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Election Petition No.1 of 2009, filed by the Respondent herein, Shri Chandra Narayan Tripathi @ Chandu Tripathi, in connection with the said election, under Sections 80, 80A/81 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, for a declaration that the election of Shri Kapil Muni Karwaria as a Member of Parliament from 51-Phulpur Parliamentary Constituency of District Allahabad be set aside and be declared null and void. =Whether the above-mentioned Pramod Kumar was eligible to subscribe to the nomination paper of the Respondent is a question which can only be decided on evidence. The Election Tribunal, in our view, did not commit any error in dismissing the applications filed by the Appellant herein for rejection of the Election Petition filed by the Respondent herein. In our view, no interference is called for with the order of the Election Tribunal and the Appeal is, therefore, liable to be dismissed. It is for the Election Tribunal to take up the matter and decide the same at an early date. 18. The Appeal is, therefore, dismissed in view of the observations made hereinabove. We, however, make it clear that the views expressed in this judgment are only confined to the disposal of the two objections which have been filed by the
REPORTABL
E
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.2122 OF 2012
(Arising out of SLP(C)No.16734 of 2011)
KAPIL MUNI KARWARIYA ... APPELLANT
Vs.
CHANDRA NARAIN TRIPATHI ... RESPONDENT
J U D G M E N T
ALTAMAS KABIR, J.
1. Leave granted.
2
2. On 2nd March, 2009, a Notification under
Section 14 of the Representation of the People Act,
1951, hereinafter referred to as the "1951 Act",
was issued by the Election Commission of India to
constitute the 15th Lok Sabha by calling upon
Parliamentary Constituencies of India to elect
Members of the House of the People (Lok Sabha).
3. District Allahabad consists of two
Parliamentary Constituencies, namely, 51-Phulpur
Parliamentary Constituency and 52-Allahabad
Parliamentary Constituency. The District
Magistrate, Allahabad, was appointed by the
Election Commission of India as the Returning
Officer for 51-Phulpur Parliamentary Constituency.
The Returning Officer notified the date of filing
of nomination papers from 28th March, 2009, to 4th
April, 2009, from 11.00 a.m. to 3.00 p.m. Separate
dates were given for the other stages of the
election. The date of polling was fixed on 16th
3
April, 2009 and the date of counting was fixed on
16th May, 2009, a month later, when the results were
to be declared.
4. The Special Leave Petition is directed against
the judgment and order dated 5th May, 2011, passed
by the Allahabad High Court (Election Tribunal) in
Election Petition No.1 of 2009, filed by the
Respondent herein, Shri Chandra Narayan Tripathi @
Chandu Tripathi, in connection with the said
election, under Sections 80, 80A/81 of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951, for a
declaration that the election of Shri Kapil Muni
Karwaria as a Member of Parliament from 51-Phulpur
Parliamentary Constituency of District Allahabad be
set aside and be declared null and void. The said
prayer was made in the background of the rejection
of his nomination paper for election to the said
Constituency by the Returning Officer. The said
Chandra Narain Tripathi, who is the Respondent
4
herein, filed his nomination paper for election to
the said Lok Sabha constituency as a candidate of
Krantikari Jai Hind Sena. He challenged the
Appellant's election on the ground that the
nomination papers which he had filed to contest the
election had been wrongly rejected.
5. There is no dispute that the Appellant filed
his nomination paper as a candidate of the Bahujan
Samaj Party and the Respondent filed his nomination
paper for contesting the election to the aforesaid
51-Phulpur Parliamentary Constituency as a
candidate of Krantikari Jai Hind Sena, which is an
unrecognized political party. Accordingly, under
Section 33 of the Representation of the People Act,
1951, his nomination paper was required to be
subscribed by ten (10) proposers. His nomination
paper was found to be defective, inasmuch as, the
name of the second proposer, Pramod Kumar was found
to have been deleted from the electoral roll.
5
According to the Appellant herein, Pramod Kumar,
who was not a voter from 1st January, 2009, and had
been declared "Vilopit", had subscribed to the
nomination paper of the Respondent, though he was
not a voter from the aforesaid constituency.
According to the Appellant, the name of the said
proposer No.2 was deleted from the electoral roll
and, hence, the Respondent's nomination fell short
of the reasonable number of proposers in terms of
the first proviso to Section 33 of the 1951 Act.
6. After scrutinizing the nomination papers, the
Returning Officer found that the nomination paper
filed by the Election Petitioner, the Respondent
herein, was invalid and defective and he,
accordingly, rejected the said nomination paper.
After the votes were counted, on 16th May, 2009, the
Returning Officer declared the Appellant elected
from the 51-Phulpur Parliamentary Constituency, as
having secured the highest number of votes polled
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for the said Lok Sabha seat. It is the said order
of the Returning Officer which was challenged
before the Election Tribunal by the Respondent
herein by way of an Election Petition, being No.1
of 2009, on the ground that his nomination paper
had been improperly rejected.
7. On 5th October, 2009, the Appellant filed an
application under Section 86(1) of the 1951 Act, in
Election Petition No.1 of 2009, praying for
dismissal of the Election Petition on the ground of
non-compliance of the provisions of Section 81(1)
of the 1951 Act. One of the grounds taken by the
Appellant in the application was that the
Respondent was not an elector of 51-Phulpur
Parliamentary Constituency within the meaning of
Section 2(e) of the 1951 Act. It was urged that
since the Respondent was not a duly elected
candidate and did not also claim to be so, he was
7
not entitled to file the Election Petition under
Section 81(1) of the 1951 Act.
8. The Appellant also filed another application
under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil
Procedure in the said Election Petition before the
Election Tribunal on 5th November, 2009, for
dismissal of the Election Petition for non-
disclosure of the cause of action. In this
application it was categorically indicated that the
name of the proposer No.2, Mr. Pramod Kumar, had
been struck off from the electoral roll and he was
no more an elector from the said place and was not,
therefore, entitled to propose the name of the
Respondent for election to the 51-Phulpur
Parliamentary Constituency.
9. The applications filed by the Appellant, the
one under Section 86(1) of the 1951 Act and the
other under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, were heard together and were dismissed
8
by the Election Tribunal on 5th May, 2011. The
Election Petition was, thereafter, directed to be
listed for disposal of the amendment applications
moved on behalf of the Appellant and also for
settlement of issues.
10. It is the said interim order of the Election
Tribunal, based on the two applications filed by
the Appellant herein, against which this Special
Leave Petition has been filed.
11. Appearing for the Appellant herein, Mr. Ranjit
Kumar, learned Senior Advocate, submitted that the
Respondent had filed his nomination for contesting
the election as an independent candidate. His
nomination paper was, however, rejected by the
Returning Officer on the ground that the nomination
paper had not been subscribed by 10 proposers. The
Respondent, thereafter, filed an Election Petition
in the Election Tribunal challenging the election
9
of the Appellant herein on the ground that his
nomination paper had been wrongly rejected and that
he had been prevented from contesting the polls. In
the said Election Petition, the Appellant herein
filed two separate applications, one for setting
aside the order passed by the Returning Officer
holding that the Election Petition filed by the
Respondent was not maintainable and the other for
dismissal of the Election Petition under Order VII
Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure since the
name of one of the proposers, Pramod Kumar, had
been deleted from the voters' list and he was,
therefore, not an elector on the date of nomination
in the electoral roll relating to 261 Allahabad
West Assembly Constituency. Accordingly, since he
was not an elector of the said Constituency on the
date of filing of the nomination papers, he was not
eligible to subscribe the nomination paper of the
Election Petitioner.
10
12. Both the objections taken by the Appellant
herein were rejected by the Election Tribunal and
the Election Petition filed by the Respondent
herein, was held to be maintainable.
13. It was further submitted that Pramod Kumar's
name having been deleted from the electoral roll,
it would be clear from the electoral roll, which
had been made an integral part of the Election
Petition, that on the date of filing of nomination
papers Pramod Kumar could not have been one of the
10 proposers of the Election Petitioner. Mr.
Ranjit Kumar submitted that in the absence of the
required number of proposers for the nomination
paper of the Election Petitioner, as required under
Section 33 of the 1951 Act, the Election Petitioner
was not a duly nominated candidate and his
nomination had been rightly rejected by the
Returning Officer.
11
14. In support of his submissions, learned counsel
referred to and relied upon the judgment of this
Court in Charan Lal Sahu Vs. K.R. Narayanan [(1998)
1 SCC 56] and the decision in the case of Charan
Lal Sahu Vs. Giani Zail Singh[(1984) 1 SCC 390] and
a couple of other cases which do not say anything
different from the other decisions. Mr. Ranjit
Kumar urged that since the Election Petitions were
original proceedings and not appealable, the
Election Tribunal's jurisdiction cannot be confined
to the grounds on which the Returning Officer
rejected the nomination paper. In fact, it is not
precluded from considering any other ground or
fresh material having any relevance to the
rejection of the Respondent's nomination paper.
In this regard, reference was also made to the
decision of this Court in J.H. Patel Vs. Subhan
Khan [(1996) 5 SCC 312] and in the case of Uttamrao
Shivdas Jankar Vs. Ranjitsinh Vijaysinh Mohite
12
Patil [(2009) 13 SCC 131]. Urging that his
interlocutory applications had been wrongly
rejected, the Appellant prayed for setting aside
the order passed by the Election Tribunal and to
hold that the Election Petition was not
maintainable.
15. The Respondent herein, whose nomination paper
had been rejected, appeared and with the permission
of the Court, was allowed to advance submissions in
support of his case that the applications filed by
the Appellant (the returned candidate) had been
rightly rejected by the Election Tribunal. The
Respondent urged that it has been wrongly held by
the Returning Officer that the Respondent's
nomination paper was not in order, since the name
of Pramod Kumar was very much there in the voters'
list, but may have been removed therefrom at a
later stage. It was submitted that the said
question is yet to be decided by the Election
13
Tribunal in the pending Election Petition and,
accordingly, no order is called for in the present
Appeal. As far as the decisions cited by Mr. Ranjit
Kumar are concerned, it was submitted that the same
did not help the Appellant's case, inasmuch as, the
same related to the question that as Election
Petitions were original proceedings, the Court's
jurisdiction to consider the matter could not be
confined only to the grounds on which the Returning
Officer had rejected the nomination paper. In the
said decisions it was also held that the Returning
Officer was not precluded from considering any
other ground or fresh material having bearing on
the question of rejection of the nomination paper.
It was further held that it is not only the
decision making process but the merit of the
decision of the Returning Officer which has to be
seen while trying an Election Petition.
14
16. Having carefully considered the submissions
made on behalf of the respective parties and having
considered the fact that the Election Petition is
yet to be disposed of by the Election Tribunal, we
are of the view that making any observations in
this proceedings would certainly have an effect on
the pending proceedings before the Election
Tribunal. We are, however, inclined to agree with
the view taken by the Election Tribunal that the
Election Petition filed by the Respondent herein
was required to be considered on evidence on
account of the allegations made therein.
17. The question regarding the right of Pramod
Kumar to be a subscriber to the nomination paper
filed by the Respondent herein is the fundamental
question which is required to be considered in this
case. Being the central question involved in the
pending Election Petition, in our view, the
allegations contained therein have to be decided
15
before a decision can be rendered regarding the
validity of the Respondent's Election Petition.
Whether the above-mentioned Pramod Kumar was
eligible to subscribe to the nomination paper of
the Respondent is a question which can only be
decided on evidence. The Election Tribunal, in our
view, did not commit any error in dismissing the
applications filed by the Appellant herein for
rejection of the Election Petition filed by the
Respondent herein. In our view, no interference is
called for with the order of the Election Tribunal
and the Appeal is, therefore, liable to be
dismissed. It is for the Election Tribunal to take
up the matter and decide the same at an early date.
18. The Appeal is, therefore, dismissed in view of
the observations made hereinabove. We, however,
make it clear that the views expressed in this
judgment are only confined to the disposal of the
two objections which have been filed by the
16
Appellant herein before the Election Tribunal and
the same should not influence the outcome of the
pending Election Petition filed by the Respondent
herein.
19. There shall, however, be no order as to costs.
..................................................................J.
(ALTAMAS KABIR)
New Delhi ..................................................................J.
Dated:15.02.2012 (SURINDER SINGH NIJJAR)