13 August 1968
Supreme Court
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K. VENKATESWARA RAO AND ANR. Vs BEKKAM NARASIMHA REDDI & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1864 of 1967


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PETITIONER: K. VENKATESWARA RAO AND ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: BEKKAM NARASIMHA REDDI & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/08/1968

BENCH: MITTER, G.K. BENCH: MITTER, G.K. HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)

CITATION:  1969 AIR  872            1969 SCR  (1) 679  CITATOR INFO :  R          1973 SC2077  (9)  E&R        1974 SC 480  (16,19,23,24)  R          1982 SC 983  (10)  F          1984 SC 309  (24)

ACT: Representation  of the People Act, 1951, ss. 79(b), 82(b)  & 86(1)-Corrupt  practice  alleged against candidate  who  had withdrawn  from contest-Such candidate not impleaded  during period  of limitation of  election petition-Petition  liable to be dismissed-Application for condonation of delay whether permissible-Applicability  of s. 29(2) and s. 5 of  Limition Act,  1963-Candidate  who withdraws from contest  whether  a candidate  within  meaning  of  s. 79(b)  and  s.  82(b)  of Representation  of  the People Act-Procedure under s. 99  of Act whether applicable  to  such candidate.

HEADNOTE: The  election of the first respondent to the Andhra  Pradesh Legislative  Assembly at the General Election hold  in  1967 was  challenged by the appellants in an  election  petition. Various  corrupt practices were alleged appellants  to  have been  committed  by  the first respondent,  his  agents  and supporters.  One of these was that the first respondent paid a  bribe to one R who had also filed nomination  papers,  in order  to secure his withdrawal as a candidate.   After  the issues were framed the appellants made an application to the Court  for  impleading R but it was  dismissed.   The  first respondent then filed an application under s. 86(1)  praying for  the  dismissal of the election petition on  the  ground that  there  had  been  compliance  with  s.  82(b)  of  the Representation of the People Act, 1951 inasmuch as R against whom  corrupt practice had been alleged had not been made  a party.  The appellants filed an application seeking to with- draw  the  allegation against R and in  the  alternative  to implied  him as are not.  They  also prayed for  condonation of delay in making the respondent.  The learned Judge of the High   Court  trying  the election  petition  dismissed  the aforesaid  applications  and refused to condone  the  delay. The’ appellants came to this Court.  The contentions in  the appeal  were:   (i) that the allegation against  R  did  not amount to an allegation of corrupt practice, (ii) that s.  5

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and s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act, 1963 were applicable  to the  case  and the High Court and this Court  had  power  to condone  the  delay  made  by  the  election  petitioner  in impleading a necessary party, (iii) that R, having withdrawn from  the contest was not a ’candidate’. and (iv)  that  the procedure under s. 99 ought to have been followed in respect of R. HELD:  (i) The taint of illegal gratification  attaches  not only  to  the  payer but also to the payee.   It  could  not therefore be accepted that the allegation against R that  he had  received  illegal  gratification  did   not  amount  to corrupt practice.[682 C-D] (ii) The plea for condonation of delay in impleading R could not be accepted. It is well settled that amendments to a petition in a  civil proceeding and the addition of parties to such a  proceeding are   generally  possible subject to the law of  limitation. But an election petition stands on a different footing.  The trial  of  such a petition and the powers of  the  court  in respect’ thereof are all circumscribed bY the Representation of the People Act.  The Indian Limitation Act of 1963 is  an Act to consolidate and amend the law of limitation 67f suits and other proceedings and for 680 purposes  connected therewith.  The provisions of  this  Act will  apply  to  all  civil  proceedings  and  some  special criminal  proceedings which can be taken in a court  of  law unless  the  application thereof has been excluded  by  some enactment:   the extent of such  application is governed  by s.  29(2) of the Limitation Act. However the Limitation  Act cannot  apply  to  proceedings  like  an  election  petition inasmuch  as  the  Representation of the  People  Act  is  a complete and self-contained code which does not admit of the introduction of the principles or the provisions of the ’law contained in the Indian Limitation Act. [686 H-687 B] Kamaraja  Nadar  v.  Kunju Thevar,  [1959]  S.C.R.  583  and Basappa v. Ayyappa, [1959] S.C.R. 611. applied. A.  Sreenivasan  v. Election Tribunal, Madras,   11   E.L.R. 278  and Tipperary case, (1875) 30’M & H. 19, referred to. After the amendment of the Representation of the People  Act in 1966 there is now no section in the Act which equates  an order  made  by  the High Court under s. 98 or s.  99  to  a decree  passed  by  a civil court subordinate  to  the  High Court.   An appeal being a creature of statute,  the  rights conferred on the appellant  must be found  within  the  four corners  of  the Act.  Sub-s. (2) of the  present  s.  116-A expressly  gives this Court the discretion and authority  to entertain an appeal after the expiry of the period of thirty days.  No  right  is  however given to  the  High  Court  to entertain  a  petition  which  does  not  comply  with   the provisions  of  s.  81,  s. 82  or  s.  117.   Any  hardship resulting  from this situation is a matter which can be  set right  only  by the Legislature.  The  Legislature   in  its wisdom  has made the observance of certain  formalities  and provisions  obligatory and failure in that respect can  only be visited with a dismissal of the petition. [688H-689 C] Vidyacharan  Shukla v. Khubchand Baghel,  [1964]  6   S.C.R. 129, distinguished. O bitter: Even though the  Indian Limitation  Act, 1963 does not  apply to an election petition provisions like s. 9  and s.  10  of  the  General Clauses  Act,  1897  providing  for computation  of time which are in pari materia with  ss.  12 (1)  and  4  of the Limitation Act would apply   to  such  a petition. [689 E] (iii)  A  candidate  who has  withdrawn  from  the  election

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remains  a ’candidate’ within the meaning  of s. 79(b)   and s. 82(b) of  the Act. [689 F] Har  Swarup  v. Bril Bhushan,  [1967] IS.C.R.   342,   Mohan Singh   v.  Bhanwarlal, [1964] 5 S.C.R. 12 and Amin  Lal  v. Hunna Mat [1965] 1 S.C.R. 393. relied on. (iv) Section 99 only enjoins upon the High Court to give  an opportunity  to  a  person sought to be  held  guilty  of  a corrupt practice if he was not a party to the petition,  but does not apply to a  person  who  is a necessary party. [690 C-D]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1864 of 1967. Appeal  under s. 116-A of the Representation of  the  People Act, 1951 from the judgment and order dated August 21,  1967 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Election Petition No. 13 of 1967. P. Ram Reddy and A.V.V. Nair, for the appellants. 681 D.  Narsaraju,  R.V.  Pillai  and  A.  Sitarama  Reddy,  for respondent No. 1 G. Narayana Rao, for respondent No. 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Mitter, J.  On April 6, 1967 the appellants before us,  fled an  Election  Petition in the High Court of  Andhra  Pradesh challenging  the  election  of the  first  respondent,  B.N. Reddi,  to the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly from  the Kollapur  Constituency inter alia on the ground  of  corrupt practices  committed  by him, his  election  agent,  polling agents  and other workers mentioned in the schedule  to  the petition with his consent and praying for a declaration that the second respondent, K. Ranga  Das,  was duly elected from the  said  constituency.  The third respondent  was  another candidate  who  had contested the election  but   had  fared very  badly.  The first respondent secured 25,321  votes  at the  election  overtopping the votes polled  by  the  second respondent by approximately 1600.  The petitioners stated in paragraph  5  of the petition that one’ V.K. Reddi  who  had firfiled his nomination paper had been made to withdraw  his Candidature by the first respondent on payment of an illegal gratification of a sum of Rs. 10,000/-. This allegation  was repeated  in  paragraph 10. The first  respondent  was  also charged  with  other  corrupt  practices  m  diverse   other paragraphs of the petition. The  first respondent put in his written statement  on  28th June,  1967;  the  second  respondent  put  in  his  counter affidavit on June 26, 1967.  The issues were settled on July 24,   1967.   On  August  4,  1967  the  petitioners   filed Application   No.  161/1967  for  impleading   V.K.   Reddi. Thereafter they wanted to withdraw that application when the examination  of witnesses had commenced.  On August 7,  1967 this application was dismissed. On August 8, 1967 the  first respondent  ’filed  Application  No.  169/1967  praying  for dismissal  of the petition on the ground that although  V.K. Reddi  had  been charged with corrupt practices he  had  not been  impleaded as a party to the petition which was  liable to be dismissed under the provisions of section 82(b) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Act’) in compliance with s. 86(1).  The  election petitioners   filed   Application  No.  187  of   1967   for withdrawing  the allegations against V.K. Reddi, or, in  the alternative,  to  implead him as a  respondent.   They  also filed  Application No. 186/1967 for condoning the  delay  in

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seeking  to implead V.K. Reddi in Application No.  187/1967. The  second  respondent filed a number  of  applications  of which  it  is  necessary  to  take  note  of  a  few   only. Application  No. 174/1967 was filed for condoning the  delay in  seeking  to  implead  V.K.  Reddi  in  Application   No. 175/1967.  Application No. 175/1967 was for the purpose of 682 impleading V.K. Reddi as a party respondent to the  election petition. The learned trial Judge held that the allegations  contained in  election petition amounted to an imputation  of  corrupt practice  to  V.K. Reddi and although of the view  that  the prayer in Application No. 169/1967 for condonation of  delay was  allowable in suitable cases, he felt himself  bound  by the  decision  of Kumarayya, J. in  Applications  Nos.  150- 155/1967  in Election Petition No. 11 of 1967 and  dismissed the amendment application No- 169/1967. Before  us  a  faint  attempt was made  to  argue  that  the allegation against V.K. Reddi did not amount to a charge  of corrupt  practice but that it was the first  respondent  who was  guilty  of  such a practice by making  the  payment  of illegal gratification. The argument has only to be set  down to  be  rejected.   In  paragraph 5  of  the  petition,  the definite  averment  was  that V.K. Reddi had  been  made  to withdraw his candidature by  the first respondent on payment of an illegal gratification of Rs. 10,000/-. If the  payment of  Rs.  10,000/- amounts to an  illegal  gratification  the taint attaches not only to the payer, the first  respondent, but also to the payee,. V. K. Reddi. The second point urged was that the learned Chief  Justice’s view  in  regard  to the power of condonation  of  delay  in impleading V.K. Reddi was correct and although he could  not give effect to his own view because he felt himself bound by the decision of Kumarayya, J. we ought to accept the  appeal and  uphold  his  view.   This  argument  was  developed  as follows.  An election petition was in essence an application to  the High Court for the purpose of the Indian  Limitation Act  and as such s. 29(2) of the Act of 1963 was  applicable to such  petitions  drawing  in  its chain the applicability of section 5 of the Act giving the court the power to  admit the  same  if  it  was  satisfied  that  the  applicant  had sufficient  cause for not preferring the application  within the prescribed period of limitation. The  Act as it now stands provides by s. 80A that the  court having jurisdiction to try an election petition shall be the High Court.  Under s. 81 (1 ) "an election petition  calling in question any election may be presented on one or more  of the   grounds specified in sub-s. (1 ) of s. 100 and s.  101 to  the High Court by any candidate at such election or  any elector  within  forty-five days, but not earlier than,  the date of election of the returned candidate  ......  "               S. 82 runs as follows :--                     "A petitioner shall join as  respondents               to his petition-- 683               (a)  where  the  petitioner,  in  addition  to               claiming  a declaration that the  election  of               all or any of the returned candidates is void,               claims  a further declaration that he  himself               or any other candidate has been duly  elected,               all  the contesting candidates other than  the               petitioner,   and   where  no   such   further               declaration  is  claimed,  all  the   returned               candidates; and               (b)   any   other   candidate   against   whom

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             allegations  of any corrupt practice are  made               in the petition."               Section  83  lays  down  inter  alia  that  an               election   petition  shall  set   forth   full               particulars  of any corrupt practice that  the               petitioner   alleges,  including as full a               statement  as  possible of the  names  of  the               parties alleged to have committed such corrupt               practice  and  the  date  and  place  of   the               commission of such practice.               Section 86( 1 ) provides that:               "The  High  Court shall  dismiss  an  election               petition  which  does  not  comply  with   the               provisions  of  section 81, or section  82  or               section 117." The  last  mentioned  section  relates  to  the  giving   of security for costs.  Sub-s. (4) of s. 86 gives any candidate not  already a respondent, a right to be joined as one  upon application   to  the High Court within fourteen  days  from the  date  of commencement of the trial and subject  to  any order as to security for costs which may be made. Under sub- s. (5)               "The  High Court may, upon such terms  as  to.               costs and otherwise as it may deem fit,  allow               the  particulars   of  any  corrupt   practice               alleged  in  the  petition to  be  amended  or               amplified in such manner as may in its opinion               be necessary for ensuring a fair and effective               trial of the petition, but shall not allow any               amendment of the petition which will have  the               effect of introducing particulars of a corrupt               practice   not  previously  alleged   in   the               petition." Sub-ss.  (6)  and  (7)  aim at the speedy  disposal  of  the election petitions.  Section 87 ( 1 ) provides that:               "Subject to the provisions of this Act and  of               any  rules  made  thereunder,  every  election               petition shall be tried by the High Court,  as               nearly  as  may  be, in  accordance  with  the               procedure  applicable under the Code of  Civil               Procedure, 1908 to the trial of suits :" The  proviso  to  the  sub-section  gives  the  High   Court discretion to refuse, for reasons to be recorded in writing, to examine any witness.  Sub-s. (2) makes the provisions  of the Indian Evidence 684 Act  applicable in all respects to the trial of an  election petition.  Section  98 shows the nature of the order  to  be made by the High Court at the conclusion of the trial of  an election  petition.  Section 99 makes it obligatory  on  the High Court while making an order under s. 98 in cases  where any  charge is made in the petition of any corrupt  practice having  been committed at the election, to record a  finding whether  any corrupt practice has or has not been proved  to have  been committed at the election and the nature of  that corrupt  practice as also the names of all persons, if  any, who have been proved at the trial to have been guilty of any corrupt practice and the nature of that practice.  There is. a  proviso to the section which lays down that a person  who is not a party to the petition shall not be so named  unless he has been given notice to appear before the High Court and to  show  cause to the contrary. In case he does so,  he  is further  given  the  right  to.  cross-examine  any  witness already  examined by the High Court and to give evidence  in his defence.

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Entry  72  of  List  I of  the  Seventh  Schedule  vests  in Parliament the exclusive power to make laws with respect  to elections  to Parliament, to the Legislatures of States  and to  the offices of President and Vice-President as also  the Election Commission. Under Art. 329(b) lm15 "Notwithstanding     anything in this        Constitution-- (a) (b)  no  election to either House of Parliament  or  to  the House of either House of the Legislature of a State shall be called in question except by an election petition  presented to  such authority and in such manner as may be provided for by or under any law made by  the  appropriate Legislature." In order to determine whether an election petition  launched for the purpose of contesting the validity of an election is an  application within the meaning of the Indian  Limitation Act, it is necessary to examine the nature of the rights and liabilities  involved therein and of the provisions  of  law which  govern such determination.  The right of citizens  to elect representatives of their choice either to the House of the  People  or to a Legislative Assembly of  a  State,  the process  of  election  beginning from  the  notification  of general  elections  and the nomination  of  candidates,  the general  procedure  at  elections, taking of  the  poll  and counting  of votes and the publication of  election  results are  all  matters  dealt  with  and  covered  by   different provisions of the Act.  The right to elect is statutory  and so are all the processes connected with the election.  There is no element of any common law right 685 in  the process of election.  Part VI of the Act deals  with disputes  regarding  election.  The second chapter  of  this Part  shows how elections may be called in  question,  which courts have jurisdiction to try election petitions, how such a petition is to be presented, who are to be parties to  the petition,  what  are to be the contents of the  petition  as also  the  relief which may be claimed by  the   petitioner. The  third  chapter  of this Part deals with  the  trial  of election  petitions.  The first section of this group  makes it  incumbent  on  the High Court to,  dismiss  an  election petition  straightaway  if it does not comply  with  certain statutory  requirements. The next section is a guide to  the procedure to be adopted by the High Court in the trial of an election  petition.   This  section  does    not  equate  an election  petition  with  a  suit  but  merely  shows   that subject to the provisions of the Act and. of any rules  made thereunder, the trial is to conform as nearly as possible to the trial of a suit under the Code of Civil Procedure.  This means that (a) the contestants have a right to file  written statements, (b) both parties must disclose the documents  on which  they reply;  (c) they must examine witnesses  orally, if  necessary, to substantiate   the charges leveled or  the defenses raised in the petition; and (d) the evidence to  be adduced  must  comply with the requirements  of  the  Indian Evidence  Act.  There are however certain limitations as  to the questions which may put to a witness contained in ss. 94 and  95; the returned candidate has a right  to  recriminate under the provisions of s. 97.  The High Court does not pass a decree as  in the case of a suit but has to make an  order in terms of s. 98 which gives the nature of the orders to be made.   The High Court has to communicate the  substance  of its  decision to the Election Commission and the Speaker  or the  Chairman as the case may be of the House of the  People or  of  the  State  Legislature.   Chapter  IV  deals   with withdrawal and abatement of election petitions.  Chapter IV-

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A  deals with appeals from the decisions of the High.  Court and Chapter V deals with costs and security for costs. The  above  brief analysis is sufficient to  show  that  the trial  of an election petition is not the same thing as  the trial  of a suit.  As was pointed out by this Court  in  the case of Kamaraja Nadar v. Kunju Thevat(1), the provisions of the Act               "go to show that an election contest is not an               action      at law or a suit in equity but  is               a  purely statutory proceeding unknown to  the               common law  ......  " The  Court also emphasised on the peculiar character  of  an election  petition  by quoting from the observations  of  A. Sreenivasan v. Election Tribunal, Madras(2).  Reference  was also made. to the Tipperary case(3) where Morris, J. said: (1) [1959] S.C.R. 583 at 596. (2) 11 E.I..R. 278 at 293.                          (3) (1875) 310, M & H 19.25. 686               "  ....  a petition is not a suit between  two               persons,  but  is a proceeding  in  which  the               constituency  itself is the’  principal  party               interested." This aspect of an election petition was emphasised again  in the  ,case of Basappa v. Ayyappa(1) where it was  held  that the provisions of O. 23 r. 1 of the Code of Civil  Procedure do not apply to election petitions and it would not be  open to  a petitioner to withdraw or abandon a part of his  claim once  an  election petition was presented  to  the  Election Commission. Even  though  s.  87 ( 1 ) of the Act  lays  down  that  the procedure  applicable to the trial of an  election  petition shall  be like that of the trial of a suit, the  Act  itself makes  important provisions of the Code inapplicable to  the trial  of an election petition.  Under O. 6 r. 17  C.P.C.  a court  of  law trying the suit has very wide powers  in  the matter   of  allowing  amendments  of  pleadings   and   all amendments  which  will aid the court in  disposing  of  the matters in dispute between the parties are as a rule allowed subject  to the law of limitation.  But s. 86(5) of the  Act provides for restrictions on the power of the High Court  to allow  amendments.   The  High Court is  not  to  allow  the amendment  of  a  petition which will  have  the  effect  of introducing particulars of a corrupt practice not previously alleged  in  the  petition.  With regard to the addition  of parties  which is possible in the case of a suit  under  the provisions of O. 1 r. 10 subject to the added party’s  right to  contend  that  the suit as against  him  was  barred  by limitation when he was irapleaded, no addition of parties is possible  in the case of an election petition  except  under the  provisions of sub-s. (4 ) of s. 86.  Section  82  shows who are necessary parties to an election petition which must be  filed within 45 days from the date of election  as  laid down  in s. 81. Under s. 86(1) it is incumbent on  the  High Court to dismiss an election petition which does not  comply with the provisions of s. 81 or s. 82. Again the High  Court must  dismiss an election petition if security for costs  be not given in terms of s. 117 of the Act. It is well settled that amendments to a petition in a  civil proceeding and the addition of parties to such a  proceeding are  generally  possible subject to the law  of  limitation. But an election petition stands on a different footing.  The trial  of  such a petition and the powers of  the  court  in respect  thereof  are  all circumscribed by  the  Act.   The Indian  Limitation Act of 1963 is an Act to consolidate  and

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amend  the law of limitation of suits and other  proceedings and  for  purposes connected therewith.  The  provisions  of this  Act  will  apply to all  civil  proceedings  and  some special  criminal proceedings which can be taken in a  court of  law unless the application thereof has been excluded  by any enact- (1)[1959] S.C.R. 611. 687 ment: the extent of such application is governed by s. 29(2) of   the  Limitation  Act.   In  our  opinion  however   the Limitation Act cannot apply to proceedings like an  election petition inasmuch as the Representation of the People Act is a  complete and self-contained code which does not admit  of the introduction of the principles or the provisions of  law contained in the Indian Limitation Act. Before  the  recent amendment of the Representation  of  the People  Act, election petitions had to be presented  to  the Election  Commission  and it was the  Commission  which  was empowered  under section 85 to dismiss the petition  if  the then provisions of s. 81, s. 83 and s. 117 were not complied with.   It  is only when the petition was not  so  dismissed that  the  Election  Commission had to appoint  an  Election Tribunal  for  the trial of the petition. Under  s.  85  the Commission had power to admit a petition presented after the prescribed  period  if  it  was  satisfied  that  there  was sufficient cause for the failure.  Section 90(4) of the  Act of  1951  empowered  the Tribunal  to  dismiss  an  election petition  even  if  it  had not been  so  dismissed  by  the Election Commission. The Act as amended in 1966 gives the jurisdiction to try  an election  petition  to  the  High  Court  of  a  State.  The provision  for appeal in s. 116-A was introduced in the  Act for  the  first time in 1956 providing for  an  appeal  from every order of the Tribunal under s. 98 or s. 99 to the High Court  of the State in which the Tribunal was  situate.   By sub-s.  (2)  of s. 116-A of the Act as amended in  1956  the High  Court  was, subject to the provisions of the  Act,  to have the same powers, jurisdiction and authority and was  to follow  the same procedure with respect to an appeal’  under this Chapter (Chapter IV-A) as if the appeal were an  appeal from an original decree passed by a court situate within the local  limits of its civil appellate  jurisdiction.   Sub-s. (3) fixed the time limit for filing the appeal. to a  period of  30 days from the date of the order complained  of.   The proviso  to this sub-section gave the High Court  discretion to entertain an appeal after the expiry of the period of  30 days, if it was satisfied that the appellant had  sufficient cause  for  not preferring the appeal  within  such  period. This section was amended again in 1966 and s. 116-A( 1 ) now provides for an appeal from an order of the High Court under s. 98 or s. 99 to the Supreme Court on any question, whether of  law or fact.  Sub-s.  (2 ) of the new section is on  the same  lines  as  the old sub-s.  (3)  excepting   that   the Supreme  Court has been substituted for the High  Court  and the High Court for the Tribunal in the old section. While the Act of 1956 was in force this Court had to go into the question as to whether s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act of 1908 would be applicable to an appeal preferred to the  High Court 688 from  an  order of the Tribunal.  In Vidyacharan  Shukla  v. Khubchand  Baghel (1) the main question before  this.  Court was  whether for the purpose of computing the period  of  30 days   prescribed  under  s.  116-A(3)  of  the   Act,   the provisions, of s. 12 of the Limitation Act could be invoked.

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The  High  Court had proceeded on the basis  that  s.  29(2) applied to the case of appeals under s. 116-A of the Act and on that basis had held that the appeal was within time if it was ’computed after making the deductions permitted by s. 12 of the Limitation Act.  There was a good deal of  discussion in  the case about the scope and extent of s. 29(2). We  are no.t  concerned with that in the present appeal.   According to the learned Chief Justice and Ayyangar, J.               "even  on  the narrowest construction  of  the               words   ’different   from   those   prescribed               therefor in the  first schedule’ occurring  in               the opening part of s. 29(2), the exclusion of               time provided for by Art. 12 of the Limitation               Act  would  be permissible  in  computing  the               period of limitation for filing the appeal  to               the High Subba  Rao, J. (as he then was) took the view that s.  116-A did  not  provide  an  exhaustive  and  exclusive  code   of limitation and did not exclude the general provisions of the Limitation  Act. The majority view was that though the fight of  appeal was conferred by s. 116-A of the Act of  1951  it was still an appeal under the Code of Civil Procedure and to attract  Art.  156 of the First Schedule to  the  Limitation Act,  it  was not necessary for an appeal to  be  an  appeal under  the  Code of Civil Procedure in  that  the  right  to prefer  the appeal should be conferred by the said Code.  In our  view. sub-s. (2 ) of s. 116-A empowered the High  Court to treat an appeal under that section presented to it as  if it were an appeal from an original decree passed by a  court within the local limits of its civil appellate jurisdiction. Consequently, the jurisdiction, powers and authority of  the High  Court  would  be  the same as in  an  appeal  from  an original  decree  of  a  lower court.  In  other  words,  in entertaining  the appeal and disposing of it the High  Court could exercise the same powers as were available to it in an appeal  from a decree of a lower court.  To such  an  appeal the  powers of the High Court under s. 12 of the  Limitation Act would necessarily 130 attracted, Mr. Ram Reddy attempted to press that decision to service in the  appeal  before  us.  In our  view,  the  situation  now obtaining  in an appeal to this Court from an order  of  the High  Court is entirely different.  There is no  section  in the Act as it now stands which equates an order made by  the High  Court under s. 98 or  Is. 99 to a decree passed  by  a civil court subordinate to the High (1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 129. 689 Court.  An appeal being a creature of a statute, the  rights conferred  on  the appellant must be found within  the  four corners  of  the Act.  Sub-s. (2) of the  present  s.  116-A expressly  gives this Court the discretion and authority  to entertain an appeal after the expiry of the period of thirty days.   No  right  is however given to  the  High  Court  to entertain  an election petition which does not  comply  with the provisions of s. 81, s. 82 or s. 117. It  was  argued  that if a petition were to  be  thrown  out merely because a necessary party had not been joined  within the period of 45 days no enquiry into the corrupt  practices alleged to have been committed at certain elections would be possible.   This is however a matter which can be set  right only by the Legislature. It is worthy of note that  although the  Act has been amended on several occasions, a  provision like  s.  86(1)  as it now stands has  always  been  on  the statute  book but whereas in the Act of 1951 the  discretion was given to the Election Commission to entertain a petition

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beyond the period fixed if it was satisfied as to the  cause for  delay  no such saving clause is to be found  now.   The legislature in its wisdom has made the observance of certain formalities  and provisions obligatory and failure  in  that respect  can  only  be  visited  with  a  dismissal  of  the petition. It  is  to  be noted however that  even  though  the  Indian Limitation Act, 1963 does not apply to an election  petition provisions  like  sections 9 and 10 of the  General  Clauses Act,  1897  providing for computation of time which  are  in pari  materia with sections 12( 1 ) and 4 of the  Limitation Act would apply to such a petition. The  last submission of counsel for the appellants was  that the failure to implead V.K. Reddi did not make the  election petition  liable  to  dismissal under s. 86 (1  ).   It  was argued  that after V.K. Reddi had withdrawn from contest  he was no longer a candidate within the meaning of s. 79(b)  or 82(b) of the Act.  In our opinion, it is not open to him  to argue  that point in view of the decision of this  Court  in Hat Swarup v. Brij Bhushan(1).  It is to be noted that  this decision  does  not  stand by itself.   In  Mohan  Singh  v. Bhanwarlal(2)  an  attempt  was made  to  get  the  election petition  dismissed in limine on the ground that one of  the candidates  at the election, namely, Himmat  Singh,  against whom allegations of corrupt practice were made in regard  to withdrawal   of  his  candidature  was  not  joined   as   a respondent.  It was held by this Court that a mere offer  to help in getting employment was not an offer of gratification within  the meaning of s. 123(1)(B) of the Act.   The  Court however observed:               "If  therefore  the  petition  contained   any               imputation  of corrupt practice  made  against               Himmat Singh, it could (1)  [1967]  1 S.C.R. 342. (2) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 12. 690               not be regarded as properly constituted unless               he was impleaded as a respondent, for, by  the               defmition   of  "candidate" in s.  79(b),  the               expression  "any     other   candidate" in  s.               82(b)  must include a candidate     who    had               withdrawn Iris candidature." (see at p. 18 ). Reference may also be made to Amin Lal v. Hunna Mal(1). It was however sought to be argued that s. 99 enjoined  upon the  High Court to name all persons who had been  proved  at the  trial to have been guilty of any corrupt  practice  and where such a person who not a party to the petition, he  was not to be so named unless he had been given notice to appear before the High Court and asked to show cause why he  should not  be  so named and if he chose to appear, he  was  to  be given  an opportunity of crossexamining any witness  already examined  by the High Court and of calling evidence  in  his own  defence  and of being heard.  This  provision,  to  our mind,   only  enjoins  upon  the  High  Court  to  give   an opportunity  to  a  person sought to be  held  guilty  of  a corrupt practice if he was not a party to the petition,  but it  does  not  apply to a person who is  a  necessary  party thereto.  An obvious case for the use of powers. under s. 99 would be that of an agent guilty of commission of a  corrupt practice  with the consent of the candidate.  Such a  person would  not be a necessary party to the petition but he  must have  an opportunity of showing cause  and  of  being  heard before  the High Court can name him as guilty of  a  corrupt practice while making an order under s. 98. In  our  opinion,  the appeal has  no  merits  and  must  be

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dismissed with costs. G.C.                                      Appeal dismissed. (1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 393. 691