01 May 1980
Supreme Court
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BAR COUNCIL OF DELHI AND ANR. ETC. Vs SURJEET SINGH AND ORS. ETC. ETC.

Bench: UNTWALIA,N.L.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2224 of 1979


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PETITIONER: BAR COUNCIL OF DELHI AND ANR. ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SURJEET SINGH AND ORS. ETC. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT01/05/1980

BENCH: UNTWALIA, N.L. BENCH: UNTWALIA, N.L. TULZAPURKAR, V.D. SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:  1980 AIR 1612            1980 SCR  (3) 946  1980 SCC  (4) 211

ACT:      Bar Council  of Delhi  Election Rules  1968  Rule  3(i) validity of-Jurisdiction  of the  High Court  under  Article 226-Alternative remedy  no bar-Right  to vote  and right  to stand  for  election-Doctrine  of  Promissory  Estoppel  and principle of approbation and reprobation.

HEADNOTE:      In the  year 1978,  a proviso was added to Rule 3(j) of the Bar  Council of  Delhi Election  Rules,  1968  with  the approval of  the Bar Council of India in accordance with the requirement  of   Sub-section  (3)  of  section  15  of  the Advocates Act,  1961. In accordance with that proviso a copy of the  declaration form  was sent on 14th June, 1978 to the Advocates whose  names found  place in  the  State  roll  of Advocates asking  them to  return the  declaration form duly filled  up   and  signed  within  the  specified  period.  A publication to  this effect was also made in some newspapers viz. Hindustan  Times, Indian  Express, Statesman  etc.  The last extended  date for  the submission  of the  declaration forms was  14th September,  1978 and  the electoral roll was finally published  on the 16th September, 1978 excluding the names of about 2,000 Advocates who had failed to submit such declaration forms.  On the  basis of  the electoral  roll so prepared, elections  to the Bar Council of Delhi was held on the 17th  November, 1978.  The total  number of advocates on the Advocates  roll was 5,000 and odd out of which the names of about  3,000 and  odd only were included in the electoral roll in  accordance with  the proviso  to Rule  3(j) of  the Election Rules  of the  Bar Council of Delhi. The results of the election  were declared  on the 19th November, 1978. The names of  the 15  persons who  were  declared  elected  were published  in  the  Gazette  on  the  22nd  November,  1978. Thereafter the  respondents  in  these  appeals  filed  writ petitions challenging  the whole  election by  attacking the validity of the proviso to Rule 3(j).      The Delhi  High Court  allowed the three writ petitions taking the  view, (i)  so far  as the  qualifications to  be possessed by  and the  conditions  to  be  satisfied  by  an advocate before  being brought  on to the Electoral Roll was concerned only  the Bar  Council of India has the competence

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to make the rules under section 3(4) and section 49(1)(a) of the Advocates  Act, 1961  and the  State Bar  Council has no power at  all to  make a rule on this subject; (ii) the plea of estoppel against Surjeet Singh does not arise, (iii) rank injustice has been done to the petitioners because more than 2000 advocates were wrongfully disqualified being brought on the Electoral  Roll. This has materially affected the result of the  elections; and  (iv) Rule 3(j) of the Bar Council of Delhi Election  Rules, 1968 is in excess of the rules making power of Bar Council of Delhi.      Dismissing the appeals by special leave the Court, ^      HELD: 1. The impugned proviso to Rule 3(j) of the Delhi Bar Council of Election Rules is ultra vires and invalid and the electoral roll prepared by 947 the Delhi  Bar Council on the basis of the same resulting in the exclusion  of the names of about 2000 advocates from the said roll was not valid in law. [958D-E]      (b) The  whole election was invalid on that account and it could  be challenged  as such  in a writ petition. It was not a  case of  challenging the preparation of the electoral roll on the factual basis of wrong exclusion of a few names. For the  said purpose  Rule 4  occurring in Chapter I of the Bar Council  of India  Rules could come into play. But here, because  of   the  invalidity   of  the  Rules  itself,  the preparation of  the electoral roll was completely vitiated-a matter which  cannot be  put within  the narrow limit of the said rule. [958E-F]      However, it  depends upon  the nature and the intensity of the  error committed  in the preparation of the electoral roll and  its effect  on the whole election for deciding the question as to whether a writ petition would be maintainable or not. [862E-F]      Chief Commissioner,  Ajmer v. Radhey Shyam Dani, [1957] S.C.R. 68;  Parmeshwar Mahaseth  and Ors.  v. State of Bihar and Ors.,  AIR 1958  Patna 149;  Umakant Singh  and Ors.  v. Binda Choudhary  and Ors.,  AIR 1965  Patna 459; Dev Prakash Balmukand v.  Babu Ram  Rewti Mal  and Ors.  AIR 1961 Punjab 429;  Ramgulam   Shri  Baijnath  Parsad  v.  The  Collector, District Guna and Ors., AIR 1975 M.P. 145 and Bhoop Singh v. Bar Council  of Punjab and Haryana through its Secretary and Ors., AIR 1976 M.P. 110; referred to.      (c) The  illegal preparation  of the  electoral roll by the Delhi Bar Council on the basis of the invalid proviso to Rule 3(j)  goes to  the very  root  of  the  matter  and  no election held  on the  basis of  such an  infirmity  can  be upheld. There  is no question of the result being materially affected in such a case. [958F-G]      (d) The contesting respondents could not be defeated in their writ  petitions on  the  ground  of  estoppel  or  the principle that  one cannot  approbate and  reprobate or that they were  guilty of  laches. In  the first instance some of the contesting  respondents were  merely  voters.  Even  Sri Surjeet Singh  in his  writ petition  claimed to  be both  a candidate and  a voter.  As a  voter he  could challenge the election even  assuming that  as  a  candidate  after  being unsuccessful he  was estopped  from doing  so.  But,  merely because he  took part  in the  election  by  standing  as  a candidate or by exercise of his right of franchise he cannot be estopped  from challenging  the whole  election when  the election was  glaringly illegal and void on the basis of the obnoxious proviso.  There is  no question of approbation and reprobation in  such a  case. A voter could come to the High Court even  earlier before the election was held. But merely

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because he  came to challenge the election after it was held it cannot  be said  that he was guilty of laches and must be non-suited on that account. [958F-H, 959A-B]      Kanglu  Beula   Kotwal  and  Anr.  v.  Chief  Executive Officer, Janpad  Sabha, Durga  and Ors., AIR 1955 Nagpur 49; distinguished.      (e) The manner of resolving disputes as to the validity of election  is provided  for in  Rule 34  of the  Delhi Bar Council Election Rules. This is not an 948 appropriate and  adequate alternative  remedy to  defeat the writ petitioner  on that account. Firstly, no clause of Rule 34 covers the challenging of the election on the ground that it has  been done  in  this  case.  Secondly,  the  Election Tribunal will  not be  competent to declare any provision of the Election Rules ultra vires and invalid. It is not a case where the  name of  any voter  was wrongly  omitted from the electoral roll but it is a case where the preparation of the whole electoral  roll was  null  and  void  because  of  the invalidity of the impugned proviso. [959C-D, E-F]      Ramgulam Shri Baijnath Pd. v. The Collector, Dist. Guna and Ors.,  AIR 1975  M.P. 145 and Bhupendra Kumar Jain v. Y. S. Dharmadhikari and Ors., AIR 1976, M.P. 110; referred to.      Bhoop Singh  v.  Bar  Council  of  Punjab  and  Haryana through its  Secretary and  Ors., AIR  1977 Pb.  &  Haryana; quoted with approval.      K. K. Srivastava etc. v. Bhupendra Kumar Jain and Ors., AIR 1977 S.C. 1703; distinguished.      2. If the alternative remedy fully covers the challenge to the  election then that remedy and that remedy alone must be resorted  to even though it involves the challenge of the election of all the successful candidates. But if the nature and the  ground of  the challenge  of the whole election are such that  the alternative remedy is no remedy in the eye of law to cover the challenge or, in any event, is not adequate and efficacious  remedy, then the remedy of writ petition to challenge the  whole election  is still  available.  In  the present case  the Election  Tribunal would have found itself incompetent to declare the proviso to Rule 3(j) of the Delhi Bar Council Election Rules ultra vires and that being so the alternative remedy  provided in  Rule 34(8) was no remedy at all. [964D-F]      Suryya Kumar  Ray v.  The Bar Council of India and Ors. Matter No.  304  of  1976  decided  on  December  17,  1976, overruled.      Harish Sambhu Prasad v. Bar Council of Gujarat, Special Civil Application Nos. 542 and 551 of 1969; approved.      3. So long the existing rules framed by the Bar Council of India  remained in  vogue all  persons whose names are on the State  Roll are entitled proprio vigore to be put on the electoral roll.  Sections 24(e) (1) and 26A of the Advocates Act, 1961  read with  Rules 1,  2 and 3 of Chapter I of Part III of  the Bar  Council of  India Rules  make this position clear. [954A-B, D-H]      4. On a plain reading of sub-sections 4 of section 3 of the Advocates  Act, 1961,  it is manifest that under the Act the qualifications  and conditions  entitling an advocate to vote at  an election  or for being chosen as a member of the State Bar Council has to be prescribed by the Bar Council of India. The State Bar Council has no such power. The power of the State  Bar Council  is merely to prepare and revise from time to time the electoral roll subject to the Rules made by the Bar  Council of  India concerning the qualifications and conditions aforesaid. This interpretation of Section 3(4) of the Act  finds ample  support  from  the  very  special  and

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specific provision  contained in section 49(1) (a) providing for the general power of the Bar Council of India. [956F-H] 949      5. It is true that the power to make rules conferred by section 15  is both for the Bar Council of India as also for the Bar  Council of  a State. But no provision of section 15 can override the specific provision made in section 3(4) and section 49(1)(a)  of the  Act. Sub-section (1) of section 15 says-"A Bar Council may make rules to carry out the purposes of this Chapter" which means Chapter II including section 3. But the  power to  prescribe qualifications  and  conditions entitling an  advocate to  vote at an election being that of the Bar Council of India section 15(1) cannot be interpreted to confer  power on  the State  Bar Council  to  make  rules regarding  the   qualifications  and  conditions  aforesaid. [957B-D]      The  State   Bar  Council   can  frame  rules  for  the preparation and  revision of  electoral rolls  under section 15(2)(a). That  would be  in conformity with the latter part of sub-section  (4) of  section 3  also. But  in the garb of making a  rule for  the  preparation  and  revision  of  the electoral  rolls   it  cannot  prescribe  disqualifications, qualifications or  conditions subject  to which  an advocate whose name  occurs in  the State  roll can find place in the electoral roll  resulting in his deprivation of his right to vote at the election. In the instant case under the impugned proviso failure  on the  part of  an advocate  to submit the required declaration  within the specified time entitles the State Bar  Council to  exclude his  name from  the electoral roll. Such  a thing  was squarely  covered by  the exclusive power conferred  on the  Bar Council of India under sections 3(4) and  49(1)(a) of  the  Advocates  Act.  The  State  Bar Council had no such power. [957F-H]      6. The  approval of  the Bar  Council of India can make the rule  made by  the State Bar Council valid and effective only if  the rule made is within the competence of the State Bar Council  otherwise not. Mere approval by the Bar Council of India  to a rule ultra vires the State Bar Council cannot make the rule valid. Nor has it the effect of a rule made by the Bar  Council of  India. Making a rule by the Bar Council of India and giving approval to a rule made by the State Bar Council are  two distinct  and different  things. One cannot take the place of the other. [958B-D]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 2224, 2225 and 2226 of 1979.      Appeals by  Special Leave  from the  Judgment and Order dated 22-5-1979  of the  Delhi High Court in Civil Writ Nos. 111, 551 and 284 of 1979.      V.M.  Tarkunde,   A.  K.  Sen,  G.  L.  Sanghi,  B.  P. Maheshwari and  S. K.  Bhattacharya for  the  Appellants  in C.A.s. 2224, 2225, 2226/79.      P. R.  Mridul, Vimal  Shanker, K.  R. R.  Pillai, P. N. Wadhera and  Aruneshwar Gupta  for Respondent  No. 1  in  CA 2224/79.      D. D.  Chawla,  Vineet  Kumar  and  R.  S.  Sihota  for Respondent Nos. 1-3 in CA 2225/79.      B. D.  Sharma and Aloka Bhattacharya for Respondent No. 1 in CA 2226/79. 950      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      UNTWALIA J.-These  three appeals  by the Bar Council of

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Delhi and  the Bar  Council of  India are  from  the  common judgment  of  the  Delhi  High  Court  allowing  three  writ petitions filed  by the  first respondent in each appeal and others seeking  the setting aside of the election of the Bar Council of  Delhi held  in the  year  1978.  As  the  points involved in  them are  identical they are all being disposed of by  this common  judgment. We  shall proceed to state the facts from  the records  of Civil Appeal No. 2224 of 1979 in which respondent no. 1 is Shri Surjeet Singh Bhangul. He was a voter  as also  a candidate  for the  election wherein  he lost. In  the writ petition giving rise to Civil Appeal 2225 of 1979 there were three petitioners-two were candidates but Shri D.  R. Thakur  was  an  advocate  whose  name  was  not included in  the electoral  roll although his name occurs in the State roll of Advocates. Shri A. S. Randhawa, respondent no. 1  in Civil  Appeal 2226 of 1979 was a person whose name occurred both  in the State roll of Advocates as also in the electoral roll. But he was not a candidate.      Surjeet Singh  was an  advocate who was a member of the Delhi Bar  Council before  the impugned  election. A proviso was added  to Rule 3(j) of the Bar Council of Delhi Election Rules, 1968  in the  year  1978.  In  accordance  with  that proviso a  copy of  the declaration  form was  sent on  14th June, 1978  to the  advocates whose names found place in the State  roll   of  Advocates   asking  them   to  return  the declaration form  duly  filled  up  and  signed  within  the specified period. A publication to this effect was also made in some  newspapers viz.  Hindustan Times,  Indian  Express, Statesman etc.  The last extended date for the submission of the declaration  forms  was  14th  September  1978  and  the electoral roll  was finally  published on the 16th September 1978 excluding  the names  of about  2,000 advocates who had failed to submit such declaration forms. On the basis of the electoral roll  so prepared,  according to  the programme of election, the  election of  members to  the Bar  Council  of Delhi was  held on  the 17th November 1978. The total number of advocates  on the Advocates roll was 5,000 and odd out of which the names of about 3,000 and odd only were included in the electoral  roll in  accordance with  the proviso to Rule 3(j) of  the Election Rules of the Bar Council of Delhi. The results of  the election were declared on the 19th November, 1978. The  names of the 15 persons who were declared elected were published  in the  Gazette on  the 22nd November, 1978. Thereafter on the 24th of January 1979 the writ petition was filed in  the High  Court challenging  the whole election by attacking the validity of the proviso to Rule 3(j). 951      Apart from the successful candidates the writ petitions were  mainly   and  vigorously  contested  by  the  two  Bar Councils, namely,  the Bar  Council of  Delhi  and  the  Bar Council of  India. The  latter  seems  to  have  taken  keen interest in  the matter  of contesting  the  writ  petitions because the  impugned proviso to Rule 3(j) was introduced in the Election  Rules with  the approval of the Bar Council of India in  accordance with  the requirement  of sub-s. (3) of Section 15  of the  Advocates Act,  1961. The High Court has taken the view:-           (1)  "Lastly,   the    irresistible    conclusion,                therefore,   is    that   so   far   as   the                qualifications to  be possessed  by  and  the                conditions to  be satisfied  by  an  advocate                before being  brought on  the Electoral  Roll                are concerned  only the  Bar Council of India                has the  competence to  make the  rules under                Section 3  (4) and Section 49 (1) (a) and the

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              State Bar Council has no power at all to make                a rule on this subject."           (2)  The plea  of estoppel  raised against Surjeet                Singh was rejected.           (3)  "Rank  injustice   has  been   done  to   the                petitioner because  more than 2,000 advocates                were  wrongfully   disqualified  from   being                brought  on  the  Electoral  Roll.  This  has                materially  affected   the  result   of   the                election."           (4)  "For the  reasons stated  above, we hold that                Rule  3(j)   of  the  Bar  Council  of  Delhi                Election Rules,  1968, is  in excess  of  the                rules making  power of  the  Bar  Council  of                Delhi. Since  the action  taken  by  the  Bar                Council of  Delhi  to  disqualify  more  than                2,000  advocates   because  of   their   non-                compliance with  the proviso to Rule 3(j) has                resulted in great prejudice to the petitioner                who can justly claim that the bringing on the                Electoral Roll  of more  than 2000  advocates                would have  made a considerable difference to                his own  election and  to the  election as  a                whole, we  are constrained  to set  aside the                election to  the Bar Council of Delhi held on                17th November 1978."      M/s V.  M.  Tarkunde,  A.  K.  Sen  and  G.  L.  Sanghi appearing for  the appellants,  broadly speaking,  made  the following submissions:-           (1)  That  the   impugned  proviso  of  Delhi  Bar                Council Election  Rules was  valid as  it was                within  the   competence  of  the  Delhi  Bar                Council to  add such  a proviso  in the Rules                under its rule making power with the approval                of the Bar Council of India. In any event the                ap- 952                proval had  the effect  of making  it a  rule                made by the Bar Council of India.           (2)  The  electoral   roll  prepared  by  the  Bar                Council of Delhi could not be challenged in a                writ  petition.   The  preparation   of   the                electoral  roll   is  final   and  any  wrong                exclusion or inclusion of name from or in the                electoral  roll   is  beyond   the  pale   of                challenge in a writ petition.           (3)  That it  was not shown that the result of the                election has  been materially affected due to                the non-inclusion of the names of about 2,000                advocates from  the electoral roll. There was                neither any  pleading to  this effect nor was                any material  placed before the High Court in                support of this assertion.           (4)  That Surjeet  Singh and  others like  him who                had taken  part  in  the  election  and  were                defeated were  estopped from  challenging the                election as  they  could  not  approbate  and                reprobate at  the same time. They were guilty                of laches  also as they could have challenged                in  the   High  Court  the  validity  of  the                impugned  proviso  before  the  election  was                actually held.           (5)  That there  is a  specific remedy provided in                the Delhi  Bar  Council  Election  Rules  for                challenging any  election to  the Bar Council

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              and hence  in view  of  the  adequate  remedy                being available  the election  could  not  be                challenged by a writ petition.      M/s. P.  R. Mridul  and F. S. Nariman appearing for the contesting respondents  combated all the submissions made on behalf of  the appellants  and supported the judgment of the High Court.      We find  no substance  in any  of the  points urged  on behalf of the appellants. We are, by and large, in agreement with the decision of the High Court on each and every point. We proceed to briefly state our reasons for the same.      Section 4 of the Advocates Act provides for persons who may be  admitted as advocates on a State roll. Clause (e) of sub-s. (1)  says that  the person  must  fulfil  such  other conditions as  may be  specified in  the rules  made by  the State Bar  Council  under  Chapter  III  of  the  Act  which concerns the  admission and  enrollment of  advocates. Under the Rules  so framed  a person desirous of being enrolled as an advocate  has to  apply in the prescribed form furnishing all the  details of  his qualifications to be enrolled as an advocate.  In  item  3  of  the  application  the  applicant declares-"I declare that upon admission I pro- 953 pose to  practise within  the State of Delhi." At the end of the application  form certain  undertakings are given by the applicant. Clause (c) of the undertaking runs thus:-           "I hereby declare and undertake that-           (iv) I intend to practise ordinarily and regularly                within the jurisdiction of the Bar Council of                Delhi.           (v)  I shall  inform the Bar Council of any change                of  address  of  my  residence  or  place  of                practice for  the proper  maintenance of  the                roll and voters’ list." According  to  the  case  of  the  Delhi  Bar  Council  many advocates after  having been  enrolled and  put on the State roll of  advocates of Delhi break the said undertaking. They do  not   ordinarily  and   regularly  practise  within  the jurisdiction of  the Bar Council of Delhi nor do they inform any change of address for the proper maintenance of the roll and the  voters’ list. It is a pertinent matter no doubt. It is the  duty of  the Bar Council to obtain information as to whether any person put on the roll of State advocates ceased ordinarily and regularly to practise within the jurisdiction of the  Bar Council  of Delhi,  if so,  to  take  steps  for removal of  his  name  from  the  State  rolls.  That  would automatically, as  we shall presently show, debar the person concerned to  be put on the electoral roll. But no provision in the  Advocates Act  or any rule was brought to our notice enabling the  Delhi Bar  Council to  remove the  name  of  a person from  the State roll if he has broken the undertaking aforesaid. Section  26A of  the Advocates Act merely says-"A State Bar Council may remove from the State roll the name of any advocate  who is  dead or  from whom  a request has been received to that effect." In para 2 of the affidavit of Shri D. Gupta, Advocate it is stated:-           "It is the experience of this Council that most of      the advocates  who are  elevated to  the Bench or those      who join  subordinate  judiciary  or  family  or  other      business or  employment, seldom  care  to  notify  this      Council to  get their licence revoked or suspended, nor      do the  advocates shifting their place of practice from      Delhi to elsewhere, care to notify this Council in that      respect, although  the undertakings  at internal page 8      of the  Enrollment form of this Council obliges them to

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    do so." It may  be so  but the lacunae in this regard have got to be removed by amending the Advocates Act or by properly framing the rules in that 954 respect. We  are definitely  of the opinion that so long the existing rules  framed by  the Bar Council of India remained in vogue  all persons  whose names are on the State roll are entitled proprio  vigore to  be put  on the  electoral roll. Rule 1 occurring in Chapter I of Part III of the Bar Council of India Rules says:-           "1. Every  advocate whose name is on the Electoral      Roll of  the State Council shall be entitled to vote at      an election." Rule 2 provides:-           "2. Subject  to the provisions of Rule 3, the name      of every  advocate entered  in the  State Roll shall be      entered in the electoral roll of the State Council." Exceptions to  Rule 2  are to  be found  embodied in  Rule 3 which runs thus:-           "3. The name of an advocate appearing in the State      Roll shall  not be entered in the Electoral Roll, if on      information obtained by the State Council:      (a)  his name has any time been removed;      (b)  he has been suspended from practice, provided that           this disqualification  shall operate  only  for  a           period of  five years  from the date of the expiry           of the period of suspension;      (c)  he is an undischarged insolvent;      (d)  he has been found guilty of an election offence in           regard to  an election  to the State Council by an           Election  Tribunal,  provided  however  that  such           disqualification  shall  not  operate  beyond  the           election next  following after  such  finding  has           been made;      (e)  he is  convicted  by  a  competent  court  for  an           offence involving  moral turpitude,  provided that           this disqualification  shall cease  to have effect           after a  period of two years has elapsed since his           release;      (f)  he is in full-time service or is in such part-time           business or  other vocation  not permitted  in the           case of  practising advocates  by the rules either           of the State Council concerned or of the Council;      (g)  he has  intimated voluntary suspension of practice           and has  not given  intimation  of  resumption  of           practice." None of  the clauses  in Rule  3 covers a clause of the kind found in  the proviso  to Rule 3(j) of the Delhi Bar Council Election Rules. 955 Rule 3  of  Delhi  Bar  Council  Election  Rules  is  headed ’Interpretation". Clause (j) of the said Rules says:-           ""Electoral Roll"  means  and  includes  the  roll      containing the  names  of  the  advocates  prepared  in      accordance with  the rules  of the Bar Council of India      in Part III, Chapter I." The impugned  proviso added  to clause  (j) in the year 1978 runs thus:-           "Provided  that   the  Electoral  Roll  shall  not      include the  name of such advocate who fails to file in      the office  of the  Bar Council, on or before such date      (not  being  earlier  than  30  days  of  the  date  of      notification) as  may be notified by the Bar Council in      such manner as may be considered proper by it from time

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    to time,  or within  45 days  of the  putting up of the      preliminary Electoral Roll under Rule 4(1) of Chapter I      of Part  III of  the Bar  Council  of  India  Rules,  a      declaration containing  the name, address and number of      the advocate on the State Roll and to the effect that:-           (a)  He is  an advocate  ordinarily practising  in                the Union  Territory of  Delhi and  that  his                principal place  of practice  is within Union                Territory of Delhi;           (b)  He is not an undischarged insolvent;           (c)  He has  never been convicted by any court for                an offence involving moral turpitude;                              or                A period  of two  years has elapsed since his                release after  being convicted  of an offence                involving moral turpitude;                (In case  of conviction  particulars of  such                conviction should be given)           (d)  He is not in full-time service or business or                in  any  such  part-time  business  or  other                vocation as  is not  permitted in the case of                practising advocates  by the rules of the Bar                Council; and           (e)  He has  not been suspended from practice; and                on the  failure to file the declaration or on                filing of incomplete or incorrect declaration                in any respect, it shall be presumed that the                name of such advocate is not to be entered on                the Electoral  Roll in accordance with Rule 3                of Chapter  I of  Part III of the Bar Council                of India Rules." 956 In these  appeals we are not concerned with the propriety or legality  of   asking  such  a  declaration  from  a  person belonging to  the noble  profession. We shall proceed on the assumption that  such an information could be asked for from a person  concerned whose  name is  on  the  State  roll  of Advocates. On the furnishing of such information the name of the  advocate   concerned  could  not  be  included  in  the electoral roll  only if on the basis of that information one or more  clauses of Rule 3 of the Bar Council of India Rules to be found in Part III, Chapter I could come into play, not otherwise. In  these appeals  we are  not concerned with any such case.  The controversy here centres round the fact that under the impugned proviso mere failure to file the required declaration disqualified  the advocate  concerned from being put on the electoral roll thus depriving him of his right to vote or  to stand  as a candidate. The crux of the matter in these appeals  is as  to whether such a proviso was valid or ultra vires.      In order  to determine  the point at issue we shall now read some  relevant provisions of the Advocates Act. Section 3 provides  for the  constitution of  the State Bar Council, sub-s. (4) of which says:-           "(4) An advocate shall be disqualified from voting      at an  election under  sub-section  (2)  or  for  being      chosen as,  and for  being, a  member of  a State  Bar,      Council, unless  he possesses  such  qualifications  or      satisfies such  conditions as may be prescribed in this      behalf by  the Bar Council of India, and subject to any      such rules that may be made, an electoral roll shall be      prepared and  revised from  time to  time by each State      Bar Council." On a  plain reading  of this sub-section it is manifest that under the Act the qualifications and conditions entitling an

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advocate to  vote at  an election  or for  being chosen as a member of  the State Bar Council has to be prescribed by the Bar Council  of India.  The State  Bar Council  has no  such power. The  power of  the State  Bar Council  is  merely  to prepare and  revise from  time to  time the  electoral  roll subject to  the rules  made by  the  Bar  Council  of  India concerning the qualifications and conditions aforesaid. This interpretation of  Section  3(4)  of  the  Act  finds  ample support  from   the  very  special  and  specific  provision contained in  section 49(1)(a)  providing  for  the  general power of the Bar Council of India in these terms:-           "49. (1)  The Bar  Council of India may make rules      for discharging  its functions  under this Act, and, in      particular, such rules may prescribe- 957           (a)  the conditions  subject to  which an advocate                may be entitled to vote at an election to the                State    Bar     Council    including     the                qualifications   or    disqualifications   of                voters, and  the manner in which an electoral                roll of voters may be prepared and revised by                a State Bar Council;" Great reliance was placed on behalf of the appellants on the concurrent power  of the  State  Bar  Council  and  the  Bar Council of  India engrafted  in section  15 of the Advocates Act. It  is true  that the  power to make rules conferred by section 15  is both for the Bar Council of India as also for the Bar  Council of  a State. But no provision of section 15 can override the specific provision made in section 3(4) and section 49(1)(a)  of the  Act. Sub-section (1) of section 15 says-"A Bar Council may make rules to carry out the purposes of this Chapter" which means Chapter II including section 3. But the  power to  prescribe qualifications  and  conditions entitling an  advocate to  vote at an election being that of the Bar Council of India section 15(1) cannot be interpreted to confer  power on  the State  Bar Council  to  make  rules regarding the  qualifications and  conditions aforesaid. The relevant words  of sub-section  2(a) of  section 15  are the following:-           "In  particular,  and  without  prejudice  to  the      generality of  the  foregoing  power,  such  rules  may      provide for :-           (a)  ............ the  preparation and revision of                electoral rolls  and the  manner in which the                results of election shall be published." The State  Bar Council  can frame  rules for the preparation and revision of electoral rolls under section 15(2)(a). That would be  in conformity  with the latter part of sub-section (4) of  section 3 also. But in the garb of making a rule for the preparation  and revision  of  the  electoral  rolls  it cannot  prescribe   disqualifications,   qualifications   or conditions subject to which an advocate whose name occurs in the  State  roll  can  find  place  in  the  electoral  roll resulting in  his deprivation  of his  right to  vote at the election. In  the instant  case under  the impugned  proviso failure on  the part  of an  advocate to submit the required declaration within the specified time entitles the State Bar Council to  exclude his name from the electoral roll. Such a thing was  squarely covered by the exclusive power conferred on the Bar Council of India under sections 3(4) and 49(1)(a) of the  Advocates Act.  The State  Bar Council  had no  such power. 958 Sub-s. (3) of section 15 says:-           "No rules  made under  this section by a State Bar

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    Council  shall   have  effect  unless  they  have  been      approved by the Bar Council of India." Introduction of  the impugned  proviso in  Rule 3(j)  of the Delhi Bar  Council Election Rules was approved by Resolution No. 18  of 1978 passed by the Bar Council of India. Any rule made by  the State  Bar Council cannot have effect unless it is approved by the Bar Council of India. But the approval of the Bar Council of India can make the rule made by the State Bar Council  valid and  effective only  if the  rule made is within the  competence of  the State  Bar Council, otherwise not. Mere  approval by  the Bar  Council of  India to a rule ultra vires  the State  Bar Council  cannot  make  the  rule valid. Nor  has it  the effect  of a  rule made  by the  Bar Council of  India. Making a rule by the Bar Council of India and giving  approval to a rule made by the State Bar Council are two  distinct and  different things. One cannot take the place of the other.      We, therefore,  hold that  the impugned proviso to Rule 3(j) of  the Delhi Bar Council Election Rules is ultra vires and invalid and the electoral roll prepared by the Delhi Bar Council on  the basis of the same resulting in the exclusion of the names of about 2,000 advocates from the said roll was not valid  in law.  We are  further of  the opinion that the whole election  was invalid  on that account and it could be challenged as  such in a writ petition. It was not a case of challenging the  preparation of  the electoral  roll on  the factual basis  of wrong  exclusion of  a few  names. For the said purpose  Rule 4  occurring in  Chapter  I  of  the  Bar Council of  India Rules  could come  into  play.  But  here, because  of   the  invalidity   of  the  Rules  itself,  the preparation of  the electoral roll was completely vitiated-a matter which  cannot be  put within  the narrow limit of the said rule.      The illegal  preparation of  the electoral  roll by the Delhi Bar  Council on  the basis  of the  invalid proviso to Rule 3(j)  goes to  the very  root  of  the  matter  and  no election held  on the  basis of  such an  infirmity  can  be upheld. There  is no question of the result being materially affected in such a case.      The contesting  respondents could  not be  defeated  in their writ  petitions on  the  ground  of  estoppel  or  the principle that  one cannot  approbate and  reprobate or that they were  guilty of  laches. In  the first instance some of the contesting  respondents were  merely voters.  Even  Shri Surjeet Singh  in his  writ petition  claimed to  be both  a candidate and  a voter.  As a  voter he  could challenge the election even 959 assuming that as a candidate after being unsuccessful he was estopped from  doing so.  But to  be precise,  we are of the opinion that  merely because he took part in the election by standing as  a candidate  or by  exercise of  his  right  of franchise he  cannot be  estopped from challenging the whole election when the election was glaringly illegal and void on the basis  of the obnoxious proviso. There is no question of approbation and reprobation at the same time in such a case. A voter could come to the High Court even earlier before the election was  held. But  merely because he came to challenge the election after it was held it cannot be said that he was guilty of  any laches  and must  be non-suited  only on that account.      There is  no substance  in the  last submission made on behalf of  the appellants.  The manner of resolving disputes as to the validity of election is provided for in Rule 34 of the Delhi  Bar  Council  Election  Rules.  This  is  not  an

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appropriate and  adequate alternative  remedy to  defeat the writ petitioner  on that account. Firstly, no clause of Rule 34 covers  the challenging  of the election on the ground it has been  done in this case. Secondly, the Election Tribunal will not  be competent  to  declare  any  provision  of  the Election Rules  ultra vires  and invalid.  Our attention was specifically drawn to clause (8) of Rule 34 which says:-           "No petition  shall lie  on the  ground  that  any      nomination paper  was wrongly  rejected or  the name of      any voter  was wrongly  included in or omitted from the      electoral roll  or any  error or  irregularity which is      not of a substantial character." As we  have said  above, it  is not a case where the name of any voter was wrongly omitted from the electoral roll but it is a  case where the preparation of the whole electoral roll was null  and void because of the invalidity of the impugned proviso.      We now  proceed to  refer to some relevant decisions of the High  Courts and  of this  Court cited  at  the  Bar  in support of some of the points discussed above.      Mudholkar J.,  delivering the  leading and the majority judgment of  a Full Bench of the Nagpur High Court in Kanglu Baula Kotwal  & another  v. Chief  Executive Officer, Janpad Sabha, Durg  and others,  rejected the  plea of  estoppel to challenge the election at page 58, para 25 in these terms:-           "As  regards   the  petitioners   who  were   also      candidates at  the elections  but  were  defeated,  the      learned counsel said that 960      those who  took their  chances  at  the  elections  and      failed should not now be allowed to challenge elections      of their  opponents on  the ground  that the  electoral      rolls were  defective. The  plea is in substance one of      estoppel. There  can be  no question  of any  estoppel,      because it  cannot be  said that  the position  of  the      other  side  has  in  any  way  altered  by  reason  of      something done or not done by the petitioners." We are  of the  view that  neither the principle of estoppel nor the  principle of  approbation and  reprobation  can  be pressed into services in this case.      In Chief  Commissioner, Ajmer  v. Radhey Shyam Dani the respondent  before  the  Supreme  Court  had  filed  a  writ petition  in  the  Court  of  Chief  Commissioner  of  Ajmer challenging the  validity of  the notification directing the holding of  the election  of the  Ajmer Municipality and the electoral roll.  This challenge was made before the election was held.  Since the electoral roll prepared was found to be invalid as  it was  prepared in accordance with some invalid rules,  a  Constitution  Bench  of  this  Court  upheld  the decision of the Chief Commissioner. At page 75, Bhagwati J., speaking for the Court said:-           "It is  of the  essence of  these  elections  that      proper electoral  rolls should  be  maintained  and  in      order that a proper electoral roll should be maintained      it is  necessary that  after  the  preparation  of  the      electoral roll  opportunity  should  be  given  to  the      parties concerned  to scrutinize  whether  the  persons      enrolled   as    electors   possessed   the   requisite      qualifications. Opportunity  should also  be given  for      the  revision   of  the  electoral  roll  and  for  the      adjudication of  claims  to  be  enrolled  therein  and      entertaining objections to such Enrollment. Unless this      is  done,   the  entire   obligation  cast   upon   the      authorities holding the elections is not discharged and      the elections  held on  such imperfect  electoral rolls

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    would acquire  no validity  and would  be liable  to be      challenged at the instance of the parties concerned. It      was in  our opinion, therefore, necessary for the Chief      Commissioner to  frame rules  in this behalf, and in so      far as  the rules  which were thus framed omitted these      provisions they were defective." Finally at pages 76 and 77 it was said:-           "If Rules  7 and 9 above referred to were intended      to form  a complete  code for  the finalisation  of the      electoral roll 961      of the  Municipality they  did not  serve the  intended      purpose  and   were  either   inconsistent   with   the      provisions of  s. 30,  sub-s. (2), of the Regulation or      were defective  in so far as they failed to provide the      proper procedure  for taking  of the  steps hereinabove      indicated for  finalising the  electoral  roll  of  the      Municipality.  If   that  was  the  true  position  the      electoral roll  of  the  Municipality  which  has  been      authenticated and  published by  the Chief Commissioner      on August  8, 1955  was certainly not an electoral roll      prepared in  accordance with  law on the basis of which      the elections and poll to the Ajmer Municipal Committee      could be  held either  on September  9, 1955, or at any      time thereafter." In the  instant case  the electoral roll was prepared on the basis of  a rule  which has  been found to be void and ultra vires. That being so, even though the contesting respondents came to challenge the election after it was held, they could do so because of the gravity of the infraction of the law in the preparation  of the  electoral roll. Dani’s case (supra) was followed  by the  Patna High  Court in two decisions. In Parmeshwar Mahaseth  and others v. State of Bihar and others and Umakant  Singh and others v. Binda Choudhary and others. After quoting  a  passage  at  page  153  from  Dani’s  case Kanhaiya Singh J., said in Parmeshwar Mahaseth’s case at the same page in paragraph 14 thus:-           "It was  urged by  the learned Government Advocate      that the  election cannot  be  disputed  except  by  an      election petition,  as  laid  down  in  R.  62  of  the      Election Rules.  He submitted  that petitioner  9,  had      already  filed   an   election   petition   after   the      presentation of  this writ application. This contention      is not  valid. What  is  challenged  here  is  not  the      election of a particular candidate, but the validity of      the entire  election, because  of the  violation of the      essential provisions of the Election Rules and the Act.      I think,  R. 62  provides for  a case  where  a  person      challenges the  election of  a particular  candidate. I      would overrule the objection."      In Umakant’s  case the  Court quoted  the passage  from Dani’s case  from page 461 and finally expressed the view in paragraph 12 at page 462 in these terms:-           "Mr. Shankar Kumar appearing for respondents 6 and      7 submitted  that  the  election  ought  to  have  been      challenged 962      by following  the machinery provided in rule 148 of the      rules, and  this Court,  in exercise of its power under      Article 226  of the  Constitution, should not interfere      with the election when a special machinery was provided      for  challenging   it.  I  am  unable  to  accept  this      argument. It is the well settled view of the Court that      if the  entire election  is challenged  as having  been      held  under  statutes  or  statutory  rules  which  are

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    invalid or  by committing  illegalities which  make the      entire election  void, it  can be quashed by grant of a      writ in the nature of certiorari."      A Full  Bench of  the Punjab  High Court in Dev Prakash Balmukand v.  Babu Ram  Rewti Mal and others had occasion to consider this  question and  in that  connection at page 434 Dulat J., said in paragraph 15:-           "Everybody, of  course, agrees  that, if  the very      foundation of  the election, namely, the electoral roll      is illegal,  no election on its basis can proceed or be      allowed to  stand, but that does not mean that any kind      of defect in the roll, however technical in its nature,      will suffice to reach such a conclusion."      It would  thus be  seen that it depends upon the nature and the  intensity of the error committed in the preparation of the  electoral roll  and its effect on the whole election for deciding  the question  as to  whether a  writ  petition would be  maintainable or  not. In  Ramgulam  Shri  Baijnath Prasad v.  The Collector,  District Guna  and others Oza J., delivering the judgment of the Division Bench stated in para 17 at page 152 thus:-           "It was  also contended  that the petition was not      filed  immediately,   but  has  been  filed  after  the      elections  were   over.  As  regards  the  question  of      estoppel we  had already  considered it  and found that      the petition  under Art.  226 cannot be disposed on the      question  of   estoppel.  As   regards  delay,   it  is      sufficient to  state that it could not be said that the      petition was  unduly delayed. Apart from it, it is also      clear that an election held on the basis of rolls which      have not  been prepared  in accordance  with  law,  the      petition cannot  be dismissed  merely on  the ground of      delay." 963      The Madhya  Pradesh High Court has taken a similar view in the  case of  Bhupendra Kumar Jain v. Y. S. Dharmadhikari and others  wherein it  was held  that the  entire  election could be  challenged  on  the  basis  of  certain  types  of illegalities committed in holding it.      Shri Bhoop  Singh, an  Advocate and a member of the Bar Association at Chandigarh was a candidate to the Bar Council of Punjab  & Haryana. After being unsuccessful he challenged the election  by filing  a writ  petition in the High Court. The full  Bench of  the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Bhoop Singh v.  Bar Council  of Punjab  and  Haryana  through  its Secretary and  others dismissed  the writ  petition  on  the particular facts  of that  case. Yet  the view  expressed at page 43 in para 9 was:-           "I am extremely doubtful whether the nature of the      relief which  the petitioner  claims here,  namely  the      setting aside  of the  whole of  the election  and  the      ordering of  a repoll  could be  claimed by  way of  an      election petition under rule 34(1). No provision in the      said rule  was brought  to our  notice which in express      terms empowers  or warrants  the setting  aside of  the      whole of  the election  (in  contradistinction  to  the      election of  individual  candidates)  or  to  direct  a      repoll. In  any  case  it  is  well  settled  that  the      existence of  an alternative  remedy is not an absolute      legal bar to the issuance of a writ".      Reliance  was   placed  for  the  appellants  upon  the decision  of  this  Court  in  K.  K.  Shrivastava  etc.  v. Bhupendra Kumar  Jain and  others that because of rule 34(8) of the  Delhi Bar  Council Election Rules the writ petitions ought to  have been held to be not maintainable. It would be

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noticed from  the  facts  of  that  case  that  an  election petition had  already been  filed. About four months later a writ petition  was also  filed to challenge the election. At page 1704,  column 1 Krishna Iyer J., speaking for the Court said:-           "One of  them which  is relevant  for the  present      case is  that where  there is an appropriate or equally      efficacious remedy the Court should keep its hands off.      This is  more particularly so where the dispute relates      to  an  election.  Still  more  so  where  there  is  a      statutorily prescribed  remedy which  almost  reads  in      mandatory terms". 964      But he added:-           "While we  need not  in this case go to the extent      of  stating   that  if   there   are   exceptional   or      extraordinary  circumstances  the  Court  should  still      refuse to entertain a writ petition."      Finally the  view expressed in K. K. Shrivastava’s case is:-           "There is no foundation whatever for thinking that      where the challenge is to an "entire election" then the      writ jurisdiction  springs into  action. On  the  other      hand the  circumstances of  this case  convince us that      exercise of  the power  under Art. 226 may be described      as mis-exercise."      We may  add that the view expressed by some of the High Courts in  the cases  referred to  above that merely because the whole  election has  been challenged by a writ petition, the petition  would be  maintainable in spite of there being an alternative  remedy being  available, so  widely put, may not  be  quite  correct  and  especially  after  the  recent amendment  of   Art.  226   of  the   Constitution.  If  the alternative  remedy   fully  covers  the  challenge  to  the election then  that remedy  and that  remedy alone  must  be resorted to  even though  it involves  the challenge  of the election of all the successful candidates. But if the nature and the  ground of  the challenge  of the whole election are such that  the alternative remedy is no remedy in the eye of law to cover the challenge or, in any event, is not adequate and efficacious  remedy then  the remedy of writ petition to challenge the  whole election  is still  available.  In  the present case  we have  pointed out  above that  the Election Tribunal would  have found itself incompetent to declare the proviso to Rule 3(j) of the Delhi Bar Council Election Rules ultra  vires  and  that  being  so  the  alternative  remedy provided in Rule 34(8) was no remedy at all.      Appellants heavily  relied upon  an unreported decision of the  Calcutta High  Court in  Suryya Kumar Ray v. The Bar Council of India & Ors. The challenge to the election to the Bar Council  of West  Bengal was almost on grounds which are similar to  those in  the present  case. The  Calcutta  High Court upheld  the validity of the Rule and the election held on the  basis of  electoral roll prepared in accordance with that Rule  and dissented  from the  view of the Gujarat High Court in Harish Sambhu Prasad v. Bar Council of Gujarat. 965 The learned Judge said with reference to the decision of the Gujarat High Court thus:-           "It appears  to me  that this decision will not be      of much  assistance to  the petitioner  in the  instant      case in as much as the electoral rules which are before      me have  duly been approved by the Bar Council of India      itself. Such  approval confers  upon  these  rules  the      authority and  sanction of the Bar Council of India and

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    may be deemed to be the rules framed by the Bar Council      of India."      The enunciation  of the  law  as  made  above,  in  our opinion, is not correct. We have held to the contrary.      For the  reasons  stated  above,  we  dismiss  all  the appeals but make no order as to costs in any of them. S.R.                                      Appeals dismissed. 966