SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Sandhya Thakur
Vs.
Vimla Devi Kushwah
C.A.No.701 of 2004
(R.C.Lahoti CJI. and G.P.Mathur JJ.)
28.01.2005
P. K. Balasubramanyan, J.
1. The appellant was born as a Maharashtrian Barhmin. She married one Naresh
Kumar Thakur who is a Namdev by caste. In the election to the Municipal
Corporation of Gwalior, the appellant filed her nomination for election for the
post of a Corporator for Ward No.50, a ward reserved for backward communities.
The appellant was declared elected. The defeated candidate - the respondent
herein challenged the election of the appellant in an Election Petition. The
District Judge held that the nomination paper of the appellant was wrongly
accepted and that her election was liable to be set aside since she could not
contest the seat reserved for backward communities. The appellant filed a
revision before the High Court.
“The High Court after consideration of the relevant aspects confirmed the
decision of the District Court. The court overruled the contention of the
appellant that the Circular dated 12.0.3.1997 issued by the Government of
Madhya Pradesh was restricted to employment or admission alone and did not
apply to elections to local bodies. The High Court also noticed the decisions
of this Court in Valsamma Paul vs. Cochin University and others
( 0 ), N.E. Horo vs. Smt. Jahan Ara Jaipal Singh ) and Kailash
Sonkar vs. Smt. Maya Devi).”
2. In the light of the decision in Valsamma Paul vs. Cochin University and
others (supra) and our decision rendered today in Civil Appeal Nos. 4413-14 of
2003, which were heard along with this appeal, it must be held that the
appellant, who by birth did not belong to a backward class or community, would
not be entitled to contest a seat reserved for a backward class or community,
merely on the basis of her marriage to a male of that community.
3. Therefore, it is not possible to accept the argument that the appellant was
entitled to contest a seat reserved for a backward community merely because of
her marriage to a person belonging to the Namdev community or caste. We
also see no reason to differ from the High Court in its view that the Circular
dated 12.0.3.1997 was not restricted in its operation to employment and
admission to an educational institution, but was also relevant and applicable
in elections to local bodies. It is, thus, found that both the
reasons given by the High Court for affirming the decision of the District
Judge setting aside the election of the appellant are sustainable.
4. In view of this we have no hesitation in confirming the decision of the High
Court and in dismissing this appeal. Hence, we dismiss this appeal with costs.