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[Cites 18, Cited by 28]

Supreme Court of India

Ramji Prasad Singh vs Ram Bilas Jha & Four Ors on 24 September, 1976

Equivalent citations: 1976 AIR 2573, 1977 SCR (1) 741, AIR 1976 SUPREME COURT 2573, 1977 (1) SCC 260, 1977 (1) SCR 741, 1977 PATLJR 230, 1976 2 SCWR 430

Author: Y.V. Chandrachud

Bench: Y.V. Chandrachud, P.K. Goswami, A.C. Gupta

           PETITIONER:
RAMJI PRASAD SINGH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
RAM BILAS JHA & FOUR ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT24/09/1976

BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
GUPTA, A.C.

CITATION:
 1976 AIR 2573		  1977 SCR  (1) 741
 1977 SCC  (1) 260
 CITATOR INFO :
 RF	    1977 SC1992	 (30)
 RF	    1977 SC2171	 (23)
 R	    1978 SC 351	 (5)
 R	    1978 SC1162	 (8)
 R	    1985 SC  89	 (20)
 C	    1991 SC2001	 (5,24)


ACT:
	    Representation of the People Act 1950--Sec. 15, 21,	 22,
	23--Preparation	 and revision of electoral  roll--Amendment,
	transposition	or   deletion  of   entries   in   electoral
	roll--Provision of Sec. 23 if mandatory--Representation	  of
	the People Act 1951---Every person on electoral roll whether
	entitled to vote even if name not brought in accordance with
	law---Sec.  100 ( 1 ) b--Sec. 123 ( 1 )	 (A)b-Bribery--Proof
	of--Quasi-criminal in nature  Interference with appreciation
	of evidence by High Court.
	Bihar and Orissa municipal Act 1922--S. 389.



HEADNOTE:
	    In March, 1972, the Election Commission issued a notifi-
	cation	calling upon the Muzaffarpur Local Authorities	Con-
	stituency  to  elect  one member to  the  Bihar	 Legislative
	Council.   One of the constituencies was the  notified	area
	committee  of Dumra.  The. last date for  filing  nomination
	was 5-4-1972.  The poll was held on 30-4-1972 and the result
	was declared on 1st May, 1972. Respondent no. 1 an-independ-
	ent candidate secured the  highest  number of  votes, namely
	61,  whereas his nearest rival respondent no. 5	 secured  36
	votes..	 The appellant Ramji Prasad Singh, a voter, filed an
	election petition challenging the election of respondent no.
	1 inter alia on the following two grounds:
		    (1) 40 voters of the Dumra Notified Ares Commit-
		 tee were  illegally prevented from exercising their
		 franchise  which  materially affected the result of
		 the election.
		 (2) Respondent no. 1 attempted to bribe two voters.
	    The	 Government of Bihar had nominated 40 persons to  be
	the  members  of the Dumra notified Area  Committee  by	 its
	notification dated 5-5-1971.  All of them were duly enrolled
	as  voters  in the electoral roll.  On	4-4-1972  the  State
	Government issued a notification cancelling the notification
	dated  5-5-1971	 and nominating 40 other  persons  mentioned
	therein as members of the Dumra Notified Area Committee.  In
	a  Writ Petition filed by some of the sitting  members,	 the
	High Court passed an interim order staying the operation  of
	the  notification dated 5-5-1971.  The names of the 40	per-
	sons who were nominated earlier were removed from the  elec-
	toral  roll  and  it was alleged that the names	 of  40	 new
	members	 were included.	 The old members were not  permitted
	to  vote  on  the ground that their names were	not  on	 the
	electoral  roll	 and the new members were not  permitted  to
	vote  on the ground that the High Court had issued the	stay
	order.	Section 389 of the Bihar & Orissa Municipal Act 7 of
	1922  empowers the State Government to make appointments  to
	Notified  Area Committee. Section 151of the  Representation,
	of the People Act 1950 provides that for every	constituency
	there shall be an electoral roll which shall be prepared  in
	accordance with the provisions of the Act.  Section 21 deals
	with  the  preparation and revision of the  electoral  roll.
	Section 22 provides the procedure for correction of  entries
	in  electoral rolls.  Section 23(3) provides that no  amend-
	ment,  transposition,  or  deletion of any entry   shall  be
	made under  section 22 and no direction for the inclusion of
	a  name	 in the electroal roll of a  constituency  shall  be
	given  after  the last date for making nominations  for	 the
	election.
	The High Court dismissed the election petition.
	The appellant contended:
	    1.	Section 62(1) of the Representation of	People	Act,
	1951  provides that no person who is not and except  as	 ex-
	pressly provided by this Act every person
	742
	who is, for the time being entered in the electoral roll  of
	any constituency shall be entitled to vote in that constitu-
	ency  and, therefore, since the names of the 40 new  persons
	were  in the electoral roll and since' they  were  illegally
	prevented     from voting which has materially affected	 the
	result of the election, the election  must be set aside.
	    2.	The elected candidate attempted to bribe two  voters
	and thereby rendered his election void under sec. 100 (1)(b)
	read  with sec. 123 (a)(A)(b) of the Representation  of	 the
	People,Act 1951.
	Dismissing the appeal,
	    HELD:  1. It is implicit in section 62(1) that the	name
	of  the person who claims  to be entitled to vote in a	con-
	stituency  must have been entered in the electoral  roll  of
	that particular constituency in accordance with law.  If the
	name of a person is entered in the electoral roll in  viola-
	tion of section 23(3) he can have no right to vote by reason
	merely of the entitlement conferred  by section 62(1).	[749
	A--C]
	    Kabul Singh v. Kundan Singh & Ors. [1970] v.S.C.R.	845;
	B.M.  Ramaswamy	 v.  B.M. Krishnamurthy and  Ors.  [1963]  3
	S.C.R. 479 explained.
	Baidyanath, Panliar v. Sitaram Matho & Ors. [1970] 1 SCR 839
	followed.
	    2. The electoral roll was amended after 5th April, which
	was the last date for filing the nomination. [745 G]
	3.  The	 provisions  of section 23(3)  are  mandatory.	 The
	Election  Commission of India was within its right in  with-
	drawing	 the polling booth at the Dumra Committee office  in
	order  that  the new members may not vote at  the  election.
	[750 B, C]
	    4. The charge of bribery is quasi-criminal in nature and
	in a series of cases this Court has held that such a  charge
	must be proved not by a more  preponderance of probabilities
	but  beyond a reasonable doubt.	 In the absence of any	evi-
	dence  of unimpeachable nature and particularly in  the	 ab-
	sence  of  any contemporaneous complaint in  regard  to	 the
	allegation of bribery it would be unsafe to accept the	bare
	word  of  the appellant and his witness on  such  a  serious
	charge.	  The High Court having considered the	evidence  on
	the question of bribery fully and carefully, this Court	 did
	not  find  any reason to depart from  the  well	 established
	practice  that	except for substantial reasons.	 this  Court
	does  not embark on a detailed assessment of oral  evidence.
	[751 B--C]



JUDGMENT:

Civil Appeal No. 1147 of .1974 (From the Judgment and Order dated 9.5.1974 of the Patna High Court in Election Petition No. 42/72).

D. Goburdhan and L.R. Sinha, for the Appellant D.V. Patel, U.P. Singh, R.P. Singh and S.N. Jha, for respondent No. 1.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHANDRACHUD, J.--This is an appeal under section 116A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 from the judgment of the Patna High Court dated May 9, 1974 in Election Peti- tion No. 42 of 1972.

On March 29. 1972 the Election Commission issued a notification calling upon the Muzaffarpur Local Authorities Constituency to elect one member to the Bihar Legislative Council.. That Constituency consists of the Municipalities of Muzaffarpur, Sitamarhi, Hajipur and 743 Lalganj and the Notified Area Committees of Mahnur and Dumra. We are concerned in this appeal with the Notified Area Committee of Dumra only. According to the programme notified by the Election Commission, the last date for filing nominations was April 5, 1972. The poll was held on April 30 and the result of the election was declare,5 on May 1, 1972. Respondent 1 Ram Bilas Jha, an independent candi- date, secured the highest number of votes, namely 61 whereas his nearest rival respondent 5, Mahanth Raghunath Das, a Congress (R) candidate, secured 36 votes.. Respondent 1 was accordingly declared elected.

The appellant Ramji Prasad Singh was a voter for the election being a member or commissioner of the Sitamarhi Municipality. On June 14, 1972 he filed an election peti- tion in the Patna High Court challenging the election of respondent 1 on various grounds. Before us, appellant restricted his challenge to the following two grounds :--

(1) Forty voters of the Dumra Notified Area Committee were illegally prevented from exercising their franchise, which materially affected the result of the election; and (2) Respondent 1 attempted to bribe two voters, Sri Narain Prasad and Ram Swarath Raut thereby rendering his election void under section 100(1)(b) read with section 123(1)(A)(b) of the Act of 1951.

The High Court having rejected these contentions the elec- tion petitioner has filed this appeal.

It is necessary to state certain important facts for a proper appreciation of the question involved in the first of the two points mentioned above. By Notification No. 2708/LSG dated May 5, 1971 the Government of Bihar had nominated 40 persons to be members or commissioners of the Dumra Notified Area Committee. All of them were duly enrolled as voters in the electoral roll of the Muzaffarpur Local Authorities constituency. On April 4, 1972 the State Government issued a Notification, No. 2934, cancelling the notification dated May 5, 1971. By another notification, No. 2935, of even date, viz., April 4, 1972 the State Gov- ernment nominated 40 other persons named therein as members of the Dumra Notified Area Committee.

Immediately after the issuance of the two notifications of April 4, 1972 some of the sitting members of the Dumra N.A. Committee, who ceased to be members by reason of these notifications, filed writ petition No. 150 of 1972 in the Patna High Court challenging the validity of the notifica- tions. A rule was issued in that writ petition on April 14, 1972 and by an interim order, the operation of notification No. 2934 by which the notification of May 5, 1971 was can- celled, was stayed till the disposal of the writ petition.

744

After the High Court issued the stay order, a petition was moved before Shri A.M. Bose, the District Magistrate of Muzaffarpur, asking that the names of the 40 members which were removed from the electoral roll pursuant to the notifi- cation issued by the State Government should be reincorporated therein. Shri Bose who was functioning ex- officio as the District Election Officer, Electoral Registration Officer and the Returning Officer for the purposes of the particular election sent a Teleprinter message (Ex. 7) On April 21, 1972 to the Chief Electoral Officer, Patna, stating that since the last date filing nominations was long since past, the names of the old members which were already removed from the electoral roll could not be reincorporated therein but that it would be in contempt of the High Court if elections were to be held on the basis of the amended roll, as the High COurt had stayed the operation of the notification issued by the Government on April 4, 1972 cancelling the notification of May 5, 1971.

"In this anomalous situation", Shri Bose asked the Chief Electoral Officer to seek the instructions of the ELection Commission of India. By his Telex message (Ex.8), the Chief Electoral Officer sought the directions of the Election Commission which opined that since the old members could not vote as their names were not on the electoral roll and since the new members also could not vote because of the stay order issued by the High Court, the polling station at the Dumra Notified Area Committee office should be withdrawn and cancelled. Pursuant to this directive, there was no polling booth where the members of the Dumra Committee could cast their votes. Consequently, neither the old 40 members whose names were removed from the electoral roll nor the new 40 members whose names were included therein could cast their votes in the election held on April 30. It is on this background that the election petitioner raised the point that the new 40 members were illegally prevented from exercising their franchise and that such prevention had materially affected the result of the election as those members would have voted for respondent 5, the Congress (R) candidate.
It may, we think, be accepted that the 40 newly enrolled members, had they been permitted to cast their votes, would have mostly voted for respondent 5. Thirty-four out of the 40 were examined as witnesses and they protested their loyalty to respondent 5. Out of these 34 witnesses, 27 are members of Congress (R) and though defections cannot be totally ruled out, there is no reason to discard their evidence that they were pledged to support respondent 5 who was their party candidate. It may be assumed that members of the party would not have disobeyed the mandate issued by the Provincial and District Congress Committees through circular letters, Exs. 3 and 3/a, that they must vote for the party candidate, respondent 5. The remaining 7 out of the 34 may be taken at their word that they would have voted for respondent 5 since they thought that he was the most eligible candidate amongst the contestants. There is also evidence showing that the newly enrolled members had gone to the polling station to cast their votes but had to return without exercising their franchise as there was no booth where they could cast their votes.
745
The question which then remains to be considered is whether the newly enrolled members of the Dumra Committee were prevented illegally from casting their votes in the poll of 30th April. The power to make appointments to Notified Area Committee's is derived by the State Government under section 389 of the Bihar and Orissa Municipal Act, 7 of 1922. That section provides by clause (c) that the State Government may by notification appoint a Committee or make rules for the appointment or election of a Committee for carrying out the purposes of the Municipal Act in the Noti- fied Area. The notifications of May 5, 1971 and April 4, 1972 nominating 40 persons as members or commissioners of the Dumra Notified Area Committee were issued by the Govern- ment of Bihar in exercise of the power conferred by section 389(c). The State Government did have the power to issue the 2nd notification as much as the first and their juris- diction in that behalf has not been questioned. An interesting question however arises by reason of the provisions contained in the Representation of the People Act, 43 of 1950. Section 15 of that Act provides that for every constituency there shall be an electoral roll which shall be prepared in accordance with the provisions of the Act under the superintendence, direction and control of the Election Commission. Section 16 prescribes disqualifica- tions for registration in an electoral roll. Section 21 dels with the preparation and revision of the electoral roll. Section 22 prescribes a procedure for correction of entries in electoral rolls and section 24 provides for an appeal from any order passed under section 22. Section 23(3) which has an important bearing on the point raised behalf of the election petitioner reads thus :--
"23. (3) No amendment, transposition or deletion of any entry shall be made under section 22 and no direction for the inclusion of a name in the electoral roll of a constituency shah be given under this section, after the last date for making nominations for an election in that constituency or in the parliamentary constituency within which that constituency is comprised and before the completion of 'that election."

As mentioned. above the State Government issued two notifica'lions on April 4, 1972, one by which the earlier notification of May 5, 1971 was cancelled and the other making fresh appointments of 40 members to the Dumra Noti- fied Area Committee. As a result of these notifications (Exs. 10A and 10 respectively), it became necessary for the Electoral Registration Officer to delete from the electoral roll the names of 40 persons who were appointed under the notification of May 5, 1971 and to. include in their place the names of the 40 new members who were appointed to the Committee under the Notification (Ex. 10) of April 4, 1972. But these corrections or amendments could not, by reason of section 23(3), be made after April 5, 1972 which was the last date for making nominations to the election. No direc- tion also could have been given for the inclusion of these names in the electoral roll, after the last date for making nominations. The point, thus, for consideration is whether the 746 amendment to the electoral roll was made in the instant case by incorporating the names of the 40 new members therein on or before the 5th April or whether the roll was amended after the expiry of that date. If the roll was amended after the 5th April, the inclusion of the new names would be clearly in breach of the mandate contained in section 23(3) of the Act of 1950 and therefore beyond the jurisdiction of the Electoral Registration Officer. The best evidence on this question would of course be of Shri Bose himself who, being the District Magistrate of Muzaffarpur, was function- ing ex-officio as the Electoral Registration Officer. Ex. 1 is the electoral roll for 1972 on the basis of which the biennial election to the Bihar Legislative Assem- bly from the Muzaffarpur Local Authorities constituency was held in this case. The names of the 40 members of the Dumra Notified Area Committee who were appointed under Notifica- tion No. 2935 (Ex. 10) dated April 4, 1972 are included in that roll at Serial Nos. 31 to 70. These names, according to the learned counsel of the election petitioner, were entered in the roll soon after the Electoral Registration Officer received the two notifications (Exs. 10 and 10A) which was at about 8-15 a.m. on. the 5th April. On the other hand, learned counsel for respondent 1 says that in the very nature of things the names could not have been entered in the electoral roll before the expiry of the crucial date, 5th April. At best, according to him, the names might have been entered in the roll on the 6th.

It seems to us impossible to accept the contention of the election petitioner that the names of the new members were entered in the electoral roll immediately after Shri Bose, the Electoral Registration Officer, received the notifications Exs. 10 and 10A dated April 4. It is true that Shri Bose received these notifications through a special messenger on the 5th at about 8-15 a.m. But he says in his evidence that immediately after receiving the notifications, he endorsed them to the Assistant District Electoral Officer and then to the Deputy Collector in charge of the General Section for necessary action. He has further stated that he could not have taken any action for including the names of the new members in the electoral roll on the strength of the notifications because, in so far as he knew, an amendment in the electoral roll could not be made unless a list of mem- bers for inclusion in the electoral roll was received by him from the Chairman of the local body concerned. That unques- tionably is the true legal position because under section 27(2)(d) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950 it is the duty of the Chief Executive Officer of every local authority (by whatever designation he may be known) to inform the Electoral Registration Officer immediately about every change in the membership of the local authority, in order to enable the Electoral Registration Officer to main- tain the electoral roll corrected up-to-date. The section further provides that on receipt of such information the Electoral Registration Officer shall strike off from the electoral roll the names of persons who have ceased to be and include therein the names of persons who have become, members of the 747 particular local authority. Shri Bose, therefore, could not have included the new names in the electoral roll merely on the strength of the Government notifications which he re- ceived on the morning of the 5th. For doing so, he had to await an official communication from the Chief Executive Officer of the Dumra Notified Area Committee. At the relevant time Shri Durga Prasad, the Sub-Divi- sional Officer of Sitamarhi, District Muzaffarpur, was functioning ex-officio as the Chairman of the Dumra Notified Area Committee and was therefore the "Chief executive offi- cer" of that local authority, within the meaning of section 27(2)(d) of the Act of 1950. Just as Shri Bose had received the two Government notifications on the 5th, so had Shri Durga Prasad. On receiving the notifications he convened an 'emergent meeting' of the newly nominated members of the Dumra Committee which, as shown by the proceedings Ex. E, was held in the Committee's office at 8 p.m. on the 5th. Shri Durga Prasad has stated in his evidence that after the meeting was over he sent a letter (No. 62) to Shri Bose stating that the old list of members should be treated as cancelled and the names of members mentioned in the new list should be included in the electoral roll. Shri Bose has stated in his evidence that he received that letter (Ex. A/3) at 11-30 p.m. through a special messenger and in token thereof made an appropriate endorsement on it. That en- dorsement is Ex. J which shows that the letter was received at 11-30 p.m. on the 5th April, Shri Bose also made another endorsement (Ex. K) on that letter saying that in the new list of members sent along with the letter Ex. A/3, the addresses members at Serial Nos. 8, 16 and 29 to 37 were not noted. Shri Bose has testified to these endorsements in his own evidence.

Column No. 5 of the Electoral Roll requires the specifi- cation of the authority on the basis of which the names of voters are incorporated in the Electoral Roll. In regard to the names of the 40 new members with which we are concerned in this appeal, the authorisation for including their names in the roll is stated as letter No. 62 dated April 5, 1972 of the Chairman of the Dumra Notified Area Committee. That letter, as stated above, was received by the Electoral Registration Officer at 11-30 p.m. on the 5th. The fact of the receipt of Shri Durga Prasad's letter by Shri Bose at 11-30 p.m. on the 5th and the entry in column 5 of the Electoral roll that the new names were incorporated therein on the authority of that letter make it impossible to accept the half-hearted claim of Shri Bose that he had passed orders for inclusion of the new names on the 5th itself. Time was running fast and only half an hour was left for the last date to expire for making amendments in the electoral roll.. The endorsement, Ex. K, made by Shri Bose on letter No. 62 Ex. A/3, shows that he treated the list of members as incomplete in necessary particulars since the addresses of certain members were not mentioned in the list. Shri Bose did not make any endorsement on the letter, which he would in the normal course of business do, direct- ing that the names of new members contained in the list accompanying the letter should be incorporated in the roll. In fact 16--1234SCI/76 748 the letter was "diarised" by Shri Bose's office on the 6th. Even on the 6th, when an endorsement was made on the letter regarding its diarisation in the relevant office file, the letter did not bear any direction of the Electoral Registra- tion Officer that the new names should be included in the electoral roll. The fact of the matter seems to be that the notifications of the 4th April came too late for being acted upon before the dead-line, which was the 5th. The red tape moved slowly, the due date expired and then every one awoke to the necessity of curing the infirmity by hurrying with the implementation of the notifications. But it was too late and the law had already put its seal on the elec- toral roll as it existed on the 5th April. It could not be touched thereafter, until the completion of the election. The entry at Serial No. 33 in the letter, Ex. M, on which the appellant relies to show that orders were issued on the 5th itself for inclusion of new names in the elector- al roll is ambiguous and relates, in all probability, to the superseded list of May 5, 1971. The Assistant District Election Officer who is the author of the letter was not examined in the case and Shri Bose to whom the letter was addressed has admitted very fairly that he is "doubtful about serial No. 33" in Ex. M. Coupled with these facts is the evidence of witnesses from the Government Printing Press showing that the notifi- cation, Ex. 10, by which the appointment of new members was made was printed and published on April 7, 1972. Evidently, there was inadequate response to the urgency of the proces- sual matters governing the electoral process. We must, however, make it clear in fairness to Shri Durga Prasad and Shri Bose, that neither of them is to be blamed for non-inclusion of the names in the electoral roll within the appointed time. They acted with the promptitude possible in the circumstances and the mishap occurred mainly because of the last-minute decision of the Government to cancel the previous notification and to issue a new one in its place. The new notification, Ex. 10, was lacking in essential particulars and in transposing some of the not so easily identifiable names of new members to the electoral roll, whether it was done on the 6th, 7th or later, the Electoral Officers did the best of a bad bargain. We see no substance in the argument that since the new names have found their way into the electoral roll, the entries are conclusive of the right of those members to vote at the election and accordingly, the Court has no power or jurisdiction to go behind the entries and inquire into their validity. In support of this argument the appellant's counsel relies principally on section 62(1) of the Represen- tation of the People Act, 1951 which provides that "No person who is not, and except as expressly provided by this Act, every person who is, for the time being entered in the electoral roll of any constituency shall be entitled to vote in that constituency." This sub-section may be split up into. two parts so as to make its meaning and intendment clear. It provides, in the first ..place, that a person Who is not entered in an electoral roll of a constituency shall not be entitled to vote in 749 that constituency. Secondly it provides that, except as expressly provided by the Act, every person who is for the time being entered in the electoral roll of any constituency shall be entitled to vote in that constituency. It is implicit in these provisions that the name of the person who claims to be entitled to vote in a constituency must have been entered in the electoral roll of that particular con- stituency in accordance with law. Section 23(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950 provides that no amendment, transposition or deletion of any entry shall be made and no direction for the inclusion of a name in the electoral roll of a constituency shall be given after the last date for making nominations for an election in that constituency and before the completion of the election. If the name of a person is entered in the electoral roll in violation of the mandate contained in this section, he can have no right to vote by reason merely of the entitlement conferred by section 62(1) of the Act of 1951. Putting it briefly, the words "for the time being entered in the elec- toral roll" in section 62( 1 ) of the Act of 1951 must be taken to mean "for the time being entered in the electoral roll in accordance with law."

Learned counsel for the appellant invited our attention to a decision of this Court in Kabul Singh v. Kundan Singh & Ors. (1) which says that in view of section 30 of the Act of 1950, entries found in the electoral roll are final and that no civil court has jurisdiction to entertain or adjudicate upon any question as to whether any person is or is not entitled to be registered in an electoral roll for a con- stituency or to question the legality of any action taken by or under the authority of an Electoral Registration Officer or of any decision given by any authority appointed under the Act for the revision of any such roll. In B.M. Ramaswa- my v. B.M. Krishnamurthy and Ors.(2) also this Court had come to the conclusion that the finality of the electoral roll cannot be challenged in a proceeding in which the validity of the election is questioned. These decisions cannot assist the appellant for two reasons. Firstly, the question which arises for consideration before us is not whether any one or more of the 40 members whose names are included in Ex. 10 are entitled to be registered in the electoral roll. The question is, assuming that they are so entitled, were their named entered in the roll within the time limited by law? Secondly, the legality of the action taken by the Electoral Registration Officer in entering the new names in the roll after the expiry of the last date for making nominations, was in issue before High Court in the Election Petition itself filed by the appellant, under section 81 of the Act of 1951, Section 30(b) of the Act of 1950 cannot affect the jurisdiction of the High Court, while dealing with an election petition, to set aside an election on the grounds mentioned in section 100(1) of the Act of 1951, one of which is that the result of the election was materially affected by the improper reception, refusal or rejection of any vote. There is a clear distinction between a challenge to the right of a voter to be registered in an electoral roll and the jurisdiction of an authority appoint- ed under the Act to enter a name in the electoral roll. That jurisdiction has perforce to be exercised. (1) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 845. (2) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 479.

750

consistently with the provisions of the law governing the election and in case there is failure to do so, the action of the officer would be open to challenge on the ground of want of jurisdiction. If, as here, the electoral roll is amended after the time-limit set down in section 23(3) of the Act of 1950, the amendment would be without jurisdiction conferring no right to vote on the persons whose names are thus included in the roll. As held by this Court in Baidya- nath Panjiar v. Sitaram Mahto & Ors., C) the provision contained in section 23 (3) is mandatory not merely because of the language employed in that sub-section but more so in view of the purpose behind the particular provision. The sub-section does not deal with any mode or procedure in the matter of registering voters. It interdicts the concerned officer from interfering with the electoral process under the prescribed circumstances. Therefore, when there is a breach of section 23(3), the question is not of an irregu- lar exercise of power but of the lack of power itself. It is thus clear that the Election Commission of India was within its rights in withdrawing the polling booth at the Dumra Committee office in order that the new members may not vote at the election. The reason which weighed with the Election Commission were evidently different but its ulti- mate decision can seek its justification in what we have stated above. It is unfortunate that the existing 40 members of the Committee also were prevented from voting but they did not complain of the deprivation of their franchise, probably because they thought that their names, in any case, were deleted from the roll on the 5th itself. It is a sad reflection that the sitting members of the Dumra Committee should have been dismembered on the eve of the elections, apparently without rhyme or reason. The State Government undoubtedly possesses the power under section 389(c) of the Bihar and Orissa Municipal Act, 1922, to make appointments to the Notified Area Committees but that power, it ought to be remembered, must be exercised' for carrying out the purposes of that Act, not for defeating them. The issuance of the two notifications on the penulti- mate day, the feverish activity following in their wake and the unseemly haste and hurry with which the enrolment of new members was attempted to be rushed through on the eventful evening of the 5th April lend great weight to the contention of respondent 1's counsel that the cancellation of the old members and their replacement by the new ones was motivated by considerations foreign to the good governance of the Area Committee. We feel greatly uneasy that local machinations should have eventually led in this case to a denial of the valuable right of franchise to the whole body of 40 members who constituted the Area Committee. Such occurrences, we hope, will not happen once too often. If they do, the power of the State Governments to make appointments to Area Com- mittees will itself become suspect, sapping thereby the faith of the people in the working of what are believed to be the nurseries of democracies.

That leaves the second of the two contentions to be considered, namely, that respondent s election is vitiated because he attempted to (1) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 839.

751

bribe the voters Sri Narain Prasad and Ram Swarath Raut. Having considered the evidence of these two witnesses who are respectively P.Ws. 11 and 71 and the evidence of the appellant himself, it seems to us impossible to accept the allegation of bribery. The two witnesses, P.Ws. 11 and 71, are members of a local authority and it is unlikely that an attempt would be made to bribe them. In the absence of any evidence of unimpeachable nature and particularly in the absence of any contemporaneous complaint in regard to the allegation of bribery, it would be unsafe to accept the bare word of the appellant and his witnesses on such a serious charge. The charge of bribery is quasicriminal in nature and in a series of cases this Court has held that such a charge must be proved not by a mere preponderance,of proba- bilities but beyond a reasonable doubt. That proof is tacking here. Besides, the High Court has considered the evidence on the question of bribery fully and carefully and we do not see any reason for departing from our established practice that, except for substantial reasons, this Court will not embark upon a detailed assessment of oral evidence. In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs in favour of respondent 1.

	P.H.P.					       Appeal	dis-
	missed.
	752