17 September 1974
Supreme Court
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BABUBHAI MULJIBHAI PATEL Vs NANDLAL KHODIDAS BAROT & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1707 of 1973


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PETITIONER: BABUBHAI MULJIBHAI PATEL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: NANDLAL KHODIDAS BAROT & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/09/1974

BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH KRISHNAIYER, V.R.

CITATION:  1974 AIR 2105            1975 SCR  (2)  71  1974 SCC  (2) 706  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1988 SC2114  (1)

ACT: Constitution  of  India, 1950-Art. 226-Nature and  scope  of jurisdiction of the High Court-Whether the High Court  could decide  writ petitions on affidavits-Whether the High  Court should   call  all  the  deponents  for   cross-examination- Difference  between  a motion of no confidence  and  censure motion.

HEADNOTE: A  vote  of  no confidence was moved by  respondent  no.   1 against the appellant    who was the elected President of  a Municipality.  The appellant’s party claimed that the motion was  lost  while the respondent no. 1 claimed  that  it  was carried.   Since  the appellant did not  vacate  his  office respondent no. 1 filed a writ petition under article 226  of the  Constitution.  Before the High Court a number of  affi- davits  had  been filed on behalf of the appellant  and  the respondent.    After   cross-examining  six   persons.   for respondent  and  two for the appellant the High  Court  held that the appellant had ceased to be the President. On  appeal  to this Court it was contended (1) that  as  the dispute  between the parties involved questions of fact  the High  Court should have referred the parties to  a  separate suit,  (2) that the High Court should have permitted  cross- examination  of  all  deponents,  (3)  that  as  the  cross- examination  of  only  a  few  of  the  deponents  had  been permitted  the  affidavits  of others who  were  not  cross- examined could not be taken into consideration; (4) that the High  Court  was  wrong  in  relying  upon  the  version  of respondent  no.   1 that one of the councillors  who  was  a supporter  of the appellant had supported the motion  of  no confidence;  (5)  that the councillors had to stick  to  the ground specified in the notice and could not depart from  it in passing the motion of no confidence. Dismissing the appeal, HELD  :  (1) (a).  The appellant could not be heard  to  say that the Court should have relegated respondent no. 1 to the remedy  of a suit.  Had the respondent no.  1 been  directed to  seek his remedy by way of a suit the relief  secured  by

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him  would have been wholly illusory because by the time  he would  succeed in the litigation, the term of the office  of the President would have either already expired or be  about to expire.  The appellant in that event would have continued as  the  President of the Municipality even  though  he  had ceased  to enjoy the confidence of the requisite  number  of councillors.  The entire concept of a democratic institution would thus have been set at naught. [79H; 8OB-C] (b)In  a  petition  under  Art. 226  the  High  Court  has jurisdiction to try issues, both of fact and law.  The words "as far as it can be made applicable" occurring in s. 141 of the  Code of Civil Procedure make it clear that in  applying the various provisions of the Code to proceedings other than those of a suit, the court must take into account the nature of  those proceedings and the relief sought.  The object  of article 226 is to provide a quick and inexpensive remedy  to aggrieved  parties.  Power has consequently been  vested  in the High Courts to issue orders: or writs.  If the procedure of  a  suit had also to be adhered to in the  case  of  writ petitions   the  entire  purpose  of  having  a  quick   and inexpensive remedy would be defeated.  A writ petition under article  226  is essentially different from a  suit  and  it would  be  incorrect  to  assimilate  and  incorporate   the procedure of a suit into the proceedings of a petition under article  226.   The  High  Court is  not  deprived  of  this jurisdiction  to  entertain  a petition  under  article  226 merely  because  in considering the  petitioner’s  right  of relief, questions of fact may fall to be determined. [80D-G]                              72 Gunwant  Kaur  v. Bhatinda Municipality A.I.R. 1970  SC  802 relied on. (2)It is difficult to accede to this contention.  Normally writ petitions, are decidedon  the basis  of  affidavits. In some cases, however, where it is not possible for a court to arrive at a definite conclusion on account of there being affidavits  of  either  side  containing  ’allegations   and counter-allegations  it would not only be desirable  but  in the interest of justice, it is the duty also of the court to summon  a deponent for cross-examination in order to  arrive at  the  truth.   The fact that  the  court  permits  cross- examination of some of the deponents in a petition does  not warrant  the proposition that the court is bound  to  permit crossexamination of each and everyone of the deponents  whom a party wishes to cross,examine. [81C-D] Barium Chemicals Ltd. & Anr v. The Company Law Board &  ors. [1966] Supp.  S.C.R. 311 on p. 353, referred to. In  the  present case the discretion exercised by  the  High Court  in  selecting for cross-examination  those  deponents whom  it considered to be crucial was proper and  judicious. No  prejudice  was  caused  to any of  the  parties  by  the procedure adopted by the High Court. [82A-B] (3)From the fact that the High Court had permitted  cross- examination  of only some deponents it did not  follow  that the High Court was precluded from taking into  consideration the affidavits of other deponents.  Order permitting  cross- examination of some of the deponents did not have the effect of   obliterating  from  record  the  affidavits  of   other deponents.   There is nothing wrong in the approach  of  the High  Court in relying upon the affidavits of deponents  who were  not  cross-examined  on a  conspectus  of  the  entire circumstances of the case. 182H] (4)The submission must be rejected.  It may be a matter of mournful   reflection   but   all  the  same   it   is   the acknowledgment  of  a stark reality that there has  been  in recent years in the case of some elected representatives  so

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much  erosion of moral values that they feel no  compunction in  repeatedly  changing their loyalty  and  shifting  their allegiance  from  one  party  leader  to  the  other.   Such representatives  have a pliable conscience  plainly  because they  succumb  to III kinds of pressures and  yield  to  all kinds  of temptations.  They bring a touch of melodrama  and the  kaleidoscopic  nature of the local political  scene  is quite  often a reflection of the sombre activities of  these representatives.   Against the backdrop of  such  activities there is nothing surprising or unusual in the conduct of the Councillor, [83H] (5)There  is  no imperative requirement in the case  of  a motion  of  no confidence that it should be passed  on  some particular  ground.  There is nothing in the language of  s. 36  of  the  Gujarat  Municipalities  Act  which  makes   it necessary  to specify a ground when passing a motion  of  no confidence  against the President.  Though according to  the form prescribed the ground has to be mentioned, it does  not follow that the ground must also be specified when a  motion of  no  confidence is actually passed against  a  President. [86A-B] There is a difference between a motion of no confidence  and a,  censure motion.  While it, is necessary in the  case  of censure  motion to set out the ground or charge on which  it is  based,  a  motion of no confidence need not  set  out  a ground  or charge.  A vote of censure presupposes  that  the persons  censured  have been guilty of some  impropriety  or lapse  by  act  or  omission.   It  may,  therefore,  become necessary to specify the impropriety or lapse while moving a vote of censure.  No such consideration arises when a motion of no confidence is moved. [66C] Practice & Procedure of Parliament 2nd Edition, by Kaul  and Shakdher, p.   591 referred to. Krishma lyer, J It  acts enormously to inconvenience, expense and  delay  to insist  on oral evidence for proof of every little  relevant fact in judicial proceedings by suit or writ. Faith in  viva voice  examination  tested by severe  cross-examination  has sometimes 73 been reduced to a legal superstitious.  While screening  the veracity of glib versions on vital matters of controversy by telling cross-examination in court is necessary, many facts. either  formal, non-controversal or well-established  other- wise, may well be proved by affidavit evidence.  In a  civil case reliance upon statements made before the police is  not merely irrelevant but throws up suspicion because the police had  no business to record any statement, as the High  Court has it self pointed out. [819E-F; 90A]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1707 of 1973. Appeal  by Special Leave from the Judgment and  Order  dated 9th October 1973 of the Gujarat High Court in Spl.  C. Appl. No. 808 of 1973. M.P.  Amin,  Piyush  Amin, P.  H.  Parekh,  S.  Bhandare, Matinju Jaitley and Bhandare Parekh & Co. for the appellant. Respondent No. 1 appeared in person. Vimal Dave and Kailash Mehta for respondent No. 2. R. H. Dhebar and M. N. Shrofj for respondent No. 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Khanna J. Krishna Iyer J. gave a separate Opinion.

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KHANNA,   J.  On  a  petition  under  article  226  of   the Constitution  of  India  filed  by  Nandlal  Khodidas  Barot respondent  No.  1 the Gujarat High Court issued a  writ  of certiorari  and  quashed  order dated June 9,  1973  of  the Collector  Mehsana,  respondent No. 3, whereby it  had  been held   that  the  no  confidence  motion  against   Babubhai Muljibhai  Patel appellant as the President of  Kalol  Muni- cipality  had  not  been validly  passed.   The  High  Court further  held that the appellant had ceased to be  President of that municipality since May 10, 1973 and that since  that date he was usurper of that office.  A writ of mandamus  was also   issued  directing  the  appellant  to  refrain   from functioning  as  the President of  the  Kalol  Municipality. Direction was further issued to the Collector to hold  fresh elections   to   the  post  of  the   President   of   Kalol Municipality.   The  appellant  has  filed  this  appeal  by special leave against the above judgment of the Gujarat High Court. Kalol  Municipality in district Mehsana has 25  councillors. The appellant was elected President of the said municipality with  effect  from  November  1,  1970.   The  term  of  the President  is  for a period of five years.  On  November  1, 1972  respondent  No.  1 moved a  motion  of  no  confidence against the appellant.  Sixteen councillors belonging to the grout)  of  respondent No. 1 voted for the  motion  and  two councillors  belonging to the grout) of the appellant  voted against  it. The Vice President of the municipality who  was in  the  chair declared that the no  confidence  motion  had failed  for want of two,thirds majority of the total  number of  councillors.   In  this view 17 councillors  out  of  25 constituted the requisite two-thirds majority 74 contemplated  by  section 36 of the  Gujarat  Municipalities Act, 1963 (Gujarat Act No. 34 of 1964) which reads as  under :               "36.    Motion  of  no  confidence.  (1)   Any               councillor  of a municipality who  intends  to               move  a  motion of no confidence  against  its               president  or  vice)-.president  may  give   a               notice  thereof,  in  such  form  as  may  be,               prescribed  by  the State Government,  to  the               municipality.   If the notice is supported  by               not less than one third of the total number of               the then councillors of the municipality,  the               motion may be moved.               (2)If  the motion is carried by a  majority               of  not  less  than two thirds  of  the  total               number   of  the  then  councillors   of   the               municipality,  the president or, as  the  case               may be, the vice-president shall cease to hold               office  after a period of three days from  the               date on which the motion is carried unless  he               has earlier resigned; and thereupon the office               held by him shall be declared to be vacant.               (3)Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               this  Act  or the rules made  thereunder,  the               president,  or as the case may be,  the  vice-               president shall not preside over a meeting  in               which a motion of no confidence against him is               discussed;  but  he shall have  the  right  to               speak  in  or  otherwise  take  part  in   the               proceedings  of  such meeting  (including  the               right to vote)." A  writ petition was then filed by respondent No. 1  in  the Gujarat  High  Court  to  challenge  the  above  ruling.   A

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Division Bench of the High Court after referring to  section 36 of the Act held as per judgment dated April 2, 1973  that a motion of no confidence could be said to have been carried in case of a municipality consisting of 25   councillors  if at least 17 councillors voted for such a motion. On  April 21, 1973 a requisition signed by  16  councillors, including  respondent  No. 1, was sent  to  the.   President Kalol  Municipality for convening a special general  meeting of  the municipality to consider a motion of  no  confidence against the appellant as the President of that  municipality on the following ground :               "Your  act  of  writing  false  and  concocted               proceedings  of  the  meeting  dated  27-3,-73               amounts to the crime of forgery and is  highly               unbefitting  your status as President  of  the               Municipality." In  accordance with the above requisition, a meeting of  the Kalol  Municipality was convened for May 6, 1973 at  6  p.m. There  are conflicting versions (if what transpired in  that meeting.   According to the appellant, 13  councillors  were present in that meeting.  One of them was the appellant  and the  other was Chandulal Chhotalal Barot, Vice President  of the municipality, who also belongs to the 75 group  of  the appellant.  Eleven others  belonging  to  the opposite group were present in that meeting.  As the meeting was  to  consider  a motion of  no  confidence  against  the President, Chandulal Chhotalal Barot Vice President presided over  the meeting.  The Vice President in the course of  his ruling  observed  that the ground which had  been  given  in support of the motion of to confidence was fabricated, false and without truth.  It was further observed in that ruling :               "I, therefore, rule out the cause contained in               this  motion  and declare that  they  are  not               relevant  to the present motion.   However,  I               place  this  for voting  without  there  being               existence of any cause." After reading out the ruling, the Vice President recorded  a note in respect of the minutes of that meeting and the  same reads as under :               "The  aforesaid  ruling was read over  in  the               meeting  and  in taking votes  on  the  motion               without  the aforesaid point, no  body  showed               hand  in favour of the motion and  there  were               two  votes against the motion, viz., (1)  Shri               B.  M.  Patel and (2) C. C. Barot.   As  there               were  not legally sufficient number of  votes,               i.e.,  17 votes in favour of the  motion,  the               said no confidence motion is not passed and is               declared to have been rejected.               Dated 6-5-1973 time 6.15 p.m.               On today’s business of the meeting being  over               as above, the meeting is dissolved and  having               declared accordingly in the Board, the members               dispersed.               Date : 6-5-1973               Time: 6.15 p.m.               Sd/- Barot Chandulal               Chhotalal, Vice-President,               Kalol Municipality.,, As against the above version, according to respondent No. 1, 19 councillors were present in that meeting.  They  included the  appellant.   Vice President Barot and  two  councillors Kantilal  Chhaganlal Shah and Vithalbhai Somabhai Patel,  to whom reference would be made hereafter.  What transpired  in

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that meeting according to respondent No. 1 was given in  the note  of  councillor  N.S. Parmar who was  alleged  to  have presided  over  the  meeting  after  the  walk  out  of  the appellant and the Vice President.  The note of N. S.  Parmar reads as under               "Today a Special General Meeting was called to               discuss a motion of no confidence against  the               President  Shri  B.  M.  Patel.   As  the   no               confidence motion was to be discussed  against               the  President  Shri  B. M.  Patel,  the  Vice               President, Shri C. C. Barot had presided  over               the meeting.  He (the               76               Vice-President)  directed  the  Chief  Officer               Shri R. D. Barot as well as the Secretary Shri               Thakkar  not  to  write  the  proceedings   of               today’s meeting in the proceeding book.               I  shall  make  a  note  in  the  rough  sheet               myself’.               The  member raised a protest against this  and               the  protest  having become severe  and  there               being  circumstances enabling the  meeting  to               pass  a  motion of no confidence  as  per  the               required  legal  two-thirds majority,  by  the               Chairman, Shri C. C. Barot, and the  President               Shri  B.  M.  Patel have  walked  out  of  the               Council Hall.  The other remaining members are               present.  The chairman of today’s meeting Shri               C.  C. Barot has not taken on hand the  motion               of  no  confidence for discussion  in  today’s               meeting.   He has also not taken votes of  the               members as per law on the motion.  There being               a  position  of the motion  of  no  confidence               being carried by the required legal  majority,               I   propose  the  name  of  Shri   Narayanbhai               Sadabhai  Parmar to preside over  the  meeting               and  to  go  ahead with the  business  of  the               meeting.               Proposed,by Girish M. Bhatt                                    and               Seconded by Shah Rameshchandra Ramanlal.               The   above   motion   being   supported    by               unanimously 17 members I preside over  today’s               meeting and ’Lake on hand the business of  the               agenda.                                    Sd.                N.S. PARMAR, Presiding Authority,                KALOL MUNICIPALITY."               Later on May 6, 1973 Vice President Barot sent               a telegram to the Collector giving his version               of  the meeting.  Report was also sent on  the               same  day,  i.e. May 6, 1973 by R.  D.  Barot,               Chief   Officer  Kalol  Municipality  to   the               Collector  stating that a resolution had  been               passed  against the appellant as President  of               the  municipality.   It  was  stated  that   a               vacancy in the office of the President of  the               municipality  had arisen and election to  that               office be held.               The  appellant  as  the  President  of   Kalol               Municipality   convened  a  meeting   of   the               municipality  for May 18, 1973.  A day  before               that  on May 17, 1973 respondent No.  1  filed               the present petition under article 226 of  the               Constitution in the Gujarat High Court praying

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             for  the  issue of a writ of quo  warrant  for               ousting  the appellant from the office of  the               President  of the Kalol Municipality  and  for               declaring  that  the said  office  had  fallen               vacant in view of the motion of no  confidence               having been passed on May 6, 1973.  Prayer was               also  made that the appellant be directed  not               to preside over the meeting fixed for May  18,               1973.               77               During the pendency of the petition before the               High Court, the’ Collector of Mehsana to  whom               conflicting versions of the proceedings of the               meeting  of May 6, 1973 had been sent held  an               inquiry and, as per order dated June 9,  1973,               came   to  the  conclusion   that   Councillor               Vithalbhai  Somabhai Patel was net present  in               the meeting held on May 6, 1973.  Reliance  in               this connection was placed upon the  affidavit               filed by Patel that he was not present in that               meeting.  The Collector also took into account               the  fact  that  the  signatures  of  the   17               councilors  who were alleged to be present  in               that  meeting had not been obtained.   It  was               further   observed  that  after  the   meeting               presided  over  by  the  Vice  President   had                             terminated,  no meeting could be  lega lly  held               under  the chairmanship of N. S. Parmar.   The               concluding part of the order of the  Collector               reads as under :               "ln view of what is discussed above I come  to               the conclusion that the alleged no  confidence               motion against the President Shri B. M.  Patel               has   not  been  validly  passed.   The   very               validity   of  the  meeting  held  under   the               chairmanship of Shri N. S. Parmar is  doubtful               and  it is beyond doubt that Shri V. S.  Patel               did  not  attend and vote fear  no  confidence               motion  and  thus the alleged motion  was  not               supported and voted by more than 2/3rd of  the               total   number   of   councillors   of   Kalcl               Municipality, the office of the President  has               not,  therefore,  fallen vacant and  hence  no               action  requires to be taken on  communication               of Shri R. D. Barot." After  the  Collector  had made the above  order,  the  writ petition  filed  by respondent No. 1 was amended  so  as  to include also a prayer for he quashing of the above order. The  above  writ  petition was resisted  by  the  appellant. During  the  pendency  of the writ  petition,  a  number  of affidavits were filed on behalf of respondent No. 1 as  well as  on behalf of the appellant.  The number of  persons  who filed affidavits on behalf of the appellant has been  stated to be 27 and of those who did so on behalf of respondent No. to be 40.  The affidavits filed on behalf of respondent  No. 1  included those of 16 councillors of  Kalol  Municipality, while those filed on behalf of the appellant included  those of  nine  councillors  respondent  No.  1  also  filed   the affidavit  of Babubhai Dahyabha Chamar, local  correspondent of   Gujarat  Samachar,  a  daily  of  Ahmedabad.    Khamar, according  to  respondent No. 1, was also  present  in  that meeting.   On September 19, 1973 the learned Judges  of  the High Court passed an interlocutory order for the  production of  six  persons  rho  had filed  affidavits  on  behalf  of

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respondent No. 1 and two persons Who had filed affidavits on behalf  of the appellant for cross-examinaon.  The  material part of that order reads as under :               "We  have heard this petition which runs  into               about  700  pages.  We have noticed  from  the               affidavits,  on  record that there  are  sharp               divisions amongst the councillors of the Kalol               Municipality,  amongst the citizens of  Kalol,               amongst    the   employees   of   the    Kalol               Municipality and even amongst the               78               press reporters.  In order therefore that  the               situation may be cleared and more  elucidation               of the problem with which we are concerned may               be had on record it is necessary that some  of               the   principal  deponents.  who   have   made               affidavits in this case on either side, should               be  cross-examined by the opposite party.  (1)               Husseinmiya  Hasammiya  Sayed,  (2)   Revabhai               Lalabhai Parmar, (3) Babulal Somchand Shah, (4)               Shantiben  Ramachandra  Barot,  (5)   Kantilal               Chhaganlal  Shah  and (6)  Babubhai  Dahyabhai               Khamar  have made affidavits in favour of  the               petitioner.   The first five, persons are  the               councillors  of  the Kalol  Municipality  who,               according  to the petitioner, were present  at               the  meeting of the Municipality held  on  6th               May  1973  when  motion  of  the  Municipality               against  the  Chairman respondent  No.  1  was               moved.  According to the petitioner, they  had               voted for the no confidence motion.  According               to the respondent No. 1, they were absent and,               therefore,  they  could not vote  for  the  no               confidence   motion.    It   is,    therefore,               necessary  to subject those five witnesses  to               cross-examination by the respondent No. 1. The               sixth  person Babubhai Dahyabhai  Khamar,  the               local  correspondent  of  ’Gujarat   Samachar’               daily of Ahmedabad, claims in his affidavit to               have  entered  the Council Hall of  the  Kalol               Municipality   and   to   have   watched   the               proceedings.    He  is  an  independent   man.               Affidavits  have  been made on behalf  of  the               respondent  No.  1  to show that  he  was  not               allowed  by the police to enter the  Municipal               Hall and to watch the proceedings.  If he  had               really watched the proceedings of the  meeting               of the Kalol Municipality on 6th May 1973, his               evidence would go a long way in helping us  to               decide the issue before us.  It is, therefore,               necessary  that  he  should  be  subjected  to               cross-examination by the respondent No. 1. We,               therefore,  direct that the  petitioner  shall               produce the aforesaid six persons before  this               Court  at 11 O’clock on 20-9-1973  for  cross-               examination by the respondent No. 1.               It   is  the  case  of  the  petitioner   that               Vithalbhai  Somabhai  Patel, a  councillor  of               Kalol  Municipality, was present at  the  said               meeting  of  the Kalol  Municipality  and  had               voted   for   the   no   confidence    motion.               Vithalbhai Somabhai Patel denies that fact and               also  denies his presence at that meeting  al-               together.               Candulal Chhotalal Barot, Vice-Chairman of the

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             Kalol  Municipality  had  presided  over   the               aforesaid  meeting of the  Kalol  Municipality               and,  according to him, no  confidence  motion               was  not carried because two votes  were  cast               against  it and none had voted in its  favour.               He  is  a  material  witness.   He  has   made               affidavit  in favour of the respondent No.  1.               Interests  of justice require that  Vithalbhai               Smabhai  Patel and Chandulal  Chhotalal  Barot               who  have  made affidavits in  favour  of  the               respondent No. 1 should be offered by                79               the respondent No. 1 for cross-examination  by               the  petitioner.  We, therefore,  direct  that               the  respondent  No.  1  shall  produce  these               witnesses  at  11 O’clock on  20th  September,               1973,   for   being  cross-examined   by   the               petitioner." As mentioned earlier, the petition filed by respondent No. 1 was  ultimately accepted by the High Court.  The High  Court in  the course of its judgment first went into the  question whether  the Collector had jurisdiction to hold the  inquiry to  find  out  whether the no  confidence  motion  had  been carried  against  the appellant and whether vacancy  in  the post of the President of the Kalol Municipality had  arisen. It  was held that the Collector had no jurisdiction to  make such  inquiry  and record the impugned order.   Order  dated June  9, 1973 was, therefore, held to be void and liable  to be  quashed.   The High Court then went  into  the  question whether  the order of the Collector was void on  the  ground that  it  had been made in violation of  the  principles  of natural  justice.   The finding of the High  Court  in  this respect  was that there was not even a semblance of  natural justice  in  the  inquiry which had been  conducted  by  the Collector  and the same was vitiated by flagrant  breach  of all principles of natural justice as the interested  persons had  not  been heard.  The High Court  then  considered  the material  which had been brought on the file, including  the evidence of deponents who had been cross-examined, and  came to  the conclusion that 17 councillors had voted for the  no confidence motion against the appellant in the meeting  held on  May  6,  1973.   In the result  the  writ  petition  was accepted and directions were given as mentioned above. It  may  be mentioned that this Court initially  stayed  the operation  of the order of the High Court pending notice  of motion.  Subsequently, as per order dated November 19,  1973 the  interim stay order was vacated.  It was, however,  made clear that fresh election to ’the office of the President of the municipality would be held subject to the result of this appeal.  A meeting was thereafter held and respondent No.  1 was  elected  President  of the  municipality.   At  present respondent  No.  1  is  acting  as  the  President  of   the municipality subject to the result of this appeal. On  behalf of the appellant his learned counsel,  Mr.  Amin, has at the outset contended that as the dispute between  the parties  in this case involved questions of fact,  the  High Court should not have entertained the writ petition filed by respondent  No. 1 but should have referred the parties to  a separate suit.  This contention, in our opinion, is not well founded.   No plea was admittedly taken in the return  filed on  behalf oft the appellant in reply to the  writ  petition that respondent No. 1 should be directed to seek his  remedy by  means of a suit because of disputed questions  of  fact. In  the  absence  of  such a plea,  the  appellant,  in  our opinion,  cannot be heard to say that the High Court  should

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have  relegated  respondent No. 1 to the remedy of  a  suit. Apart  from that we find that the term of the  appellant  as the  President  of the municipality would  have  expired  in 1975.   The trial of a suit, in the very nature  of  things, would  have  taken  considerable time.   Appeal  and  second appeal would have also been filed by the 80 unsuccessful  party in the case.  Had respondent No. 1  been directed  to  seek his remedy by way of a suit,  the  relief secured by respondent No. 1 even if he had succeeded in  the suit  would  have been wholly illusory because by  the  time respondent  No. 1 would succeed in the litigation, the  term of  the  office of the President would have  either  already expired or be about to expire.  The appellant in that  event would  have continued as the President of  the  municipality even  though  he had ceased to enjoy the confidence  of  the requisite number of councillors and they had passed a motion of  no  confidence  against him.  The entire  concept  of  a democratic  institution would thus have been set at  naught. We  agree with the observations of the High Court  that  the purpose  underlying the petition would have been  completely defeated in case respondent No. 1 had been relegated to  the ordinary  remedy of a suit and that such remedy was  neither adequate nor efficacious. It  is not necessary for this case to express an opinion  on the  point as whether the various provisions of the Code  of Civil Procedure apply to petitions under article 226 of  the Constitution.   Section 141 of the Code, to which  reference has  been  made, makes it clear that the provisions  of  the Code   in  regard  to  suits  shall  be  followed   in   all preccecdings in any court of civil jurisdiction as far as it can be made applicable.  The words "as far as it can be made applicable"  make  it clear that, in  applying  the  various provisions of the Code to proceedings other than those of  a suit,  the court must take into account the nature of  those proceedings  and the relief sought.  The object  of  article 226  is  to  provide  a  quick  and  inexpensive  remedy  to aggrieved  parties.  Power has consequently been  vested  in the  High  Courts  to  issue to  any  person  or  authority, including  in appropriate cases any government,  within  the jurisdiction  of the High Court, orders or writs,  including writs in the nature of habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, quo  warrant  and  certiorari.   It is  plain  that  if  the procedure of a suit had also to be adhered to in the case of writ  petitions,  the entire purpose of having a  quick  and inexpensive remedy would be defeated.  A writ petition under article  226,  it  needs to be  emphasised,  is  essentially different  from  a  suit  and  it  would  be  incorrect   to assimilate and incorporate the procedure of a suit into  the proceedings of a petition under article 226.  The High Court is not deprived of its jurisdiction to entertain a  petition under   article  226  merely  because  in  considering   the petitioner’s right of relief, questions of fact may fall  to be  determined.   In a petition under article 226  the  High Court  has jurisdiction to try issues both of fact and  law. Exercise of the jurisdiction is no doubt discretionary,  but the   discretion  must  be  exercised  on   sound   judicial principles.   When the petition raises complex questions  of fact,  which  may  for  their  determination  require   oral evidence to be taken, and on that account the High Court  is of  the  view that the dispute should not  appropriately  be tried in a writ petition, the High Court may decline to  try a  petition  see Gunwant Kaur v.  Bhatinda  Municipality(1). If,   however,  on  consideration  of  the  nature  of   the controversy, the High Court decides, as in the present case,

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that it (1)  A.I.R. 1970 S. C. 802.  81 It   should  go  into a disputed question of  fact  and  the discretion  exercised by the High Court appears to be  sound and in conformity with judicial principles, this Court would not  interfere  in appeal with the order made  by  the  High Court in this respect. It  has  next been argued by Mr. Amin that as an  order  was made by the High Court permitting cross-examination of scene of  the persons who had filed affidavits in the  proceedings before  it,  the High Court should not have  restricted  the right  of  cross-examination to only eight  of  the  persons mentioned  in its order dated September 19, 1973 but  should have permitted cross-examination of all such deponents  whom any party wanted to cross-examine.  We are unable to  accede to this contention.  Normally Writ petitions are decided  on the  basis of affidavits.  In some cases, however, where  it is  not  possible  for the court to  arrive  at  a  definite conclusion  on account of there being affidavits  of  either side  containing  allegations  and  counter-allegations,  it would  not only be desirable but in the interest of  justice the duty also of the court to summon a deponent for  cross.- examination   in   order  to  arrive  at  the   truth   (see observations of Shelat J. in Barium Chemical’s- Ltd. &  Anr. v. The Company Law Board & Ors.(1). The fact that the  court permits cross-examination of some of the deponents in a writ petition does not warrant the proposition that the court  is bound  to permit cross-examination of each and every one  of the  deponents whom a party wishes to cross-examine.   In  a case  like  the present where as many as  40  persons  filed affidavits  in  support of one party and  27  persons  filed affidavits in support of the opposite party, the High Court, in  our opinion, was well justified in the exercise  of  its discretion  in selecting such persons whom it considered  to be  really important Ind crucial for the purpose  of  cross- examination.  The effect of permitting cross-examination was not  that the High Court was divested of all  direction  and control  in  the  matter and was bound to  call  for  cross- examination each and every deponent who was named by citlher party.  We have reproduced above the material part of carder dated September 19, 1973 and it would appear therefrom  that the High Court selected for cross-examination five of  those councillors who, according to respondent No. 1, were present in  the  meeting  wherein the motion of  no  confidence  was alleged  to  have  been passed but  who,  according  to  the appellant  were  not present in that  meeting.   These  five councillors  had filed affidavits in support of the case  of respondent No. 1. In addition to these five councillors, the High   Court  selected  Babubbai  Dahyabhai  Khamar,   local correspondent of Gujarat Samachar, who claimed to have  been present in the Council Hall at the time of the above meeting and  where  sent  a report about  the  proceedings  of  that meeting to the Gujarat Samachar.  From amongst the deponents who  had  filed  affidavits in support of the  case  of  the appellant.  the  High Court selected  for  cross-examination Chandulal   Chhotalal   Barot,   Vice   President   of   the municipality who, according to the appellant, presided  over that meeting as well as Councillor V. S. Patel, who  claimed that he was not present in the above meeting but who, (1) [1966] Sun. S. C. R. 311 on p. 353. L7-251 Sup.  Cl/75 82 according  to respondent No. 1, was present in that  meeting and  had supported the motion of no confidence.  Looking  to

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all  the facts of the case, we are of the opinion  that  the discretion  exercised  by the High Court  in  selecting  for cross-examination  these deponents whom it considered to  be crucial  was  proper and judicious.  No  prejudice,  in  our opinion,  was caused to any of the parties by the  procedure adopted  by the High Court.  We would therefore,  hold  that order  dated September 19, 1973 made by the High Court  does not suffer from any infirmity. Mr.  Amin then submits that the deponents called for  cross- examination   should   have   been   examined-in-chief   and thereafter   cross  examined.   The  production   of   those witnesses simply for cross-examination was not warranted  by law.  In this respect we, find that prayer which was made by the appellant in application dated September 17, 1973 was as under :               "to  order  the opponent No. 1  to  offer  for               cross-examination  Kantilal  Chhaganlal  Shah,               Lilavatiben    Kantilal    Shah,    Mahmadbhai               Badarbhai   Chauhan  and  Naranbhai   Sadabhai               Parmar and Nusenmiya Hasanmiya Saiyad who have               sworn affidavits in support of the  petitioner               or in the alternative to issue summons to them               to attend this Hon’ble Court for being  cross-               examined on behalf of the petitioner;" It  would appear from the above that all that the  appellant himself  prayed  in his application was that  the  deponents mentioned by him should be offered for cross-examination and not  that  those witnesses should be  examined-in-chief  and thereafter  cross-examined.  No grievance could,  therefore, have  been  made by the appellant if the deponents  had  not been  examined-in-chief but had been simply  cross-examined. As  things  however  are we find  that  when  the  deponents concerned  were  produced in court, they  were  examined-in- chief  and thereafter there was cross-examination.   In  the course  of their examination-in-chief the  deponents  stated about  their  having sworn their affidavits  and  about  the correctness  of the contents of those affidavits.  It  might in the circumstances have appeared to ’be unnecessary dupli- cation to ask those deponents to repeat what had been stated by them in their affidavits. We  are also not impressed by the argument of Mr. Amin  that as cross-examination of only 8 deponents had been permitted, the  affidavits of others who were not cross-examined  could not  be taken into consideration.  The High Court  permitted cross-examination  of  such of the deponents in  respect  of whom it came to the conclusion that their  cross-examination was  essential for arriving at the truth of the matter.   It did  not,  however,  follow from that  the  High  Court  was precluded  from taking into consideration the affidavits  of other  deponents.   Order permitting  cross--examination  of some   of  the-  deponents  did  not  have  the  effect   of obliterating  from record the affidavits of other  deponents and we- find nothing wrong in the approach 83 of  the  High  Court  in  relying  upon  the  affidavits  of deponents  who were not cross-examined it on  conspectus  of the entire circumstances of the case it found the  averments in those affidavits to be true. Mr. Amin has next challenged the correctness of the  finding of  the  High Court that 17 councillors  hid  supported  the motion  of no confidence.  It is submitted that the  version of he appellant regarding what transpired in the meeting  of May  6, 1973 is correct.  The High Court, according  to  the learned counsel, was in error in relying upon the version of respondent No. 1. In particular, Mr. Amin submits that V. S.

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Patel  councillor  was  not present in  that  meeting.   The presence  of  Councillor  Kantilal Chhaganlal  Shah  in  the ’meeting has also been questioned.  In this respect we  find that  the  High Court has relied upon the affidavits  of  16 councillors  who  in the course of their  affidavits  stated that  17 councillors including those councillors  themselves had  voted in the meeting held on May 6, 1973 in support  of the  motion of no confidence.  Out of those 16  councillors, 15 were admittedly in Kalol on that day.  They having signed the.  motion of no confidence, there was, in the opinion  of the High Court, no reason why they should not be present  in that  meeting.   As  regards  the  presence  of   Councillor Kantilal  Chhaganlal  Shah, the High Court relied  upon  his affidavit  wherein  he  stated that he was  present  in  the meeting  and  had  voted  in support of  the  motion  of  no confidence and found that his deposition had not been shaken in  cross-examination.   Regarding Councillor  V.  S.  Patel about  whom  the case of respondent No. 1 was  that  he  had supported  the  motion of no confidence while  that  of  the appellant  was that he was not present in the  meeting,  the High  Court observed that the material on record pointed  to the  conclusion  that  he had supported  the  motion  of  no confidence.  The High Court in this context relied upon  the version   given  by  Chief  Officer  R.D.  Barot,  who   was admittedly present in that meeting, as well as the statement of  Babulal  Dahyabhai Khamar, press  correspondent.   After having  heard  Mr. Amin at considerable length, we  find  no sufficient ground to interfere with the appraisement of  the depositions and other material on record by the High Court. Mr.  Amin, however, submits that Councillor V. S. Patel  had been supporting the appellant in the past.  Patel also filed on  May 8, 1973 an affidavit in support of the appellant  in the  course  of which he denied that he was present  in  the above  meeting  or that he had supported the  motion  of  no confidence.  It is urged that as V. S. Patel was a supporter of  the appellant it is most unlikely that he would vote  in favour of the motion of no confidence against the appellant. We  are  unable to accede to this submission.  It may  be  a matter  of  mournful reflection but all the same it  is  the acknowledgement  of a stark reality that there has  been  in recent years in the case of some elected representatives  so much  erosion of moral values that they feel no  compunction in  repeatedly  changing their loyalty  and  shifting  their allegiance  from  one  party  leader  to  the  other.   Such representatives  have a pliable conscience  plainly  because they  succumb  to all kinds of pressures and  yield  to  all kinds of temptations.      They bring a 84 touch of melodrama and the kaleidoscopic nature of the local Political  scene is quite  often a reflection of the  sombre activities  of these representatives.  Against the  backdrop of such activities we find nothing  surprising or unusual in the conduct of Councillor Patel. It  may  be mentioned that respondent No. 1 has  brought  on record  material as would indicate the  circumstances  under which  V.  S.  Patel  chose to  support  the  motion  of  no confidence.   Soon after the. decision of the  Gujarat  High Court  on April 2, 1973 that a motion of no  confidence’  to succeed  against  the President should be  supported  by  at least  17 councillors, the residents of ward No. 7 in  Kalol held a meeting.  V. S. Patel, who along with two others  had been  elected  to  the  municipality  from  that  ward,  was admittedly  present  in that meeting.  Some of  the  persons present  in that meeting, according to Patel, asked  him  to work  in  unison with the majority group which  was  led  by

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respondent  No. 1. It seems that it was as a result  of  the pressure  which  was  brought to bear  upon  Patel  in  that meeting  that  he  supported the motion  of  no  confidence. After  the meeting of May 6, 1973 Patel again seems to  have changed his mind and joined the group of the appellant. There is one important circumstance which tends to show that the  version  of  respondent  No.  1  with  regard  to  what transpired in the above meeting is nearer the truth.  In the earlier meeting which was held on November 1, 1972, a motion of no confidence against the appellant had been supported by 16  councillors.   The Gujarat High Court  by  its  judgment dated  April 2, 1973, held that the motion of no  confidence against the appellant could succeed only if it was supported by  at least 17 councillors.  In view of that- decision,  it is most unlikely that 16 councillors would have sent  notice of motion of no confidence on April 21, 1973 unless they had been  assured  of the support of a  seventeenth  councillor. Otherwise  it would have been a sheer exercise  in  futility for the 16 councillors to repeat the performance of what had taken  place  in  the  meeting  of  November  1,  1972.   We therefore  find  nothing improbable in the  stand  taken  on behalf of respondent No. 1 that V. S. Patel had pledged  his support to the motion of no confidence and that he  actually supported that motion in the meeting held on May 6, 1973. Argument  has  also been advanced that no signature  of  the councillors present were taken in the meeting held on May 6, 1973.  It is stated that respondent No. 1 had been insisting on  taking  such signatures in the past and that in  two  or three  meetings signatures of the councillors were, in  fact obtained.   The  omission  to take  the  signatures  in  the meeting  of  May  6,  1973,  according  to  Mr.  Amin,   was deliberate so that the correct number of councillors present in the meeting might not be known.  We are unable to  accept this  argument.   There  is no statutory  provision  in  the Gujarat   Municipalities   Act  which  requires   that   the signatures  of  the  members attending  a  meeting  must  be obtained.   It  is  true  that respondent  No.  1  had  been insisting 85 on  obtaining  signatures of the councillors  present  in  a meeting  but  his  plea in this respect  was  generally  not accepted.   No  signatures  were  admittedly  taken  in  the meeting  held  on  November  1,  1972  when  16  councillors supported the motion of no confidence against the appellant. It  is conceded by Mr. Amin that on two or  three  occasions when  signatures of councillors attending the  meeting  were taken, this was done at the commencement of the meeting.  As it was Vice President Barot, who initially presided over the meeting held on May 6, 1973, the responsibility to take  the signatures at the commencement of the meeting could at  the, best  be  that  of  Vice President Barot  and  not  that  of respondent No. 1. Respondent No. 1 in our opinion, cannot be penalised  for  the  omission of Vice  President  Barot  who admittedly belongs to the group of the appellant. It  has next been argued on behalf of the appellant that  a- ground  had  been specified in notice dated April  21,  1973 which  was sent by 16 councillors for convening the  meeting to consider the motion of no confidence.  The councillors in that  meeting, according to the submission, had to stick  to that  ground  and could not depart from it  in  passing  the motion  of  no  confidence.   With a view  to  show  that  a different  ground  was set up in passing the  motion  of  no confidence, our attention has been invited to the minutes of that  meeting  which when translated into  English  read  as under :

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             "Shri B. M. Patel, the President of the  Kalol               Municipality has been put to a minority  since               12th October 1972.  Since then he has not been               allowing  the Municipal Administration to  run               in   keeping  with  the  provisions  of   law.               Moreover,  in the special General  Meeting  of               the  1st  November,  1972,  a  motion  of   no               confidence was passed against Shri B. N. Patel               by 16 votes against 2 votes, but according  to               law a motion of no confidence can be passed by               two-third  votes of the total number i.e.,  17               votes and at present 17 members declare  their               no  confidence  against the President  on  the               present  motion of no confidence  against  the               President of the Kalol Municipality." The  above  contention has been controverted  by  respondent No.1  who has argued the appeal personally.  It is no  doubt true, submits respondent No. 1, that in the earlier part  of the  minutes there is a recital that the appellant  had  not been  allowing the municipal administration to  function  in accordance  with the provision* of law, the concluding  part of  the  minutes  shows that "17 members  declare  their  no confidence against the President on the present motion of no confidence".  Respondent No. 1 accordingly submits that the, ground  which  had  been specified in  the  notice  for  the meeting  was  adhered  to  when passing  the  motion  of  no confidence.    Although  the  stand  taken  on   behalf   of respondent  No.  1  in this respect does not  appear  to  be bereft  of  force, we need not express an  opinion  on  this aspect of the matter because the contention advanced by  the appellant  can be repelled on another ground,  namely,  that there  is no imperative requirement in the case of a  motion of no confidence that it should 86 be  passed on some particular ground.  There is  nothing  in the language of section 36 of the Gujarat Municipalities Act reproduced  earlier  which makes it necessary to  specify  a ground  when passing a motion of no confidence  against  the President.   It is no doubt true that according to the  form prescribed  the ground for the, motion of no confidence  has to be mentioned in the notice of intention to move a  motion of  no confidence.  It does not, however,  follow  therefrom that  the ground must also be specified when a motion of  no confidence  is actually passed against a President.   It  is pertinent  in  this  context  to observe  that  there  is  a difference  between a motion of no confidence and a  censure motion.   While  it is necessary in the case  of  a  censure motion to set out the ground or charge on which it is based, a  motion  of  no confidence need not set out  a  ground  or charge.   A  vote of censure presupposes  that  the  persons censured  have been guilty of some impropriety or  lapse  by act  or  omission.  It may, therefore, become  necessary  to specify  the  impropriety or lapse while moving  a  vote  of censure.   No such consideration arises when a motion of  no confidence is moved.  Although aground may be mentioned when passing a motion of no confidence, the existence of a ground is  not a prerequisite of a motion of no confidence.   There is no legal bar to the passing of a motion of no  confidence against  an  authority  in  the absence  of  any  charge  of impropriety  or  lapse on the part of that  authority.   The essential connotation of a no confidence motion is that  the party against whom such motion is passed has ceased to enjoy the confidence of the requisite majority of members.  We may in  the  above  context  refer to page  591  of  Practice  & Procedure  of Parliament, Second Ed. by Kaul  and  Shakdher.

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wherein it is observed as under :               "A  no-confidence  motion in  the  Council  of               Ministers is distinct from a- censure  motion.               Whereas,  a  censure motion must set  out  the               grounds or charge on which it is based and  is               moved  for the specific purpose  of  censuring               the   Government  for  certain  policies   and               actions,  a motion of no-confidence  need  not               set  out  any grounds on which  it  is  based.               Even when grounds are mentioned in the  notice               and  read out in the House, they do  not  form               part of the no-confidence motion." Mr.  Amin  has next assailed the finding of the  High  Court that  the Collector had no jurisdiction to make  an  inquiry and pass order dated June 9, 1973.  It is, in our view,  not necessary to express an opinion on this aspect of the matter as Mr. Amin has not during the course of arguments  assailed the  other  finding  of the High Court  that  the  procedure adopted by the Collector was violative of the principles  of natural justice. In  view  of this  latter  finding,  the order of the Collector dated June9,. 1973 was in any event liable to be quashed. Mr. Dhebar, whohas appeared on behalf of the Collector, has  submitted  that the Collector was not actuated  by  any oblique  motive  in passing order dated June  9,  1973.   We agree  with Mr. Dhebar that there is no cogent  material  on record to show that the Collector 87 A    was actuated by any oblique motive when he passed  that order.   The  fact  that the procedure adopted  by  him  was violative of the principles of natural justice might show an error of judgment, but from that it cannot be inferred  that the Collector was motivated by ulterior consideration. There is, in our opinion, no force in the appeal which fails and is dismissed with costs. KRISHNA IYER, J.-The social lesions on the political tissues of   our   body  politic  are  of   as   much   pathological significance,  in  this case, as the legal  issues  and  the weaknesses of the court system, thrown up by the mini-crisis in a small municipal council which forms the  subject-matter of  this case.  My learned brother Khanna, J. has  discussed the  points  of law and questions of fact  directly  arising from  the case and I am privileged to agree wholly with  his observations, reasoning and result.  Nevertheless, I  append this hesitant addendum, turning the focus on certain aspects fundamental to our system which this appeal reveals. We were told at the Bar that the case consumed eighteen long days  of  a  Division Bench of the High  Court  (the  Judges observe that counsel addressed them on the background of the case  for  about  nine hours) and we see  before  us  a  few hundred pages of judgment, although the facts are relatively few,  being  confined  to the passage  of  a  non-confidence motion, with the requisite majority, and the law limited  to a few sections of the relevant municipal statute. This  systemic  prolixity  highlights  the  need,  in   this country,  where litigation is notoriously dilatory  and  the docket  backlog in courts explosive, for  developing  better business  management  methods  in the  forensic  area,  more modern court methodology and streamlining of procedure, lest the   people  should  get  disenchanted  with   that   noble institution,  the  Judicature,  whose  credibility  is   the corner-stone of the rule of law and of organised Government. Indeed, it is trite, law that disputed questions of fact are not  usually  decided  under Art. 226, but it  is  a  common phenomenon that litigation spiraling up to the highest court

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from  below gets stalled so much that victor and  vanquished are stultified in the end.  The present case is an  instance in point of the unhealthy but imblamable 88 tendency  of parties to rush directly to the High Court  for speedy redress where the normal remedy is a suit in a  lower civil court. The   learned  Judges  note,  that  having  regard  to   the controversy  and  quantum of evidence, the  petitioner  (the respondent before us) should have been relegated to a  suit, but  desist from that course on the express ground that  the trial  of the suit would consume consider,,, able  time  and "then there will be an appeal to the District Court  against the decision of the civil court.  The appeal to the District Court will be followed by a second appeal to the High Court. The trial of the suit and the appeals to the District  Court and  the High Court will certainly take a very  long  time". Cynically,  the High Court adds : "The courts of law,  while upholding  the  rule  of  law,  cannot  defeat  it  by   the procrastination  of  litigations".   I agree  that,  in  the present  case,  had the aggrieved party been driven  to  the hierarchy of courts, he would have lost, not on the  merits, but by the sands of time running out before ultimate victory was  in  sight.   Time and tide do not wait  for  the  tardy course  of Indian justice and. if the appellant  had  really forfeited  the  confidence of the councillors  (as  we  have held),  he  should  not  be  allowed  to  cling  on  to  the President’s  office in the confidence that  our  slow-motion Court  system  would take a few years for  processing  final legal  justice, hopefully helping him through his  unmerited full term.  The High Court has observed about this aspect of the  case : "The anti-democratic situation in  a  democratic institution will, under these circumstances, be fostered and perpetuated by litigations in courts." These words of  robed experience are a reflection on the mechanics and dynamics of our  forensic  system and suggest radical,  not  peripheral, technological  reforms  and  scientific  re-organisation  of court-management.  Largely this is the responsibility of the legislature and partly of the courts. Counsel for the appellant expressed shock about reliance  on affidavits  by  the High Court without  the  affiants  being tested  by cross-examination.  Reasons for this course  have been  adduced by the High Court and we have found  no  legal flaw therein.  On the contrary, I wish to emphasise that  it adds  enormously  to  inconvenience, expense  and  delay  to insist  on oral evidence for proof of every little  relevant fact in judicial proceedings by suit or writ.  Faith in viva voice  examination  tested by severe  cross-examination  has sometimes  been  reduced to a legal  superstitution.   While screening the veracity of glib versions on vital matters  of controversy   by  telling  cross-examination  in  court   is necessary,  many facts, either formal, non-controversial  or well- 89 established  otherwise,  may  well be  Proved  by  affidavit evidence.  Breaking tradition and introducing the system  of affidavits,  verified  statements and certificates  in  many areas of judicial enquiry, leaving a discretion to the court to  call the author into count is an experiment  well  worth making, by reform of our law of evidence and procedure as is being  attempted  in other countries.  Written  hearsay  has ceased  to  be  anathema  in  Anglo-American  or   Socialist countries and in our country of distance, poverty and delay, processual changes in this direction may lessen cost and add speed.   Not only is the grievance of the appellant on  this

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score  chimerical,  the  length of time taken  n  this  case before   the  High  Court  is  sufficient   to  warrant   my observations for serious legislative consideration. The  learned  Judges of the High Court have  frankly  stated that  they  have,  inter alia, relied  on  ’statements  made before  the  police (vide p. 99 of Vol.  III of  the  appeal record).   It is surprising that a court should, in a  civil case,  rely upon statements made before the police.   It  is not merely irrelevant, but throws up suspicious because  the police  had no business to record any statement as the  High Court  itself  has,  in another  place,  pointed  out.   The learned  Judges, for instance, have stated :  "Though  there was  no  complaint or information at that time  either  from respondent No. 1 or from any member of his group about  what respondent  No. 1 alleges to have happened on May  5,  1973, the  police had taken interest in the matter and started  an enquiry on their own." Some inscrutable purpose has animated the police officers to investigate into what was  altogether beyond  their pale.  If such unwarranted  police  intrusions into  municipal doings were left uncriticised, the peril  to the  citizen  and  to public institutions  is  obvious.   It strikes  me that the State Government will enquire into  bow such  officious  police interference  occurred  and  whether there was any sinister savor about it. Our  elected local bodies are expected to be  self-governing unit  (Art. 40 of the Constitution).  If these,  grass-roots institutions pervert themselves, small wonder that Power  at higher levels, betrays popular trust.  In the present  case, certain incontrovertible facts need mention to appreciate my apprehensions  about  this  tiny  municipal   administration having become a play thing of factious politics with  under- currents  of  personal conflicts and overtones  of  economic interests. The Kalol Municipality is a small town and the wheels of its politics  are alleged to be linked with the economics of  an industrial 90 unit-the Navjivan Mills.  While rival versions are  asserted before  us  (neither, if true, being complimentary),  it  is pertinent  that,  out  of  a  strength  of  25  one  of  the councillors  is  a  peon of the Mill, three  of  them  other employees  and  a  fifth, connected  with  it.   Both  sides allege, although with conflicting projections, that  between the  Presidential election in 1970 and the toppling  tremors within   two  years,  the  estrangement  between  the   Mill management and the appellant had developed.  While the  Mill group voted with the appellant to elect him President,  they swung  to  oust  him  from  office  in  May  1972.   Without examining  the veracity of either party’s version,  one  may express  the  hunch  that the  economic  interests  of  that industry  must  have  had some sort of  influence  over  the working of the Kalol Council. From  the inception, the appellant and the  1st  respondent, have  been fighting for power end, in the first  round,  the former  won,  on  November  1,  1970.   Nevertheless,   some councillors  appear to have concentrated on power-grab  and, as  part  of  this political circus,  created  confusion  at municipal meetings.  It is equally clear, from the  judgment of the High Court "that in respect of quite a good number of meetings  of  the municipality held since October  12,  1972 different sets of minutes have been maintained by respondent no.  1 on the one hand and by the petitioner’s group, on the other  hand".   The  Court  has  further  stated  that   the appellant,  apprehensive of his eroding majority  had  ruled out  many motions.  "He has converted them rule-couts)  into

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an  instrument to negative, the will of the majority and  to cajole  them into submitting to him.  We are constrained  to say  that there cannot be an uglier, more distasteful,  more disagreeable  and more distorted form of democracy than  one we have seen on evidence in the civic affairs of Kalol.  The town   has   been  helplessly  witnessing   unseemly   duels city  fathers which have brought all progress  and  norm-,if administration  to a standstill.  It also appears  from  the record  of  the case ’that no meeting  of  the  municipality could be held except under police protection." The  fluctuating fortunes and the fluid  loyalties  emerging from  the  diary of events makes  disturbing  reading.   The learned  Judges  of  the High Court notice  that  while  the petitioner-appellant defeated respondent no.  1 on  November 1.  1970 that event sparked off, not collective  functioning for  the  common good, but combats for  group  cornering  of positions.  "On December 10, 1970 Kalol Municipality adopted a motion for disqualifying the petitioner (respondent no.  1 here) from the councillor-ship and passed it".  However, "on June  1972,  a resolution was passed by  23  councillors  of Kalol Municipality voting against 91 the petitioner (1st respondent herein) being disqualified by the State Government".  We have it further from the judgment of the court below that "on October 12, 1972 respondent  no. 1  (appellant before us’) admittedly lost his majority.   On December  4,  1972 a resolution came  up  for  consideration before  the Municipality to reduce the term,  of  respondent No. 1 (appellant herein), as President of the  Municipality, from 5 years to 2 years." The chaos in that tiny cosmos  is: self-evident. Presumably some citizens were exasperated  at these  happenings and "on February 18 a public  meeting  was held in the Kalol TownHall".    A   leaflet   issued   in connection with that meeting mentions that "a tug-of-war has been  going on in the Kalol Municipality between two  groups and  that  the meeting of the citizens was  called  for  the purpose  of  considering the situation arising out  of  it." From  the materials on record, it is legitimate to draw  the inference that the citizens’ meeting gave a mandate to  some councillors  to act with the majority, in the  interests  of civic  welfare.  We have one more fact of grave import.   An earlier  no-confidence motion passed by 16  councillors  was held  by the High Court to be numerically deficient by  one, to  make  up  the 2/3rds majority.  And at  the  second  no- confidence  motion,  as  we  have  already  held,  one   who otherwise  had supported the appellant, switched  loyalties. These are distressing testimony to pollution in public life. Kalol is not alone nor is the politics of jockeying a  local syndrome.   If  the municipal microcosm has put  self  above service,  wearing  the mask of public office,  the  national macrocosm will eventually magnify the vice; and once popular mistrust  of  democracy spreads, voices  in  the  whispering gallery  will be heard "Mischief. thou art afoot, take  what course   thou  wilt."  If  this  small  municipality   needs policemen to hold its meetings, periodically exercise  its,- If  in the fine art of defection and false  minutes  perhaps allows  the  interests  of a Mill to sway  its  affairs  and compels  the  holding  of public  meetings  to  command  its elected  representatives  to  behave  themselves,  political democracy  is  moving towards the evening of  long  shadows. Laws  and  Courts are not the remedy for  this  malady,  but better  men  and basic mortality when  ballots  are  sought. "Remember," said John Adams, remember, democracy never lasts long.  It soon wastes, exhausts and. 92

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murders  itself.  There never was a democracy that  did  not commit suicide."(1) The  appeal we are dismissing is  socio- legally   sympathematic. P.B.R.                              Appeal dismissed. (1)  Quoted  by  Hidayatullah,  J.  (as  he  then  was)   in "Democracy  in  India  and  the  Judicial  Process-Lajpatrai Memorial Lecture Series 1965 Asia Publishing House p. 16. 93