04 February 1969
Supreme Court
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KHAJE KHANAVAR KHADERKHAN HUSSAIN KHANAND OTHERS Vs SIDDAVANBALLI NIJALINGAPPA & ANR.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1621 of 1967


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PETITIONER: KHAJE KHANAVAR KHADERKHAN HUSSAIN KHANAND OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SIDDAVANBALLI NIJALINGAPPA & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/1969

BENCH: BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA BENCH: BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA SHELAT, J.M. VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.

CITATION:  1969 AIR 1034            1969 SCR  (3) 524  1969 SCC  (1) 631

ACT: Constitution  of  India, 1950, Art.  173(a)-Making  oath  or affirmation-When should be made. Practice and Procedure-Representation of the People Act  (43 of  1951),  s. 116A-Appeal-Taking new points-Code  of  Civil Procedure  (Act  5 of 1908), O. 16, r. 14-Duty of  Court  to summon court witnesses. Notification  by  Election Commissioner under  Art.  173(a)- Requirement of making oaths or affirmation before  competent officer ’of that constituency’-Scope of.

HEADNOTE: The  first  respondent, who was the Chief  Minister  of  the State, and the first appellant were candidates for  election to   the   Mysore   Legislative   Assembly   from   Shiggaon constituency.  The notification fixing the time schedule for the elections fixed 20th January 1967, as the last date  for filing  nominations, 21st as the date of scrutiny, and  23rd as  the last date for withdrawal of candidature.  The  first respondent,  had  also  filed his nomination  at  two  other places,   Bagalkot   and  Hospet,  and  validly   made   the affirmations  required by Art. 173 (a) of the  Constitution, at those places on the 19th and 20th January.  He also  made the affirmation before the Returning Officer of the Shiggaon constituency on the date of scrutiny, that is, 21st January. The  first respondent was declared elected unopposed on  the date  of scrutiny on the ground that all  other  candidates, including   the   first  appellant,  had   withdrawn   their candidature.   The  first  appellant  challenged  the  first respondent’s   election  on  the  grounds  that  the   first respo ndent  was  disqualified  for  failure  to  make   the affirmation  under Art. 173(a) before filing the  nomination paper  in  Shiggaon constituency, that the  withdrawal  from candidature  of  the  first appellant was  attempted  to  be obtained by inducement, threats and undue in and was in fact procured  with the connivance of the Returning Officer,  and that the first respondent committed other irregularities  in the filing of his nomination.  It was alleged that one P was responsible  for the corrupt practices with the  consent  of the  first respondent.  P was not examined as a  witness  by

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the  respondents.  The first appellant filed an  application to  examine  P as a court-witness, on the  ground  that  the appellant could not examine him as his own witness since  he would be hostile to the appellant.  The High Court  rejected the ;application. The High Court, after rightly repelling the contention  that the affirmation should have been made prior to the filing of the  nomination,  held that the affirmation  made  prior  to scrutiny was sufficient compliance with the requirements  of Art.  173(a),  and that the charges of corrupt  practice  of undue  influence and bribery against the  first  respondent, and  the connivance of the Returning Officer in relation  to the corrupt practices and irregularities, were not proved. In  appeal to this Court, it was contended that :  (1)  This Court,  in  Pashupati Nath Singh v.  Harihar  Prasad  Singh, A.I.R.  1968 S.C. 1064, held that the affirmation should  be made  before the date of scrutiny, so that, in  the  present case, it should have been made at the latest by the mid-                             525 night between 20th and 21st January; and (2) On the  failure of  the first respondent to examine P an  adverse  inference should  have  been drawn against the first  respondent,  and that  the  High Court erred in not summoning P as  a  court- witness. HELD:(1) (a) Since the first appellant was permitted to raise  the new ground based upon the decision  in  Pashupati Math  Singh’s  case,  the first  respondent  should  not  be debarred from putting forward his alternative plea that Art. 173(a)  was satisfied on the basis of the affirmations  made at Bagalkot and Hospet. [532 E-F] (b)The  notification issued by the Election Commission  in pursuance of Art. 173(a) stated that the affirmation  should be made before the Returning Officer or Assistant  Returning Officer  for  that constituency.  In  using  the  expression ’that  constituency’,  the intention of  the  Election  Com- mission  was  that the affirmation must be made  before  the Returning  Officer  or Assistant Returning Officer  of  that particular constituency from which the candidate was seeking election  to the Legislature of the State, whether it be  an Assembly Constituency or ’a Council Constituency. [534 A-B] (c)When the first respondent made his affirmations on  the 19th and 20th before, the Returning Officer at Bagalkot  and Hospet  respectively,  he  was  a  candidate  nominated  for election  from those constituencies.  Once he made  such  an affirmation  before  one of the persons  authorised  by  the Election   Commission  he  had  fully  complied   with   the requirements of Art. 173(a), and thereupon, became qualified to  be  a candidate for election to the  Mysore  Legislative Assembly. [534 C-E]. The purpose of Art. 173(a) is to ensure that any person, who wants to be a member of a Legislature of a State, must  bear true  faith  and allegiance to the Constitution  as  by  law established  and  undertake to uphold  the  sovereignty  and integrity  of  India, and, to ensure this, he must  make  an oath  or  affirmation.   The Article requires  one  oath  or affirmation in accordance with the form set out in the Third Schedule   to  the  Constitution  so  as  to   ’remove   the disqualification from being a candidate for election to  the Legislature of the State.  The Article does not mention that the  making of oath or affirmation is to be  preliminary  to the  validity of candidature in each constituency,  and  the Article  does  not require that the  qualification  must  be acquired  separately  in respect of each  constituency  from which  a candidate was seeking election.  Once the  oath  or affirmation is made before a competent authority in  respect

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of  one  constituency, the candidate becomes bound  by  that oath  or  affirmation  even  if  he  gets  elected  to   the Legislature from a different constituency [534 E-H; 535 A-B] (2)In  the  present  case,  the  circumstantial   evidence indicated  that  the version put forward on  behalf  of  the appellants could not be true.  therefore, the High Court was justified in holding that the appellants’ case was shown  to be false by other evidence, so that, there was no compelling reason for the High Court to examine P as a court-witness or to  draw an adverse inference against first  respondent  for his failure to examine P as a witness. [540 G-H; 541 A] Dr.  M. Chenna Reddy v. V. Ramachandra Rao, C.A. No. 1449/68 dt. 17-12-1968, R. M. Seshadri v. G. Vasantha Pai, [1969]  2 S.C.R.  1019 and Nani Gopal Swami v. Abdul Hamid  Chowdhury, A.I.R. 1959 Assam 200, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1621 of 1967. 8Sup.  CI/69-15 526 Appeal  under S. 116-A of the Representation of  the  People Act, 1951 from the judgment and order dated August 4, 7,  8, 1967 of the Mysore High Court in Election Petition No. 2  of 1967. B.   S.  Patel,  S.  Paramila  and  R.  B.  Datar,  for  the appellants. A.   K.  Sen, S. S. Javali and M. Yeerappa,  for  respondent No. 1 Shyamala Pappu and S. P. Nayar, for respondent No. 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bhargava, J.This   appeal  under  section  116A  of   the Representation ofthe  People’s  Act,  1951   (hereinafter referred  to as "the Act") has been filed by two  appellants whose  election petition for setting aside the  election  of respondent  No. 1 has been ,dismissed by the High  Court  of Mysore.  Appellant No. 1 was one of the candidates who filed his  nomination  for  election  to  the  Mysore  Legislative Assembly  from  Shiggaon  Constituency in  the  District  of Dharwar.  Appellant No. 2 was a voter in that  constituency. The notification fixing the time-schedule for the  elections was  issued on the 13th January, 1967, fixing 20th  January, 1967 as the last date for filing nominations, 21st  January, 1967 as the date of scrutiny, and 23rd January, 1967 as  the last  date for withdrawal of candidature.  According to  the appellants,  only eight candidates filed  their  nominations within  time  up  to 20th January, 1967.  One  of  them  was appellant  No’ 1. Respondent No. 1 was not included  amongst the  seven  other candidates and his  nomination  paper  was subsequently introduced amongst the records of the Returning Officer  on behalf of respondent No. 1 with the aid  of  the Returning Officer.  The Returning Officer is respondent  No. 2  in the appeal, having been impleaded as respondent No.  2 in the election petition also.  It was further pleaded that, even if any nomination paper was filed by respondent No.  1, it  was  not  accompanied by the  relevant  portion  of  the electoral  roll  in  which  the name  of  respondent  No.  1 appeared as a voter which was necessary, because  respondent No.  1  was  not  a voter in this  constituency,  but  in  a different constituency.  No deposit as required by s. 34  of the Act was made in time; and, further still, respondent No. 1  was  not qualified to be chosen to fill the seat  in  the Legislature,  because he had not made and subscribed  before the  person  authorised  in  that  behalf  by  the  Election

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Commission an oath or affirmation according to the form  set out   for  the  purpose  in  the  Third  Schedule   to   the Constitution as required by Article 173 (a).  It was alleged that,  despite  all  these defects.  respondent  No.  1  was declared  elected unopposed on the date of scrutiny  on  the incorrect  ground  that all other candidates  had  withdrawn their candidature.  The appellants accepted the 527 genuineness  and  validity of the withdrawals by  the  seven other  candidates,  leaving  appellant No.  1  as  the  sole contesting  candidate.  The further case was that, in  order to  have  respondent  No.  1  returned  unopposed,   corrupt practices were committed to obtain a withdrawal form  signed by  appellant No. 1 and it was filed illegally  before-  the Returning Officer. The version relating to the commission of corrupt  practices and to the filing of the withdrawal forms of appellant No. 1 may  now  be stated.  The appellants allege that  the  whole manoeuvring  was  done  by one  Patil  Puttappa,  Member  of Parliament, who was a staunch supporter of respondent No. 1, and by Mahalinga Shetty, the son-in-law of respondent No. 1. These  two persons caught hold of two other  persons,  Hotti Peerasabnavar Chamensab Ghudusab (hereinafter referred to as "P.   W.  3"), and Nadaf Mohamad  Jafar  Saheb  (hereinafter referred  to as "P.  W. 4"), and through them, attempted  to induce  appellant  No.  1  to  withdraw  his  nomination  by promising to get him a long-awaited huller licence and  also to  get him better patronage for his  book-selling  business and  for  receiving other aid and support for  his  material prosperity.  The appellants allege that this inducement  was offered   without   disclosing  that  respondent   No.   1’s candidature  was  spurious.   For  this  purpose,  on   20th January, 1967, at about 8.30 p.m., while appellant No. 1 was sitting  at-the shop of one Joshi, a car arrived from  which P.W. 4 got down, came to appellant No. 1 and told him  that Patil Puttappa was calling him and requesting him to go with him.   Appellant No. 1 went with P. W. 4 towards the car  in which Patil Puttappa was sitting. The latter asked appellant No.  1 why he should further trouble himself  with  election matters when he had enough work in connection with the shop, flour  mill and his garden lands.  He added that it will  be to  the  advantage  of  appellant  No.  1  to  withdraw  his nomination, promising that he would assist him in his trade, assist him an agency for paper and would help him to  secure a  licence: for his huller which, he said, he had  heard  he was  trying  to  obtain without success.   Appellant  No.  1 replied  that  he had filed his nomination with  a  view  to contest the elections as his candidature had been  sponsored by  many  people  and he was not  willing  to  withdraw  his nomination.   In spite of requests having been made  two  or three  times,  appellant No. 1 refused.  At a  later  stage, when  he asked why be should withdraw his nomination,  Patil Puttappa  told him that they desired uncontested  return  of respondent  No.  1, and that was the reason  why  they  were making  that request.  Appellant No. 1 then objected  saying that  respondent  No.  1  bad  not  filed  his   nomination, whereupon   Patil  Puttappa  stated  that  every   necessary arrangement  would be made to secure the uncontested  return of  respondent No. 1. At the time, of this  talk,  Mahalinga Shetty  was a so sitting  in the car.  When appellant  No. 1 continued  to  be hesitant, Patil Puttappa asked him  to  go with him in the car and, in, this 52 8 suggestion,  P. Ws. 3 and 4 Supported him.  Appellant No.  1 first  declined  to  do so because he was  not  prepared  to

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accede  to the request for Withdrawing his nomination,  but, on  Patil  Puttappa’s persistence, he agreed  to  go  along, provided  appellant No. 2 also accompanied  him.   Appellant No.  1  then  went  to the shop  of  appellant  No.  2  and, thereafter, both of them got into the car and were taken  to the   house   of  one   Hanumanthagouda   Ayyangouda   Patil (hereinafter  referred to as "R.  W. 3").   Patil  Puttappa, Mahalinga Shetty and the two appellants all went inside  the house  of  R. W. 3 and sat there when  Patil  Puttappa  once again  made  a request to appellant No. 1  to  withdraw  his nomination.  Appellant No’. 1 refused, while appellant No. 2 also supported him by stating that appellant No. 1 had  full support  of the Muslims of the locality and that  there  was every  chance of his success, so that there was no point  in his withdrawing the nomination.  Thereafter, Patil  Puttappa changed his tactics and told appellant No. 1 that it  would neither  be good nor safe for him to continue to refuse  his request  and threatened him by asking whether he would  like to go on with the, election or prefer to live in safety.  He added that he was a Member of Parliament and, therefore,  he could do anything to appellant No. 1He  also produced  a blank printed form and two blank sheets ofwhite paper and asked appellant No. 1 to sign them,      giving thethreat that  he  will not be allowed to go, unless he  affixed  his signatures to them.  When appellant No. 1 looked for support to   appellant  No.  2,  the  latter  was   also   similarly threatened, whereupon he said that there was no escape  and, consequently,  appellant  No. 1 should sign  the  papers  as desired by Patil Puttappa.  Against his will and  submitting to  the  pressure of Puttappa, appellant No.  1  signed  the papers which were taken away by Puttappa who left asking  R. W.  3  not to permit the two appellants to go  away,  unless Puttappa  himself  told  him’  to  let  them  go.   The  two appellants,  according  to them, were kept confined  in  the house  of R. W. 3 throughout the night of 20th  January  and again  throughout the day and night of 21st January,,  1967. They were only allowed to leave the house at about 4-30 a.m. on  22nd January, 1967, when a servant of R. W. 3 woke  them up  and told them that they could go away.  The  charge  put forward on the basis of these facts was that an attempt  was made to bribe appellant No. 1 to withdraw his nomination  by offering  him help in obtaining the licence for  the  huller and in getting him agency for paper, with the further charge that  signatures  on the withdrawal form  were  obtained  by undue   influence.   It  was  further  pleaded   that   that withdrawal  form was filed before the Returning  Officer  by some  one other than appellant No. 1 or his election  agent. The  case  put forward in the election petition,  thus,  was that the withdrawal from candidature of appellant No. 1  was attempted  to  be obtained by offering  inducements  and  by subjecting him to threats and by exercise of undue influence in 529 which assistance of the Returning Officer was procured.   In the  ’Commission  of  these  corrupt  practices,  there  was consent  of  respondent  No.  1, so  that  the  election  of respondent No. 1 was void.  In order to prove the consent of respondent No. 1 to the commission of the corrupt practices, the  case put forward was that, subsequent, to  the  alleged withdrawal  of  candidature  by  all  the  other  candidates including  appellant No. 1, leaving respondent No. 1 as  the sole candidate, respondent No. 1 met P. Ws. 3 and 4 and gave them an assurance that the- promises which had already  been made to assist appellant No. 1 will be honoured. The further version put forward on behalf of the appellants,

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subsequent  to their release from ’the house of R. W. 3,  is that,  when  they came out of the house towards  the’  Poona Bangalore  Road,  they felt ashamed to show their  faces  in their own town of Shiggaon and, consequently, decided to  go to  Hubli for a few days.  A truck happened to  pass  there. carrying  some  goods and, since they had some  money,  they took a lift in the truck and went to Hubli.  They went to  a canteen  for  refreshments and on the table  they  found  an issue of a newspaper ’Samyukta Karnataka’ in which  appeared a news item stating that respondent No. 1 had been  returned uncontested  at Shiggaon.  Appellant No. 1  felt  surprised, because  be had not withdrawn his nomination,, He  consulted appellant  No. 2 and the two of them, after  thinking  over, realised that advantage must have been taken against them of the  papers which appellant No. 1 had been made to  sign  at the  ,house  of R. W. 3. They, therefore, decided to  see  a lawyer and selected Sadashiv Shankarappa Settar (hereinafter referred  to as "P. W. 2") because, besides being a  lawyer, he  was also a candidate in the election.  They went to  his house twice at about 9 a.m. and again at about 12-30 or  100 p.m.,  but he was not at home.  They waited on,  the  second occasion  until about 2-30 p.m. when he returned and,  after taking-his meals, he ultimately talked to them at 3 p.m.  As a  result  of the consultation P. W. 2  drafted  a  telegram which was despatched by the appellants at about 4-35 p.m. to the Returning Officer.  In the telegram, it was mentioned by appellant No. 1 that he had read in a newspaper that he  had withdrawn  which was false as he had not withdrawn  and  the withdrawal form was not presented by him.  He added that  he did  not  know  who  had  filled  in  the  contents  of  the withdrawal form and who had presented it and,  consequently, wanted the Returning Officer to treat it as invalid,  adding that he was still contesting the election from the  Shiggaon constituency.  The Returning Officer received it on the same evening, i.e., on 22nd January, 1967, but noted on it  that, since  it  was  a telegram, it could not be  acted  upon  or considered.  Thereafter, appellant No. 1 addressed a meeting late at night in a locality called ’Durgada Bailu’ in  Hubli where  election  propaganda  was  going  on.   After  taking further steps next day, the appellants continued to stay in 530 Hubli  for  2  or 3 days and  they  ultimately  returned  to Shiggaon on the 25th January, 1967.  On these pleadings, the case  put  forward was that appellant No. 1 had  never  with drawn  his candidature and that, since respondent No. 1  had never  filed his nomination paper and all  other  candidates had  withdrawn, appellant No. 1 was entitled to be  declared elected unopposed.  In the election petition, therefore,  in addition  to the relief for declaration of the  election  of respondent  No.  1 as void, appellant No. 1 also  claimed  a declaration that he was the duly elected candidate from  the Shiggaon constituency. The point that was put in the fore-front by Mr. B. S. Patil, learned  counsel for the appellants, and was  argued  first. relates to the challenge of the validity of the election  of respondent No. 1 on the ground that he was disqualified  for failure  to  make  or subscribe an oath  or  affirmation  in accordance  with  the  provisions of Art.  173  (a)  of  the Constitution.  In the election petition, it was pleaded that the  oath or affirmation should have preceded the filing  of the  nomination  paper,  so  that,  even  if  any  oath   or affirmation  was  made  subsequent  to  the  filing  of  the nomination  paper, it would be invalid and would  not  avoid the  disqualification.  On behalf of respondent No.  1,  the reply  in  the written statement was that respondent  No.  1

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did,  in  fact,  make an affirmation  before  the  Returning Officer of this very constituency of Shiggaon on the date of the scrutiny, viz., 21st January, 1967, before the Returning Officer  scrutinised the nomination paper of respondent  No. 1.   Evidence  was also led to show that, on  21st  January, 1967,  respondent  No. 1 did arrive, at the  office  of  the Returning Officer just before the scrutiny of his nomination paper  was  being taken up and he immediately  proceeded  to make the affirmation.  Prior to his arrival, his  nomination paper for another constituency Kundagaol was rejected by the Returning Officer on the ground that no affirmation had been made  and respondent No.  1 was disqualified under Art.  173 (a).   It may be mentioned that this Returning  Officer  was functioning as such for three different      constituencies, Shiggaon, Kundagol andShirahatti, though his Headquarters were temporarily located atShiggaon.      Since       the affirmation was made before the ReturningOfficer      by respondent  No.  1 prior to the scrutiny of  his  nomination paper  for Shiggaon Constituency, the Retuning Officer  held that  respondent  No.  1 was  not  disqualified  under  Art. 173(a),  and declared his nomination as valid.  These  facts were  accepted by the High Court in this case and  the  High Court  upheld  the view of the Returning  Officer  that  the affirmation made prior to the scrutiny of his own nomination paper  by  respondent  No. 1 was full  compliance  with  the requirements of Article 173(a).  The High Court repelled the argument  advanced  on  behalf of the  appellants  that  the affirmation should have been made before the 531 filing of the nomination paper.  In the course of  arguments on this point before us, however, neither party stuck to the position that was taken up by it before the High Court.   On behalf  of the, appellants, the alternative  legal  position relied  upon was that, in any case, the  affirmation  should have been made before the date of scrutiny, so that, in  the present  case,  it should have been latest by  the  midnight between  20th  and  21st  January,  1967.   This  plea   for challenging the validity of the election of respondent No. 1 was  not taken either in the pleadings or even at any  later stage:  in the High Court.  In fact, it was taken  here  for the  first time on the basis of a decision of this Court  in Pashupati  Nath  Singh v. Harihar Prasad Singh.(1)  In  that case,  this  Court has clearly held that the effect  of  the provision contained in s. 3 6 (2) (a) of the Act is that the oath  or  affirmation  must be before  the  date  fixed  for scrutiny, so that the candidate possesses the  qualification under  Art. 173(a) of the Constitution on the whole  of  the day  on which the scrutiny of nomination has to take  place. Even though this ground was not raised in the High Court, we consider  that we cannot.now ignore it and we have  to  hold that  the High Court was incorrect in rejecting the plea  of the  appellants on the ground that a valid  affirmation  had been  made  by respondent No. 1 on 21st January,  1967  just before the scrutiny of his nomination paper. In  view  of  this  position  taken  up  on  behalf  of  the appellants,  Mr. A. K. Sen, learned counsel  for  respondent No. 1, put forward the alternative plea that respondent  No. 1   was   not  disqualified  under  Art.   173(a)   of   the Constitution,  because he had validly made  affirmations  at two  other places on the 19th and 20th January,  1967.   For this purpose, reliance was placed on the statements made  by respondent No. 1 when he was cross-examined on behalf of the appellants.   Respondent No. 1 at one stage stated  that  he filed  his nomination at Bagalkot on the 19th January,  1967 between 2 and 3-00 p.m. in the afternoon.  On further cross-

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examination   came  his  statement  that,  at  Bagalkot   he subscribed  to the affirmation on the very day on  which  he presented his nomination paper and he also confirmed that he was  in a position to affirm on personal knowledge  that  he had  filed his nomination at Bagalkot on the  19th  January, 1967.    Similarly,  he  also  stated  that  he  filed   his nomination  for the Hoovinahadagali Constituency  at  Hospet and,  though  he could not give the exact date on  which  he filed the nomination paper, he remembered that he subscribed to the affirmation there on the night of 20th January, 1967. It  was urged by Mr. Sen that, having made affirmation  once either  at  Bagalkot  or at Hospet in  accordance  with  the requirements of law, respondent No. 1 became qualified under Art.  173 (a) of the Constitution to be a candidate for  the Legisla- (1)A.I.R. 1968 S.C. 1064. 532 tive Assembly and, therefore, it was immaterial that he  did not  again make an affirmation in time before the  Returning Officer of Shiggaon Constituency. This claim was resisted by.  Mr. Patil on two grounds.   The first point urged ’was that this was a new case being set up on  behalf  of respondent No. 1 for the first time  in  this Court  and it should not, therefore, be taken into  account. The  second  was  that, in any  case,.  the  affirmation  at Bagalkot  or  Hospet  could  not enure  to  the  benefit  of respondent No. 1 for holding him to be qualified under  Art. 173  (a)  of the Constitution to stand as a  candidate  from Shiggaon  Constituency.   On the first  Point,  we  consider that,  in  view,  of the position  noticed  by  us  earlier, respondent  No.  1  is fully justified on  relying  on  this alternative  case in this Court, even though it was not  put forward during the trial in the High Court.  While the  case was  being tried in the High Court, the plea put forward  by the appellants themselves was different from the plea on the basis  of which the affirmation made by respondent No. 1  at Shiggaon  on  21st  January,  1967  is  being  held  to   be insufficient  for compliance with the requirements  of  Art. 173(a).  In the High Court, that affirmation was  challenged solely on the ground that it should have been made prior  to the  filing  of the nomination paper; and  that  ground,  of course, had no force, because the form of affirmation  given in  the Third Schedule to the Constitution itself  makes  it manifest  that  the  affirmation  must  be  made  after  the nomination paper has been filed. Now that we have permitted the  appellants  to  raise  a new ground  and  rely  on  the decision  given  by  this Court in  Pashupati  Nath  Singh’s case(1), there is no justification for debarring  respondent No. 1 from putting forward the alternative case on the basis of  the affirmations made at Bagalkot and Hospet.  The  fact of  affirmations  having been made by respondent No.,  1  at those  two  places before the Returning  Officers  of  those Constituencies   was  elicited  by  the  counsel   for   the appellants themselves in the cross-examination.  The  facts, having  come on record, cannot be ignored, so that  reliance has  rightly  been  placed  on  those  facts  on  behalf  of respondent No. 1. On the second point, the argument has proceeded primarily on the  language  of the notification issued by  the  Election, Commission  in  pursuance of clause (a) of Art. 173  of  the Constitution.  Article 173(a) is as follows               "173.   A person shall not be qualified to  be               chosen to fill a seat. in the Legislature of a               State unless he-               (a)is  a citizen of India, and makes and  sub-

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             cribes  before some person authorized in  that               behalf  by the Election Commission an oath  or               affirmation accord- (1)  A.I.R. 1968 S.C. 1064. 533               ing to the form set out for the purpose in the               Third Schedule."               The   notification  issued  by  the   Election               Commission, which is               No.  3/130/65(2), dated 2nd January, 1965,  is               to the following effect :               "In pursuance of clause (a) of Article 173  of               the  Constitution, and in supersession of  its               notification No. 3/130/63 (2), dated the  15th               November, 1963, the Election Commission hereby               directs (a) that candidate for election to the               Legislature  of  a  State  by  an  assembly  I               constituency, or a council constituency, shall               make  and  subscribe the oath  or  affirmation               according to the form set out for the  purpose               in  the  Third Schedule to  the  Constitution,               before  the Returning Officer or an  Assistant               Returning Officer for that constituency; and               (b)that a candidate for election to fill  a               seat or seats in the Legislative Council of  a               State  by  the  members  of  the   Legislative               Assembly   of  the  State,  shall   make   and               subscribe the said oath or affirmation  before               the   Returning  Officer  or   the   Assistant               Returning Officer for that election               Provided that if any such candidate is at  the               time confined in a prison or under  preventive               detention, he may make and subscribe the  said               oath or affirmation before the  Superintendent               of the prison or Commandant of them  detention               camp in which he is so confined or under  such               detention." The  controversy between the parties has arisen  because  of the  language  used  by the  Election  Commission,  in  this notification.   The notification requires that  a  candidate for  election  to a Legislature, of a State by  an  Assembly Constituency  or  a  Council  Constituency  must  make   and subscribe  the  oath  or affirmation  before  the  Returning Officer   or  an  Assistant  Returning  Officer   for   that Constituency.   Mr. Sen urged that this notification can  be interpreted in two ways.  The first interpretation sought to be put on it was that, according to this notification, if  a person is- a candidate for election to the Legislature of  a State  by an Assembly Constituency, all that it requires  is that  the  affirmation  must be made  before  the  Returning Officer of an Assembly Constituency, while, if he is seeking election  to  a Council Constituency, then  the  affirmation must  be  made  before the Returning Officer  of  a  Council Constituency.   In  putting  this  interpretation,   learned counsel  wants  us to hold that  the  expression  "Returning Officer  for  that  Constituency" refers  to  any  Returning Officer of a Legislative Assembly or a Legislative  Council, as  the  1  case  may  be.   We  do  not  think  that   this interpretation can be accepted by us. 534 In  using  the expression "that Constituency", it  is  clear that the intention of the Election Commission was that,  the affirmation  must  be made before the Returning  Officer  of that  particular  constituency from which the  candidate  is seeking election to the Legislature of the State, whether it

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be an Assembly Constituency or a Council Constituency.  This was the second interpretation which Mr. Sen himself accepted as  a possible one.  This is also the  interpretation  which was sought to be put on this notification by Mr. B. S. Patil on   behalf   of  the  appellants.   We  think   that   this interpretation is correct, so that, in order to get over the disqualification laid down in Art. 173 (a), a candidate must make  an  affirmation  before the Returning  Officer  or  an Assistant Returning Officer of that particular  constituency from which he is a candidate. Mr.  Sen’s  case  is  that,  even  on  this  interpretation, respondent  NO. 1 had qualified to be a candidate,  because, when he made the affirmation before the Returning Officer at Bagalkot, he was already a candidate nominated for  election from  that  constituency.   Similarly,  when  he  made   the affirmation  before the Returning Officer at Hospet, he  had already   been   nominated   as   a   candidate   for    the Hoovinahadagali  Constituency.  The argument was that,  once respondent  No.  1 had made an affirmation, as  required  by Art.  173(a) of the Constitution, before one of the  persons authorised by the Election Commission, he had fully complied with  the  requirements of Art. 173(a)  and,  thereupon,  he became  qualified  to  be a candidate for  election  to  the Mysore Legislative Assembly.  There was no requirement  that that  qualification’ must be acquired separately in  respect of            each constituency from which respondent No.  1 was seeking election.  We are of the view that this  submis- sion  must  be accepted.  The purpose of Art. 173(a)  is  to ensure  that  any  person,, who wants to be a  member  of  a Legislature of a State, must bear true faith and  allegiance to  the  Constitution  of India as by  law  established  and undertake to uphold the sovereignty and integrity of  India, and,  to ensure this, he must make an oath  or  affirmation. Once such an oath or affirmation is made before a  competent authority  in respect of one constituency, he becomes  bound by  that oath or affirmation even if he gets elected to  the Legislature from a different constituency, so that there  is no   necessity  that  he  must  make  oath  or   affirmation repeatedly  on his being nominated from more than  one  con- stituency.  The language of Art. 173(a) also makes this very clear,  because  all  that  it  requires  is  one  oath   or affirmation in accordance with the form set out in the Third Schedule   to   the  Constitution  so  as  to   remove   the disqualification from being a candidate for election to  the Legislature of the State.  The Article does not mention that the  making of oath or affirmation is to be  preliminary  to the validity. of candidature in each constituency, and 535 recognises  the fact that, once the necessary  qualification is obtained, that qualification removes the bar laid down by that  Article.   In  these  circumstances,  this  ground  of disqualification.  for  challenging  the  validity  of   the election of respondent No. 1 fails and must be rejected. We  may next take up the question of the charges of  corrupt practices alleged to have been committed with the consent of respondent  No. 1 relating to bribery, undue  influence  and obtaining  of assistance, from a Government  servant,  viz., the  Returning Officer.  In support of these  charges,  only six witnesses were examined on behalf of  the  appellants. Two  of them, P. W. 5 and P. W. 6, are appellant No.  2  and appellant  No.  1  respectively.  Two  other  witnesses  are Chaman Sab, P. W. 3, and Mohammad Jaffar Saheb, P. W. 4; and the  fifth witness is Sadashiv Shankarappa Settar, P. W.  2. We have already referred to all these witnesses when  giving the  version put forward on behalf of the  appellants.   The

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only   other  witness  who  remains to  be  mentioned   is Hanumanthasa  Pawar,  P.  W. 1,  a  photographer,  who  came forward to state that he took a photograph in the office  of the  Returning Officer at about 5 p.m. on the  21st  January 1967,  when respondent No. 1 and the Returning Officer  were sitting  close  to  each other after  the  scrutiny  of  the nomination  papers.  He was examined primarily to  show  the close connection between respondent No. 1 and the  Returning Officer,  respondent  No. 2.  As  against  these  witnesses examined  on  behalf of the appellants,  respondent  No.  ’1 examined  five  witnesses.   R. W. 1  is  respondent  No.  1 himself, and R. W. 5 is Hanumanthappa Shivabasappa Hosamani, respondent  No. 2, who was the Returning Officer.   A  third witness  for  the respondents  is  Gadigeppagouda  Channaba- sanagouda  Patil, R. W. 2, who wag first put forward as  the official  candidate  by  the  Congress  from  this  Shiggaon Constituency, but who himself took active part in persuading respondent  No.  1  to PO be a candidate on  behalf  of  the Congress from this Constituency.  The next witness  examined is  Hanumanthagouda Ayyangouda Patil, R. W. 3, who  was  the proposer  of respondent No. 1 in the nomination paper  filed in  this  Constituency and in whose  house,  the  appellants alleged,  they  were kept confined from the  night  of  20th January  up  to  the  early hours of  the  morning  of  22nd January,  1967.   The fifth witness is  Gurupadappa  Basappa Mahalinga Shetty, R. W. 4, the son-in-law of respondent  No. 1.  The High Court, in assessing the value of  the  evidence given  on  behalf  of the two  parties,  has  expressed  the opinion  that all the witnesses examined by either side  are persons  interested in the two rival candidates, except  the Returning Officer, R. W. 5, in whose case the High Court has not  accepted  the  charge of partiality  brought  by  the appellants  in  the  election  petition.   The  High  Court, therefore, preferred to rely on the evidence of R.W. 5, and 536 attached  very  little value to the evidence. of  the  other witnesses examined by the two sides. We are inclined to agree with the High Court with regard  to the assessment of the value of the evidence of the witnesses examined by both sides and, even with regard to the evidence of the Returning Officer, R. W. 5, we have the feeling  that his  evidence  must  also be accepted  with  great  caution, because ’it cannot be said that he was totally disinterested and independent.  So far as the witnesses examined on behalf of   the  appellants  are  concerned,  the  two   appellants themselves  are the election petitioners and, very  clearly, their  testimony has only the value that can be attached  to evidence of contesting parties themselves who ’are bound  to speak  in  support of their case.   Mr.  Patil  particularly relied  on the evidence of P. Ws 3 and 4 who,  according  to the part played by them envisaged in the version put forward on behalf of the appellants, were in a position to state  to facts  showing that there was offer of bribery to  appellant No.  1 and undue influence was also exercised against  them. These  witnesses  are  also  admittedly  highly  interested. Appellant  No. 1 in his statement has come forward with  the plea  that P. W. 4, Mohammad Jaffar, was one of the  persons who  was  sponsoring his candidature for this  election,  so that  there  was a close bond between them.   In  fact,  the appellants’ further case itself was that appellant No. 1 was approached by Patil Puttappa through P. W. 4 because of  the close  relations between them.  P. W. 3 also,  according  to appellant No. 1, was brought in by Patil Puttappa because he was a great friend of P. W. 4 and was expected to  influence him in his attempts to persuade appellant No. 1 to withdraw.

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Thus, in putting forward their own case, the appellants have shown that P.Ws. 3 and 4 are not independent persons.  P. W. 2  was the lawyer engaged by the appellants for the  purpose of  putting  forward their case that the withdrawal  of  his candidature by appellant No. 1 was not genuine and had  been manoeuvred by persons acting on behalf of respondent No.  1. Being  their  lawyer,he  cannot be held  to  be  beyond  the influence  of  the  appellants.   So  far  as  P.W.  1,  the Photographer,  is concerned, the High Court has  found  that there is material in his own evidence indicating that he  is not  a very reliable person and we find no reason at all  to differ from the view taken by the High Court on this point. Similarly,  amongst  the  witnesses examined  on  behalf  of respondent  No. 1, R. W. I is respondent No. 1 himself  and, consequently.  the  view we have expressed  with  regard  to appellants  1 and 2 will equally apply to him.  R. W. 2  was the   official   Congress  candidate.    He   withdrew   his candidature and took an active part in persuading respondent No.  1 to be a candidate in his place.  He  was,  therefore, clearly a person interested in the candidature of respondent No. 1. R. W. 3 was the proposer 53 7 who  nominated  respondent No. 1 as the  candidate  in  this Shiggaon Constituency and this manifests his interest in the candidature of respondent No. 1. R.W. 4 is the son-in-law of respondent No. 1 who also took active part in arranging that the official candidate R.W. 2 withdrew from candidature  and respondent  No.  1 was made the candidate on behalf  of  the Congress in this, Constituency in his place.  None of  these four witnesses can,. therefore, be said to be independent. So  far as the Returning Officer, R. W. 5, is concerned,  he was  a  Government servant and was acting  in  his  official capacity  as  Returning, Officer in this  Constituency.   In assessing,  the  value of his evidence,  however,  one  fact prominently  brought out is. that he was in the  service  of the Government of the State of Mysore, while respondent  No. 1  was  the Chief Minister of the State.  R. W.’  5  himself admitted  that, earlier, when he was posted at  Bagalkot  as Assistant Commissioner in July, 1963, he, had collected gold for  the  National  Defence Fund and on the  occasion  of  a visit, Smt.  Indira Gandhi and the Chief Minister respondent No. 1, were weighed against gold collected for the"  purpose of  National  Defence  Fund.  The  weighment  of  the  Chief Minister  against  gold indicates the attempt made  by  this witness to please the Chief Minister.  Then, there seems to be  Some  force  the suggestion made that,  on  the  day  of scrutiny, them Returning Officer delayed the scrutiny of the nomination  paper  of  respondent No.  1  for  the  Shiggaon Constituency  probably at the suggestion of the  workers  of respondent No. 1 in order to, give as much time as  possible to  respondent  No.  1 to come and make  an  affirmation  as required by Art. 173(a), under the, impression that such  an affirmation made even on that day would’ be valid and  would remove  the  disqualification under that Article.   On  that day,  scrutiny  of nomination papers of all the  three  Con- stituencies,  for which R. W. 5 was the  Returning  Officer, was top take place.  The scrutiny was begun not at the  time fixed  for  it,  but  at a later  hour  and,  even  in  that scrutiny,  the nomination papers for  Shiggaon  Constituency were taken up last of all.  It is true that he rejected  the nomination  paper  of  respondent  No.  1  for  the  Kundago Constituency,  because  respondent No. 1 did not  arrive  be fore   the  scrutiny  of  his  nomination  paper  for   that Constituency in Order to make the affirmation; but even that does  not show that the Returning Officer was not trying  to

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assist respondent No. 1 as far as possible.  Then, there  is the circumstance that respondent No. 1 and this witness were photographed’   together  by  P.  W.  1.  of   course,   the photographs  produced by P. W. I are not of a very  reliable character,  because  the  negatives  or  the  original-sized Photographs have not been Produced by the Photographer.  The suggestion by Mr. Sen on behalf of respondent No. 1 was that the photographs were actually taken of a numb& of people who happened to be in the office of the Return- 538 ing  Officer by this photographer, but, for the  purpose  of urging  the  argument of close contact between R. W.  5  and respondent  No. 1, only a small part of that photograph  was enlarged  and has been put forward as Exhibit in this  case. The  part  of  the photograph brought before  the  Court  is confined  to  that  in  which respondent  No.  1  and  the Returning  Officer appeared, while ,others on both sides  of them  were excluded.  The photographer, in order to  justify his  evidence that his photographs included only  these  two persons,  had  per force to give an  explanation  for  :non- production’   of  the  negatives  and   the   original-sized positives which might have been prepared by  him,  because the  negatives  and those prints would  have  clearly  shown other persons also in the photographs. Despite these  facts, we still think that the photographs do givesome indication that the Returning Officer was showing special consideration to  respondent No. 1 because he was, the Chief Minister  and at least gave him a seat close to himself inside his office. In all these circumstances, it is not possible to hold  that the Returning Officer is a totally independent witness; but, in  our  opinion, these few circumstances ’not  justify  our rejecting  the  evidence  of  this  witness  in  toto.   The evide nce will have to be scrutinised carefully and must  be accepted at least to the extent to which it may be supported by circumstantial evidence. In  connection  with  the examination  of  witnesses,  great emphasis  was  laid  by Mr. Patil on  the  fact  that  Patil Puttappa,  who, according to the appellants, was  the  chief architect in manoeuvring the unopposed return of respondent, No. 1 from ’the Shiggaon Constituency, was not examined as a witness.   It appears that the appellants  themselves  first summoned Patil Puttappa to produce certain documents for the purpose of show-, ing that he was under great obligation  to respondent  No.  1  making  it likely  that  he  might  have resorted  to  all  kinds of practices  in  order  to  ensure uncontested  return of respondent No. 1 to the  Legislature. Patil Puttappa produced a statement showing the income  that he received from advertisements given on behalf of the State Government during the period from 1962-63 to 1966-67.  Patil Puttappa  was running two papers Viswavani’ and  ’Prapancha’ during  this  period.  For the  newspaper  ’Viswavani’,  the total  advertisement charges paid to him ’by the  Government in the first year 1962-63 were in the region of Rs.  27,000. The ’amount progressively increased in the next four  years; and in the last year 1966-67, it rose to about Rs. 8  1,000. It  was  urged that this shows that he’ had  been  receiving patronage  from  the Government of Mysore of  which,  during this  period,  respondent’  No. 1 was  the  Chief  Minister. Further , he was elected as a Member of the Rajya Sabha  and was  an  active worker of the Congress.   The  argument  was that, 539 in  these  circumstances, when the charge in  the.  election petition was that Patil Puttappa was the main instrument  in the  commission  of corrupt practices, he should  have  been

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examined as a witness.  The appellants themselves, no doubt, summoned  him  to  produce the  statement  of  accounts,  as mentioned  above,  but  they  could not  examine  him  as  a witness, because he would have. been clearly hostile and, by examining  him as their witness, the appellants  would  have conceded  to the counsel for respondent No. 1 the  advantage of being legally entitled to cross-examine him.   Respondent No.  1 also cited Patil Puttappa as one of the witnesses  in the  list  of witnesses filed, but, later, gave him  up  and ,did  not examine him as a witness.  After this  failure  on the part of respondent No. 1 to examine him, the  appellants moved an application to the Court to take his evidence-under 0.16,  r.  14  of the Code of Civil  Procedure  as  a  Court witness.   This  application was not accepted  by  the  High Court  and, after a long discussion as to the motives  which had  impelled the appellants to move this  application,  the High  Court  rejected it.  Mr. Patil,  in  this  connection, relied  on a decision of the Assam High Court in Nani  Gopal Swami v. Abdul Hamid-’Choudhury and Another(1) to urge that, though  the burden, of proof in the present case in  respect of  the corrupt practices was initially on  the  appellants, respondent  No.  1  was not  altogether  absolved  from  his responsibility  to  assist the Court by producing  the  best evidence  available after the appellants had tendered  their own  evidence.   It  was  urged  that,  on  the  failure  of respondent  No.  1  to examine Patil  Puttappa,  an  adverse inference should be drawn against him.  Reference was also made  to a recent decision of this Court in Dr.   M.  Chenna Reddy  v. V. Ramachandra Rao and Another(2) where  the  non- examination of the best person who could have come and given evidence  in  favour of the candidate who was  charged  with corrupt  practice  was  taken as one  of  the  circumstances justifying  the  belief of witnesses examined to  prove  the corrupt  practice  on behalf of the  opposite  party.   This inference  was,  however, drawn by this Court on  the  basis that  the,  Court  first found the  testimony  of  witnesses examined against the successful candidate as acceptable,  so that  the  ,  initial  burden which  lay  on,  the  election petitioner was discharged to the satisfaction of the  Court. The  third  case,  to which reference was made,  is  also  a recent decision of this Court in R. M. Seshadri v.     G. Vasantha Pai(3), where this Court dealt with the question of the  exercise  of  power by the Court  trying  the  election petition to    examine  a witness as court witness.  It  was held that the Court  has the power to summon a court witness if  it thinks that the, ends of justice require or that  the case  before  it  needs  that kind  ,of  evidence.   It  was explained that the policy of election law (1) A.I.R. 1959 Assam 200.  (3) [1969] S.C.R. 1019. (2) (1969) S.C.R. 540 to  be that, for the establishment of purity  of  elections, all allegations of malpractice, including corrupt  practices at  elections, should be thoroughly.investigated.  On  these principles, the Court held that the trial Judge of the  High Court  had  Properly exercised the power  of  summoning  and examining some persons as court witnesses. On  the basis of these cases, it was argued that it was  the duty  of respondent No. 1 to examine Patil Puttappa in  this case  because  he  was  in the best  Position  to  deny  the allegations  which had been made, in respect of the  corrupt practices,  by  the appellants and that, in  any  case,  the Court  should  have  summoned  him as  a  witness,  when  an application  was presented in that behalf by the  appellants invoking the power of the Court under O.16, r. 44, C.P.C. It

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appears  that, in this case, respondent No. 1 considered  it unnecessary  to produce Patil Puttappa as a witness  because of  the  view  that the evidence, which had  been  given  on behalf of the appellants to prove the corrupt practices, was of a very unsatisfactory nature and that even circumstantial evidence’ was available to show that the version put forward could  not  be  true.  The High  Court  also  considered  it unnecessary to summon Patil Puttappa as a court witness  for similar  reasons.  In this connection, we may  cite  further remarks made by this Court in the case of R. M.  Seshadri(1) to the following effect:-               "Although  we would say that the trial  should               be  at  arms length and the Court  should  not               really  enter  into  the dispute  as  a  third               party, but it is not to be understood that the               Court never has the power to summon a  witness               or  to call for a document which  would  throw               light upon the matter, particularly of corrupt               practice which is alleged and is being  sought               to be proved.  If the Court was satisfied that               a   corrupt   practice  had   in   fact   been               perpetrated, may be by. one side or the other,               it  was absolutely necessary to find  out  who               was the author of that corrupt practice." It  was on this principle that this Court upheld the  course adopted  by the High Court by summoning court  witnesses  in order  to satisfy itself that the corrupt practice had  in fact  been  committed.   In the present case,  as  we  shall presently show, there was plenty of circumstantial  evidence indicating  that the version put forward on behalf of  the appellants  could  not  be true and  the  High  Court  could justifiably take the view that it had not been proved to its satisfaction so that there was no compelling reason for  the High Court to examine Patil Puttappa as a court (1)  [1969] 2 S.C.R. 1019. 541 witness or even to draw any inference against respondent No. 1 for his failure to examine Patil Puttappa as a witness. We  proceed  to indicate our reasons for the view  that  the version relating to the commission of corrupt practices  has been rightly rejected by the High Court.  The story that has been  put forward on behalf of die. appellants  has  already been described by us in detail when giving the facts of  the case.   The appellants alleged that they were taken  to  the house  of  R.W. 3 in the early hours of the  night  of  20th January, 1967 and were kept ’in confinement till the morning of 22nd January, 1967.  According to the appellants,  though they  were kept at the house of R. W. 3 and were  told  that they  would not be allowed to leave, there was  actually  no use  of  force at all against them.  In  fact,  the  version given  by  the two appellants of their  confinement  in  the house of, R. W. 3 is that they remained there throughout the night  of 20th January and throughout the day hours of  21st January, 1967, without making any attempt to leave the house of  R. W. 3. They expect the Court to believe that no  such’ attempt was made by them simply because, at one stage, Patil Puttappa  had said , that appellant No. 1 had the option  of either remaining a candidate for election, or of  continuing to  live.   Apart  from  this verbal  threat,  there  is  no suggestion that any act was committed by any one there which could  put the appellants in fear of their life or of  being hurt if they tried to leave the-house of R. W. 3.  According to  their version, they quietly stayed in the house  without even  making a presence of leaving it simple  because  Patil Puttappa, when going away, had told R. W. 3 not to let  them

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go  until he gave permission.  The first attempt,  according to  them,  was  made some time late in the  night  of  21-st January  and that attempt was foiled because of  the-barking of  a dog.  Even, when relating this part of  their  story., the  appellants  did not say that the dog was  ferocious  or tried to bite them, or that any of the servants woke up  and came  to  stop them from going away.  In fact,  the  initial story  that like simpletons these two persons, one  of  whom was a candidate for membership of a legislature, entered the car  of  Patil  Puttappa and quietly went with  him  to  the residence of R.W. 3 appears to be highly improbable.   Their conduct,  after their release from the alleged  confinement, also seems to be highly improbable.  According to them, they did  not go back to their village because they were  feeling ashamed.  Why there should have been any feeling of shame is incomprehensible.   If they were kept in  confinement  under threats  of injury, there would have been no shame in  going home  and disclosing this circumstance.  In fact,  according to  appellant No. 1, his candidature had been  sponsored  by quite a large number of influential persons of Shiggaon and, consequently, it would have been quite natural for him to go to Shiggaon, as soon as he was 8SupCI/69-16 542 released from confinement, and seek their assistance against whatever  course might have been adopted in order to  defeat his candidature.  Having been absent from their houses  from the  night  of 20th January until the  early-hours  of  22nd January,  it would have been natural for them to go back  to their homes and relieve the anxiety of the members of  their families  who must have been wondering where they  had  gone away.   According to the appellants, they did not return  to their village until the 24th of January and sent no  message to their houses that they were safe And were in Hubli.   The whole conduct appears to be very improbable. Apart from this, there are admissions made by the  witnesses of  the appellants themselves and some documentary  evidence which  show  that  the appellants could  not  have  been  in confinement  in the house of R. W. 3 from the night of  20th January up to the morning of 22nd January, 1967.  P. W. 3 in his examination-in-chief itself, when relating the  incident of  21st January, 1967, stated that on that  day  respondent No.  1 sent for him and P. W. 4 and told them that  whatever promises had been made by Patil Puttappa would be  fulfilled and  they  could give that information to appellant  No.  1. Thereafter,  they went to the house of appellant No.  1  and passed  on this information to him.  Thus, P. W. 3  admitted that  appellant  No. 1 was at’ his house on the  evening  of 21st January which completely negatives the case that he and appellant to. 2 were both in confinement at the house of  R. W. 3. When this statement was made by this witness,  counsel for  the  appellants intervened and put a  question  whether appellant  No.  1 was at home and what happened  after  they went  to  his house.  When answering  these  questions,  the witness  realised that he had given a  statement  negativing the   appellants’  case  and,  therefore,  he  changed   his statement  and said that the mother of appellant No. 1  told him  that  appellant  No. 1 was not in the  house.   We  are inclined to agree with the High Court that this witness,  in fact,  gave  away  the truth  inadvertently  disproving  the appellants’ case when he stated that he and P. W. 4 had gone to  the house of appellant No. 1 on the 21st  January,  1967 and informed him of what respondent No. 1 had told them. In  this connection, there is the circumstance that  another witness examined by the appellants themselves also  supports

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the version that appellant No. 1 must have been at his house on  the evening of 21st January.  That witness is P.  W.  1, the photographer.  He was asked in his cross-examination  as to  when appellant No. 1 had taken the photos from him,  and his  answer  was  that  it was on  the  same  day  when  the photograph  was  taken.   He had  earlier  stated  that  the photograph was taken in the office of the Returning  Officer at about 5 p.m. on 21st January, 1967.                             543 This  answer given by this witness also belied the case  put forward on behalf of the appellants about their  confinement in  the house of R. W. 3. At the stage of this answer  given by  the  witness, the counsel for the  appellants  had  also intervened and suggested that the witness had been  pointing to the Returning Officer who was sitting in Court and not to appellant No.1. The Court thereupon repeated the question to the witness and the note by the Court shows that the witness was  quite clear that the copies which were retained by  him in  his  Studio  were  taken by  appellant  No.  1  whom  he identified by sight in Court.  It appears that he also got a hint  at  this stage and, therefore, added that he  was  not sure  of  the exact date on which appellant No. 1  took  the copies from him.  This attempt of the witness to get out  of the admission made by him contradicting the case put forward by  the appellants has rightly been disregarded by the  High Court,  and  the conclusion follows that P. W.  1  has  also given  evidence  which  shows the falsity of  the  story  of confinement put forward by the appellants. Another  circumstance that points in the same  direction  is that  the appellants, if they were in fact kept  in  illegal confinement,  made no attempt at all to file any  complaints either with the Police or before a Magistrate so as to  seek redress  against  this criminal  offence  committed  against them.   Even  on 22nd January, 1967, when  appellant  No.  1 addressed  the meeting at ’Durgada Bailu’ in Hubli,  he  did not  tell the people, about his illegal confinement and  the corrupt practice committed by the workers of respondent  No. 1  in  order  to obtain his withdrawal.   The  most  telling circumstance,  however, which leaves no room for doubt  that the version of the appellants about their confinement in the house  of  R. W. 3 until the early hours  of  22nd  January, 1967,  is false, is that an item appeared in  the  newspaper ’Vishal  Karnataka’  in the morning issue of  22nd  January, 1967,  saying that one only out of the five  candidates  who had  withdrawn their candidature had been made  to  withdraw his  nomination paper by use of force and great threat;  and it  was  learnt that, as against this, ’a  notice  had  been caused  to  be  given through a Pleader.   Appellant  No.  1 himself  admitted.  that this newspaper is a  daily  morning paper so that this particular issue came out on the  morning of  22nd January, 1967.  According to the version  given  by appellants  1  and 2, they were kept in confinement  at  the residence  of R. W. 3 until released at about 4-30  a.m.  on 22nd  January whereafter they proceeded  to Hubli  and,  for the first time, gave their version of confinement to  ’their lawyer, P. W. 2, at about 3 p.m. According to them, they did not mention their confinement and use of force or of threats against them to- anyone else until they were able to consult P, W. 2 At about 3 p.m. If this evidence, was true, it is 544 incomprehensible  how the news of obtaining withdrawal of  a nomination  paper  by use of force and  great  threat  could appear in the morning issue of 22nd January, 1967 which came out  several hours earlier.  Mr. Patil, learned counsel  for the appellants, tried to explain away this news by comparing

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it  with another item of news appearing in an issue  of  the newspaper  ’Prajavani’  published  from  Bangalore  on   the morning of 22nd January, 1967.  The news item in it purports to be dated 20th January, 1967 and is to the effect that the Chief  Minister  is about to bring about the first  and  the most important success to the Mysore Pradesh Congress by his uncontested    election   from   the    Shiggaon    Assembly Constituency.   It mentions that, as the  other  contestants had  withdrawn  their candidature, only the  candidature  of respondent No. 1 was remaining in Shiggaon Constituency  and he was going to be declared elected uncontested on the  23rd January, 1967, which was the last date fixed for  withdrawal of  candidature.   From  the fact that this  news  item  was published  as  an item of 20th January, it was  argued  that there  must have been a pre-arranged plan to  manoeuvre  the withdrawal of all candidates from the Shiggaon  Constituency for   the  purpose  of  achieving  uncontested   return   of respondent No. 1, because there could not be and there  were no withdrawals on 20th January which was the date for filing nominations,  and the evidence also proves clearly that  the withdrawals,  in  fact, took place on  21st  January,  1967, which was the date of scrutiny.  It, however, appears to  us that, in this newspaper, the date January 20 as the date  of the  news  item is incorrect.  If, in Bangalore,  this  news item had been received by the newspaper on 20th January,  it would  surely  have  been published in  the  issue  of  21st January.   The very fact that it was published in the  issue of 22nd January shows that this news must have been received by  the  newspaper on 21st January and the date  January  20 printed  in it is an error in printing.  No newspaper  would unnecessarily  delay such a news item by full 24 hours.   On the  21st  January, according to the evidence given  by  the Returning Officer and other witnesses examined on behalf  of respondent  No.  1, all the withdrawals had taken  place  by about  3 to 4 p.m. of course, thereafter, this  news  about withdrawals  could  have  been  flashed  to  Bangalore   and received there later in the evening of 21st January, so that it could be published in the morning issue of ’Prajavani’ of 22nd  January,  1967.   The publication  of  this  news  is, therefore,  not  at all comparable with the  publication  in Vishal  Karnataka,  to  which we referred  earlier.   It  is significant  that the newspaper Vishal Karnataka,  which  is published at Hubli, was interested in appellant No. 1.  This is  clear  from the circumstance that, after  printing  this news  item about use of force and great threat to  induce  a candidate  to withdraw his nomination, this  very  newspaper published a number of 54 5 appeals  to  raise  funds in order to support  the  case  of appellant No. 1 for challenging the uncontested election  of respondent  No.  1.  The publication  of  these  appeals  in subsequent  issues of Vishal Karnataka has been admitted  by appellant No. 1. The subscriptions were to be sent to Vishal Karnataka  Office.   In these  circumstances,  an  inference clearly  follows that, in fact, appellants No. 1 and 2  were not kept in confinement at the residence of R. W. 3 and they deliberately   made   out  this  story  to   challenge   the uncontested  election of respondent No. 1, some time on  the evening  of  21st January, 1967.  Having  decided  that  the election  ’should be challenged on such a ground, they  gave out  this  news item to Vishal Karnataka; but they  did  not realise that the publication of this news item would  itself betray them and make it clear that they could not have  been kept  in confinement up to the early hours of 22nd  January, 1967,  which  was the version they decided  to  put  forward

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against respondent No. 1. Mr. Patil, learned counsel for the appellants, also tried to suggest that this news item  might refer  to  the withdrawal of candidature of  some  candidate other than appellant No. 1, but we can see no basis for such a suggestion.  No witness has made any statement  indicating that  any  candidate  other than appellant  No.  1  had  the grievance  that  the withdrawal of his nomination  had  been obtained by use of force or threats.  None of the  witnesses of  the  appellants, including P.W. 2,  S.S.  Sattar,  their legal adviser, have stated that any other candidate was made to  withdraw  in  that manner.  On the other  hand,  in  the election  petition itself, the appellants have come  forward with the case that the withdrawals of all other  candidates, except his own, were voluntary and valid.  This plea was put forward  in  order  to claim the seat for  appellant  No.  1 himself  on the election of respondent No. 1 being  declared void;  but  this  pleading clearly  negatives  any  possible suggestion that there was some other candidate who was  also subjected  to  threats  and use of force to  induce  him  to withdraw  his candidature.  Obviously, this news item  could refer  to no one else, except appellant No. 1 and  it  could only  appear in the morning issue of 22nd  January,  because the  appellants  were  not under  confinement  on  die  21st January, 1967.  This piece of evidence, thus leaves no  room for  doubt  that  the entire story of  use  of  inducements, threats  and illegal confinement has been concocted  by  the appellant  so that the witnesses examined in support  of  it cannot  be at all relied upon.  In these  circumstances,  we hold, as we have indicated earlier, that the High Court  was justified  in  not  insisting on  the  production  of  Patil Puttappa  as a witness on behalf of respondent No. 1  or  in not  examining  him  as a court witness.   The  version  put forward by the appellants was I controverted in his evidence by  R.  W.  4,  Mahalinga  Shetty  who,  according  to   the appellants,  was  in the company of Patil Puttappa  at  both stages 546 when  bribe was offered to appellant No. 1 and, later,  when he  was  induced  by  threats  and  illegal  confinement  to withdraw his candidature.  Further, R. W. 3, was examined to controvert the version of the incident alleged to have taken place at his residence during the illegal confinement of the appellants.   Such evidence being available and the  version put forward on behalf of the appellants having been shown to be  false  by various circumstances indicated by  us  above, there  could  be no need for the Court to take the  step  of examining Patil Puttappa as a court witness.  The High Court was  fully justified in holding that the charges of  corrupt practices of undue influence and bribery had not been proved against respondent No. 1. The additional charge of obtaining assistance from a Govern- ment servant, viz., the Returning Officer, respondent No. 2, is  also linked up with the same version of  the  appellants which we have above held to be false.  Respondent No. 2  was said to have assisted in illegally obtaining the  withdrawal of the candidature of appellant No. 1 by being a party to  a faked  withdrawal form being accepted by him.  The case  was that  the  withdrawal  form  of  appellant  No.  1  was  not presented  either  by  appellant No. 1  himself  or  by  his election  agent  having been obtained in  the  circumstances indicated  by the appellants in their  version.   Respondent No. 2 has, however, clearly stated that this withdrawal form of appellant No. 1 was presented by appellant No. 1 himself, and we find no reason to disbelieve his evidence in view  of our  finding  about  the  falsity  of  the  version  of  the

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appellant.   It  is also significant that  no  witness  was. sought  to be examined on behalf of the appellants to  prove who  in fact presented the withdrawal form on his behalf  if appellant   No.   1  did  not  do  so.   In  view   of   the circumstantial  evidence being in favour of the version  put forward by the respondents, we consider that the High  Court was  right in accepting the evidence of respondent No. 2  on this point and rejecting the plea of the appellants that the withdrawal  form  of  appellant  No.  1  had  been   wrongly manoeuvred and had not been presented by him. Lastly, we may take notice of the three further  allegations that the nomination paper of respondent No. 1 was, in  fact, ’not presented, on 20th January, 1967; secondly, that, if at all  it was presented, it was not accompanied by a  copy  of the electoral roll showing that respondent No. 1 was entered as  an elector in another constituency; and, thirdly,  that it  was not accompanied by a receipt showing the deposit  of the security money as required by law.  On all these points, there is the clear evidence of the Returning Officer as well as that of R.W. 3 who proposed the name of respondent No.  1 and  who  presented the nomination paper  to  the  Returning Officer.   There  is no reason at all  to  disbelieve  their evidence on these points, particularly when their                             547 evidence  is also supported by the documents  maintained  in the  office of the Returning Officer as well as in the  Sub- TreAsury.  There is further the fact that no direct evidence has  been led on behalf of the appellants to show  that  the nomination  paper of respondent No. 1 was presented at  some other time after the expiry of the date fixed for nomination and  that, when so presented at the later stage, it was  not accompanied  by  the two necessary documents.   These  pleas taken  for  challenging  the validity  of  the  election  of respondent  No.  1  have also,  therefore,  I  been  rightly rejected by the, High Court. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.  There will be one set of costs for hearing. V.P.S.                        Appeal dismissed. 548