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[Cites 9, Cited by 7]

Supreme Court of India

Krishan Ballabh Prasad Singh vs Sub-Divisional Officer ... on 12 August, 1985

Equivalent citations: 1985 AIR 1746, 1985 SCR SUPL. (2) 532, AIR 1985 SUPREME COURT 1746, (1985) PAT LJR 65 1985 (4) SCC 194, 1985 (4) SCC 194

Author: R.S. Pathak

Bench: R.S. Pathak, Sabyasachi Mukharji

           PETITIONER:
KRISHAN BALLABH PRASAD SINGH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SUB-DIVISIONAL OFFICER HILSA-CUMRETURNING OFFICER AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/08/1985

BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)

CITATION:
 1985 AIR 1746		  1985 SCR  Supl. (2) 532
 1985 SCC  (4) 194	  1985 SCALE  (2)1402


ACT:
     Representation of	People Act  1951, Section  66 and 67
and Conduct  of Elections  Rules 1961,	Rules 64 & 66, Forms
21C, 21D  and 22  - Election  - Result - Declaration in Form
21C not	 made Certificate  in Form  22 issued  - Election  -
Whether valid  Whether writ  petition  lies  -	Whether	 bar
enacted in Article 329 (b) operates against writ petition.



HEADNOTE:
     The Returning Officer after counting of votes announced
that  the   petitioner	had   been  duly  elected  to  Bihar
Legislative Assembly from Islampur Constituency and issued a
certificate of	election in  Form 22  under Rule  66 of	 the
Conduct of  Elections Rules 1961 in his favour. However, the
declaration in Form 21C was not prepared under clause (a) of
Rules 64 and sent to the required authorities. The Returning
Officer, subsequently  discovered that	The ballot papers of
one booth had not been counted and after taking into account
those votes  issued a  notice cancelling the election of the
petitioner. A  declaration in  Form 21C	 was  then  prepared
declaring  the	 fourth	 respondent   elected  and  a  fresh
certificate in Form 22 was issued .
     The petitioner  challenged the  election of  the fourth
respondent under  Article 226  of the Constitution. The High
Court held  that the  writ  petition  was  not	maintainable
because of  the bar imposed by clause (b) of Article 329 and
that an election petition was the proper remedy.
     In	 Special   Leave  Petition  to	this  Court  it	 was
contended: (1)	that the  petitioner is entitled Lo maintain
the  writ  petition,  since  the  process  of  election	 was
completed as soon as the counting of votes was concluded and
a certificate  of election in Form 22 was granted certifying
that the  petitioner had  been elected and (2) the Returning
Officer	 had   no  power  to  cancel  the  election  of	 the
petitioner and declare the fourth respondent elected .
533
     Dismissing the Special Leave Petition,
^
     HELD:1. When  Section 66  of the  Representation of the
People Act,  1951 provides  that the  result of the election
shall be  declared in  the manner provided by the Act or the
Rules made  thereunder, the  declaration can  be effected in
the manner  expressed in Rule 64 of the Rules only either in
Form 21C or 21D, as the case may be. [536 B-C]
     In the  instant case, the announcement by the Returning
Officer that  the petitioner  had been	elected has no legal
status because	the declaration in Form 21C had not yet been
drawn up.  Even the  grant of the certificate of election in
Form 22	 cannot avail because Rule 66 contemplates the grant
of such	 certificate  only  after  the	candidate  has	been
declared elected under section 66. [536 C-D]
     2. The Writ Petition cannot be entertained. The process
of election came to an end after the declaration in Form 21C
was made  and the  consequential formalities were completed.
The bar	 of clause  (b) of  Article 329	 came into operation
thereafter and	an election petition alone was maintainable.
[536 E-F]
     3.	 The   process	of   election  set   forth  in	 the
Representation of  People  Act,	 1951  consists	 of  several
stages and  towards the end it requires a declaration of the
result of  the election. Section 66 of the Act provides that
when the  counting of votes has been completed the Returning
Officer must  declare forthwith	 the result  of the election
"in the	 manner provided  in  the  Act	or  the	 Rules	made
thereunder.' Thereafter,  under section 67 the result of the
election  is  reported	by  the	 Returning  Officer  to	 the
authorities and the declaration is published in the Official
Gazette. [535 C-D]
     4. The  procedure	for  declaring	the  result  of	 the
election 18  set forth in Rule 64 of the Conduct of Election
Rules 1961  which provides that the declaration envisaged by
the law that a candidate has been elected is the declaration
in Form 21C or Form 21D. The declaration in Form 21C is made
in a  general election	and the	 declaration in	 Form 21D is
made when  the election	 is held  to fill  a casual vacancy.
[535 E-H, 536 A]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Petition for Special Leave to Appeal (Civil) No. 7822 of 1985.

From the Judgment and Order dated 2.5.1985 of the Patna High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 1265 of 1985.

534

R.K. Garg, L.R. Singh, Gopal Singh and A. Sharan for the petitioners.

Jai Narayan Singh, F.S. Nariman, Pramod Swarup, M. Khan, B.P. Singh, Ranjit Kumar and Ravi Prakash for the respondents.

The following order of the Court was delivered by PATHAK, J. The petitioner and the fourth respondent contested an election to the Bihar Legislative Assembly seat from the Islampur Assembly Constituency in March, 1985. After the votes had been polled, the counting of votes was taken up on March , 1985. Pursuant to allegations made by the parties, the Election Commission of India ordered re- polling in sixty stations. On the conclusion of the re-poll the votes were counted and the petitioner was found to have secured more votes than the fourth respondent. The fourth respondent applied for a recount of the votes but the Returning Officer rejected the application and announced that the petitioner had been duly elected to the Assembly. A certificate of election in Form 22 under rule 66 of U the conduct of Elections Rules, 1961 was granted to the petitioner. It seems that the declaration in Form 21C was not prepared under clause (a) of rule 64 of the Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961 and sent to the authorities required thereunder. The Returning Officer, on discovering that the ballot papers of one booth had not been counted, took those votes into account and thereafter issued a notice cancelling the election of the petitioner and declaring the fourth respondent to be successful candidate. A declaration' in Form 21C was then prepared declaring the fourth respondent to be the elected candidate, and a fresh certificate in Form 22 was issued.

The petitioner filed a writ petition in the Patna High Court challenging the declaration made in favour of the fourth respondent. A Division Bench of two Judges of the High Court heard the writ petition and on a difference between the two the case was referred to a third Judge of the High Court. The third Judge agreed with the view taken by one of the Judges of the Division Bench that the writ petition must fail because of the bar imposed by clause (b) of Article 329 of the Constitution and that an election petition was the proper remedy.

In this petition for special leave against the majority judgment of the High Court, the only question is whether the bar enacted in clause (b) of Article 329 operates against the writ 535 petition. Learned counsel for the petitioner urged that the petitioner is entitled to maintain the writ petition and to contend that the returning officer had no power to cancel the election of the petitioner and declare the fourth respondent elected. It is submitted that the process of election was completed as soon as the counting of votes was concluded and a certificate of election in Form 22 was granted to the petitioner certifying that he had been elected, and therefore / question arose of the petitioner filing an election petition. What i challenged, says the petitioners, is the declaration by the returning officer thereafter that the fourth respondent, and not the petitioner stood elected. We see no force in this contention.

The process of election set forth in the Representation of People Act, 1951 consists of several stages and towards the end it requires a declaration of the result of the election. Section 66 of the Act provides that when the counting of votes has been completed the Returning Officer must declare forthwith the result of the election in the manner provided in this Act or the rules made thereunder . Thereafter, under s.67 the result of the election is reported by the Returning Officer to the authorities specified therein and the declaration is published in the Official Gazette. It may be mentioned that according to s.67A of the Act the date on which the candidate is declared by the Returning Officer under s.66 to be elected is regarded as the date of election of that candidate. Now, as contemplated by s.66 the declaration of the result of the election must be in the manner provided by the Act or the rules made thereunder. The procedure for declaring the result of the election is set forth in rule 64 of the Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961. Rule 64 provides:-

64. Declaration of result of election and return of election. The returning officer shall, subject to the provisions of section 55 if and so far as they apply to any particular case, then -
(a) declare in Form 21C or Form 21D, as may be appropriate, the candidate to whom the largest member of valid votes has been given, to be elected under section 66 and send signed copies thereof to the appropriate authority, the Election Commission and the chief electoral officer; and
(b) complete and certify the return of election in Form 21E and send signed copies thereof to the Election Commission and the chief electoral officer.
536

It is plain that the declaration envisaged by the law that a candidate has been elected is the declaration in from 21C or from 21D. The declaration in Form 21C is made in a general election and the declaration in Form 21D is made when the election is held to fill a casual vacancy. It is not settled law that the right to vote, the right to stand as a candidate for election and the entire procedure in relation thereto are created and determined by statute. Accordingly, when s.66 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 provides that the result of the election shall be declared in the manner provided by the Act or the Rules made thereunder, the declaration can be effected in that manner only. The manner is clearly expressed in rule 64 of the Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961. There is no other manner. There must be a declaration in Form 21C or Form 21D. The announcement by the Returning Officer that the petitioner had been elected has no legal status because the declaration in Form 21C had not yet been drawn up. Even the grant of the certificate of election in Form 22 to the petitioner cannot avail him because rule 66 contemplates the grant of such certificate only after the candidates been declared elected under s.66, which refers us back to rule 64 and therefore to Form 21C. There having been no declaration in Form 21C at the relevant time, the grant of the certificate of election in Form 22 to the Petitioner was meaningless.

We are of opinion that the process of election. came to an end after the declaration in Form 21C was made and the consequential formalities were completed. The bar of clause

(b) of Article 329 of the Constitution came into operation thereafter and an election petition alone was maintainable. The writ petition cannot be entertained.

Learned counsel for the petitioner contends that it was not open to the returning officer to antedate the Form 21C drawn up by him by placing on it the date on which he originally announced the result of the election. That is a ground bearing on the merits of the dispute between the parties, which as we have observed must properly be the subject of an election petition.

The petition for special leave fails and is rejected.

A.P.J.					  Petition dismissed
537