourably inclined towards the appellant who is of the rival Lok Dal Party and
would certainly be interested in the success of the Election Petition so that
the election of the appellant may be set aside. he is, therefore, not an
independent witness. The election petitioner has thus not led any
independent evidence of unimpeachable character on which implicit reliance may
be placed. #
27. There is another aspect of the case which deserves notice. Kamal Sharma did
not want to contest as an independent candidate but as a candidate of Congress
Party. Shri Hooda has clearly admitted in his cross-examination that he
instructed all the workers to campaign for the Congress candidates and after
withdrawal, Bachan Singh was adopted as the Congress candidate from 50-Safidon
Constituency. The evidence adduced by the appellant Ram PHal Kundu shows that
all the important Congress leaders like Shri Motilal Vora, Sheila Dixit, Shri
Bhajan Lal and others campaigned for Bachan Singh. Thus, a candidate set up by
the Congress Party contested the election for whom all the party workers and important
leaders campaigned. The appellant secured 45,382 i.e. 55% of the total valid
votes polled and thus won by an overwhelming majority. The appellant played
absolutely no role of any kind in the rejection of nomination paper of Kamal
Sharma on account of acceptance of Bachan Singh as a candidate of Congress
Party. It was an inter se dispute between two persons, each claiming to be
candidate of the same party. It will be opposite to refer to a well settled
principle in election jurisprudence. After referring to earlier decisions in
Jagan Nath v. Jaswant Singh and Gajanan Krishanand Bapat v. Dattaji
Raghobaji Meghe 19 9595 SCC 347, this Court in Jeet Mohinder Singh v.
Harminder Singh Jassi 1999 (9) SCC 381 stated as under:
"The success of a candidate who has won at an election should not be
lightly interfered with. Any petition seeking such interference must strictly
conform to the requirements of the law. Though the purity of the election
process has to be safeguarded and the court shall be vigilant to see that
people do not get elected by flagrant breaches of law or by committing corrupt
practices, the setting aside of an election involves serious consequences not
only for the returned candidate and the constituency, but also for the public
at large inasmuch as re-election involves an enormous load on the public funds
and administration." *
Therefore, unless the election petitioner fully established his case, it
will not be legally correct to set aside the election of the appellant. As
discussed earlier, Kamal Sharma has failed to do so.
28. The appeal is, therefore, allowed and the judgment and order dated 8.5.2003
of the High Court is set aside. The election petition filed by Kamal Sharma is
dismissed. The appellant will be entitled to his costs both here and in the
High Court. #