07 May 1971
Supreme Court
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MANGI LAL Vs K. R. PAWAR & ANR.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1229 of 1970


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PETITIONER: MANGI LAL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: K.   R. PAWAR & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT07/05/1971

BENCH: DUA, I.D. BENCH: DUA, I.D. SHELAT, J.M. BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA

CITATION:  1971 AIR 1943            1971 SCR  822

ACT: Representation of the People Act (43 of 1951), ss. 9A, 77  & 123-Publication  of  statements  relating  to  the  personal character or conduct of a candidate-When a corrupt practice- Contract between Company and Government chairman of Board of Directors of Company-If deemed to have entered into contract with Government.

HEADNOTE: The   appellant  challenged  the  election  of   the   first respondent  on  the grounds: (1) that  during  the  election campaign  statements were made at a public meeting that  the appellants  had misappropriated money, that statements  were published  in  a  weekly referring to  the  appellant  as  a corrupt  candidate, that the statements were made  with  the first respondent’s approval, that the statements were  false and  the respondent either believed them to be false or  did not  believe  them to be true, and that  by  publishing  the false  statements in relation to the personal  character  or conduct of the appellant the first respondent appellant  was guilty  of  a  corrupt  practice under s.  123  (4)  of  the Representation  of  the  People  Act,  1951.  (2)  That  the respondent  purchased  petrol worth about Rs. 2,000  and  if that  amount was added to the admitted expenditure it  would show  that the respondent had incurred election expenses  in excess of the limit prescribed by s. 77 of the Act read with r.  90 of the Election Rules. (3) That the respondent was  a Chairman  of  the Board of Directors of an  Electric  Supply Company  which  generated and supplied  electricity  to  the State  Government  under a contract, and  therefore  he  was disqualified on the ground that he had a subsisting contract with  the  State within the meaning of s. 9(A) of  the  Act. The election petition was dismissed by the High Court. In appeal to this Court, HELD:  (1) The appellant had himself admitted on oath  as  a witness   that  a  complaint  was  filed  against  him   for embezzlement.   The  complaint was pending in  the  criminal court at the time of the election.  A charge was also framed in those proceedings.  The charge and complaint are relevant and  there  is  no provision of law which  makes  the  order framing   the  charge  or  the  complaint  inadmissible   in evidence.

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There  was thus enough material to show that the  statements relating.  to  the  appellant  were  not  founded  on   mere suspicion or that they were the result of a pure conjuncture or guess.  Hence, the appellant had failed to discharge  the burden laid on him under s. 123(4) of the Act to prove  that the impugned statements were not only false but in  addition that  the  respondent and his agents published  them  either believing them to be false or not believing them to be true. [827A] Dr.   Jagjit Singh v. Giani Kartar Singh, A.I.R.  1966  S.C. 773, followed. (2)  The  charge that he incurred election  expenses  beyond the  prescribed  limit  must  fail  for  want  of   evidence connecting this item of expenditure with the election. 823 (3)  Section 9A of the Act only covers contracts which  have ’been entered into by a person in the course of his trade or business  with the appropriate Government for the supply  of goods  to  or for the execution of any works  undertaken  by that  Government.   In  the present case,  the  contract  to supply  electricity by the Electric Supply Company could  by no means be considered to be a contract entered into by  the respondent  in  the course of his trade or  business  merely because he was at the relevant time a Chairman of the  Board of  Directors  of  the Company, because the  business  of  a company could not be described as a trade or business of the Chairman of its Board of Directors. [828B]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  1229  of 1970. Appeal  under s. 116-A of the Representation of  the  People Act,  1951 from the judgment and order dated March 27,  1970 of  the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Indore Bench in  Election Petition No. 1 of 1968. L.   M.  Singhvi, U. N. Bachawat, Sobhagmal Jain and  S.  K. Dhitngra, for the appellant. for  V.  S.  Desai,  A.  M. Mathur, Bhim  Singh  and  S.  K. Gambhir, resnondent no. 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Dua  J.-Mangi  Lai Joshi has appealed to  this  Court  under s.   116-A  of  the Representation of the People Act  43  of 1951  (hereinafter called ’the Act’) from the  judgment  and order  of  the  Madhya Pradesh  High  Court  (Indore  Bench) dismissing  his  election petition under s. 81  of  the  Act challenging  the election of respondent No. I Krishnaji  Rao Pawar,  an Ex-Ruler of the erstwhile Dewas Senior State,  to the Legislative Assembly of Madhya Pradesh from the General- Dewas Assembly Constituency No. 256 in the bye-election held in June 1968.  This seat had fallen vacant on account of the death of Shri Hattesing, the successful candidate from  this constituency in the General Elections held in February 1967. The  appellant had contested the election on the  ticket  of the  Indian National Congress whereas respondent No.  1  bad contested  it as an independent candidate.  The  charges  on which  the  appellant’s  learned  counsel  has  concentrated before us relate to : -               (i)   the   alleaed   corrupt   practice    of               publication  of false statements  relating  to               the  personal  character and  conduct  of  the               appellant;               (ii)  the  incurring of election  expenses  in               excess of the prescribed limit and

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             824               (iii) the  alleged  disqualifications  of  the               respondent  on  the  ground  that  he  had   a               subsisting contract with the State               within the contemplation of s. 9A of the  Act.               The  charge  of bribery pressed  in  the  High               Court was not reagitated in this appeal. The  first point canvassed before us relates to the  alleged corrupt  practice of publication of false statement of  fact in  relation  to the personal character or  conduct  of  the appellant  as contemplated by s, 123 sub-s. (4) of the  Act. Arguments  on  this point were confined to  sub-issues  (a), (b),  (c),  (d),  (e),  (f) & (a) of Issue  No.  5  and  the relevant sub-issues of Issue No. 6. The aforesaid sub-issues of Issue No. 5 cover the plea contained in para, 13(b)(i) of the election petition.  It was averred in that sub-para that at a public meeting held at about 8, P.M. on June 13,  1968, at  Jawahar  Chowk  at  which  the  returned  candidate  was present,  Abdul Rehman Talib of Dewas, Kanhaiyasingh  Thakur of  Dewas,  Kr.  Virendrasingh, Deputy Minister  of  Labour, Government  of  Madhya Pradesh and Khasherao.   Ghorpade  of Dewas,  in  the course of their  speeches,  made  statements relating  to  the  personal character  and  conduct  of  the petitioner/appellant which were false and which the speakers and  the returned candidate either believed to be  false  or did  not  believe  to  be true  and  those  statements  were reasonably       calculated      to      prejudice       the petitioner/appellant’s prospects of election.  Abdul  Rahman Talib was alleged to have said : -               "No  votes  should be given to  such  Congress               Candidate who has misappropriated the money."               Kr.  Virendrasingh was imputed  the  following               statement               "I  have come from Labour Colony.  Water  tank               is  lying  empty.   All  the  money  of  water               subscription   has  been  misappropriated   by               Congress candidate INTUC, Mangilal Joshi.  The               workers will not vote for him."               Kanbaiyasingh  Thakur was stated to have  said               :-               "The    workers    subscription    has    been               misappropriated by INTUC Joshi.  There is also               a case pending against him in Court."               Khasherao Ghorpade was alleged to have said               "No votes be given to the corrupt candidate of               Congress  who  has  misappropriated   workers’               subscription money.............". The  relevant parts of Issue No. 6 cover the plea  contained in para 13(b)(ii) of the election petition.  The controversy covered by this issue which now survives is confined to  the statements 225 alleged  to have been published in the issue of  the  weekly Ranchandi  dated  June  16,  1968.   From  that  issue   the following extracts published in connection with the election in question were relied upon by the appellant in support  of the allegations of the corrupt practice :-               "Voters beware of Joshi misappropriator of the               workers’ subscription."               "Corrupt Congress candidate Mangilal Joshi."               "Appeal    to    remain   careful    of    the               misappropriator of mill workers’ subscription,               corrupt candidate Mangilal Joshi." According to the written statement on behalf of the returned candidate  (Respondent  No. 1 in this Court)  all  that  the

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speakers  at the meeting an June 13, 1968 in  Jawahar  Chowk had  pointed out was that a prosecution was pending  against Mangi Lai Joshi and that he was charged with embezzlement of the  funds of the Mazdoor Sangh and of the donations of  the workers.   Though  in  the written  statement  the  returned candidate denied that he had continued to be present at  the meeting, the Court below held that he was present throughout and  this  finding in our view must be  accepted.   He  also denied  that  the  statement made by  the  speakers  at  the meeting   had  been  made  with  his  consent  but  in   the circumstances  of  the case we would assume that  he  cannot disown those statements which were made in his interest and, therefore,  they  were  in all  probability  made  with  his approval. In  regard to the publication in ’Ranchandi’ the  respondent pleaded  in  the written statement that the  Editor  of  the weekly  used  to  publish  election  material  on  his   own responsibility  and that the respondent had no concern  with the   statements  published  therein.   The   subject-matter published  in the issue of June 16, 1968 was stated  not  to have  been  published with the  respondent’s  consent.   He, however,  proceeded,  without  prejudice, to  add  that  the statements  of fact contained therein were not  believed  by him to be either false or untrue. It  is not disputed that on the evening of June 13, 1968  at about  8-00  P.M. an election meeting was actually  held  in Jawahar  Chowk, Dewas, and it was called in support  of  the respondent’s  election  and  also  that  this  meeting   was addressed  by  Abdul Rehman Talib, Kr.  Virendra  singh  and Kanhaiyasingh  Thakur.   In regard  to  Khasherao  Ghorpade, however, the respondent didi not admit that he had addressed the meeting.  The High Court after considering the  evidence on the record and the arguments addressed before if came  to the conclusion that Abdul Rehman Talib had, 826 during  the  course of his address at that  meeting,  stated that  Mangilal  Joshi  had  misappropriated  the  amount  of subscription realised from the labourers and that a case was pending in Court against him and no votes should be cast  in his favour.  In regard to Kr.  Virendrasingh, the High Court came to the conclusion that the speech attributed to him had not been proved. About Kanhaiya singh Thakur’s speech  also, the  High  Court accepted the evidence  of  the  appellant’s witnesses  to the effect that Kanhaiyasingh Thakur had  said that  Mangilal Joshi had embezzled the, amount  realised  by him  as subscription from the labourers and a case  in  this connection was also going on against him in Court.  The High Court took notice of the fact that Kanhaiyasingh Thakur was called  as  witness  by the returned candidate  and  he  was actually  present  in Court on September 23,  1969  but  was given  up. In regard to Khasherao Ghorpade, the  High  Court accepted  the  appellant’s case that he  had  addressed  the meeting  in  which  he, had stated that  the  appellant  had misappropriated the money realised as subscription from  the labourers.   The  High Court then considered  the  offending publication in the issue of ’Ranchandi’ dated June 16, 1968. That  Court  after  considering the material  to  which  its attention  was  drawn observed that in this  case  the  word ’corrupt’  had been used in the context that Mangilal  Joshi had misappropriated or embezzled the subscription amount  of the  labourers  and that Mangilal Joshi’s description  as  a corrupt  person was intended to convey the fact that he  had embezzled or misappropriated the subscription realised  from the  labourers.  The use of word ’Bhrastachar’ in this  con- nection  was  held  to  connote  a  corrupt  person.   After

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considering some decisions of this Court on the construction to be placed on s. 123 sub-section (4) of the Act which were cited  in the High Court, that court came to the  conclusion that  the  appellant bad failed to prove that  the  impugned statements were false or were either believed to be false or not  believed  to be true by the speakers and  the  returned candidate.  This conclusion was arrived at in the background of  the  fact that the criminal complaint  had,  been  filed against the appellant by one Lal Singh, as far back as  July 1965.   Lal Singh appeared as witness for the respondent  as R.W. 13 in the High Court and proved his complaint from  the original record of criminal case No. 52 of 1965 in the Court of Additional Magistrate (Jud.), Dewas.  A certified copy of that  complaint Exhibit D. I was also placed on the  record. According  to  that complaint it was alleged  that  Mangilal Joshi was the President of Dewas Mill Mazdoor Sangh and  had held that office for the preceding 9 years.  Several amounts relating  to  membership  fee  were  stated  to  have   been collected  from  the  workers  and  the  amount  of  several thousand  rupees  were neither deposited. with  the  Mazdoor Sangh  office nor entered in the related registers.  It  was principally on the basis of the pendency 827 of this complaint that the High Court came to the conclusion that  the appellant had not discharged the onus  of  showing that  offending  statements  of facts were  false  and  were believed  by  the returned candidate, the  speakers  at  the meeting  in quest and the Editor of ’Ranchandi’ to be  false or were not believ by them to be true. The  charge  relating to disqualifications of  the  returned candidate  was based on the averment that the  returned  and was a Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Dewas Senior Electric  Supply  Company  Private  Limited  and  that  this Company  generated electricity and supplied the same to  the State  Government  under a contract.  On this basis  it  was pleaded  that under S. 9A of the Act the returned  candidate must be held to be disqualified from seeking election to the Assembly.   The  Hi Court repelled this  contention  holding that the returned candida could not be held to have directly entered into any contract the Government merely by reason of the fact he was the Chairm of the Board, of Directors of the Electric Supply Company Reliance for this view was placed on a  decision  of  the Pradesh High Court  reported  as  Satya Prakash v. Bashir Ahme Qureshi(1). In  regard  to  the allegations  of  the  election  expenses incurred  by the returned candidate being in excess  of  the prescribed  limit it was contended that petrol  worth  about Rs. 2,000 had bee purchased by respondent No. 1 between  May 31,  1968 and 15, 1968 and if the whole of this amount  was- to  be  added to the expenditure admitted  by  the  returned candidate  to  have bee curred then this  would  exceed  the prescribed limit, thereby traveling s. 77 of the Act.   This contravention according to appellant’s learned counsel is  a corrupt  practice covered by s. 123 sub-section (6)  of  the Act.   The High Court did not agre with this submission  and held  that the petrol and oil purchase from May 30, 1968  to June  15,  1968 included petrol and oil  for  various  other requirements  of the returned candidate and whole of it  was not proved to have been used for election purposes The whole of  this  amount, therefore, could not be  included  in  the election  expenses.   The  election  petition  as  already observe was dismissed by the High Court. On appeal, Dr. Singhvi has re-agitated all these points. may first dispose of the point of disqualification.  Section 9 of the Act on which the entire argument rests, reads:-

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             Disqualification for Government contracts.               "A  person shall be disqualified, if, and  for               so long               as, there subsists a contract entered into  by               him in the               (1)   A. I. R. 1963 M. P. 316.               828               course  of  his  trade or  business  with  the               appropriate Government for the supply of goods               to,   or  for  the  execution  of  any   works               undertaken by, that Government." It is unnecessary for the purpose of this case to  reproduce the explanation.  It is clear that this section only  covers contracts  which have been entered into by a person  in  the course  of  his  trade  or  business  with  the  appropriate Government  for the supply of goods to or for the  execution of  any  works undertaken by that Government.   Dr.  Singhvi contended that the supply of electricity would amount to the supply of goods.  That perhaps is so.  But, in our  opinion, the contract of supply of electricity by the Electric Supply Company  can  by  no means be considered to  be  a  contract entered into by respondent No. 1 in the course of his  trade or business by reason merely of the fact that he was at  the relevant  time  Chairman of the Board of  Directors  of  the Company.  It is not possible to describe the business of the Company  to be the trade or business of the Chairman of  the Board  of Directors.  A Company registered under the  Indian Companies  Act, it is settled beyond dispute, is a  separate entity distinct from its shareholders.  The Chairman of  the Board of Directors of the Company while functioning as  such cannot  be  said to be engaged in his trade or  business  as contemplated. by S. 9A of the Act.  The legal position is so clear  that  the  appellant’s  learned  counsel,  after   an unsuccessful  attempt to persuade us to the  contrary  view, felt constrained not to pursue this point sereously, Coming  now  to the charge of the alleged  corrupt  practice covered  by  S.  123(4) of the Act, we do  not  consider  it necessary  to go into the evidence in detail or to  consider at  length  the arguments addressed on the question  of  the impression conveyed to the people who had heard the speeches or   read  the  offending  publication-  in  the   newspaper ’Ranchandi’.  We will accept the position that the offending statements, both oral, made in the various speeches referred to earlier and those contained in print as published. in the Ranchandi  dated  June 16, 1968 (Ext.  P/8) do  prima  facie offend.  S. 123 (4) of the Act if false and either  believed to be so or not believed to be true.  Now it is not disputed that  the criminal complaint dated July 27, 1965, under  ss. 403 and 406 I.P.C. was filed against Mangi Lal appellant and Kanahiyalal by one Lal Singh in the Court of the Magistrate, 1st Class, Dewas.  In that complaint it was alleged that the accused  had  collected from the workers of Dewas  Mill  the following amounts                1.   Membership fee ...... Rs. 15,000/-                2   Wageboard Fund ...... Rs. 1,500/-            829                        3.     Gratuity Fund..Rs.1,500/-          4.     Mazdoor Sevadal.....Rs.900/-          5.     Travelling Fund.....Rs.1,000/-          6.     Water Tax.Rs.1,000/- It  was also averred in the complaint that except for a  sum of  Rs. 5 or 6 thousands the remaining amounts were  neither deposited  with  the Mazdoor Sangh’s office  nor  were  they entered in the relevant registers.  Mangi Lal was  described in the complaint as the President of the Dewas Mill  Mazdoor

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Sangh and Kanahiyalal accused No. 2 as the Secretary of  the said   Union.   The  appellant  Mangi  Lal  in  his   cross- examination  as P.W. 32 admitted that this  complaint  dated July 27, 1965, had been filed against him which was  pending at  the  time  of the bye-election in question  and  that  a charge had also been framed in that case on August 22,  1968 (Ext.  P19).  He further admitted that Lal Singh was a  mill worker   in  the  Dewas  Standard  Mill  and  was   also   a representative  of the Indian National Trade Union  Congress of  Dewas.  Lal Singh appeared as R. W. 13 and  proved  that complaint  and also a part of his statement dated April  12, 1968  made  in  the Court of the  Magistrate.  the  returned candidate appearing as R. W. 17 stated that he knew of  this complaint.   The  High  Court on  appraisal  of  the  entire material  on  the record expressed its final  conclusion  on Issues 5(f) and 6(a) to (h), which are the relevant  issues, in these words -               "Assuming.  though  not  admitting,  that  the               petitioner   has  succeeded  in  proving   the               falsity  of the impugned statement, even  then               he  is not out of the woods.  As held in  Sheo               palsingh v. Rampratap (A.I.R. 1965 S. C.  677)               even  if the statement is false the  candidate               -making  it  is protected unless he  makes  it               believing  it to be false not believing it  to               be true i.e., to say statements which are  not               true but made bona fide are also outside  the               ambit  of the provisions of section 123(4)  of               the Act.  We have seen above that the criminal               complaint  against the petitioner  for  having               committed    criminal   misappropriation    or               criminal  breach  of trust was  filed  in  the               criminal Court in the year 1965 when this bye-               election was not even in contemplation.  It is               no body’s case that either the three speakers,               namely Shri Abdual Rehman Talib (R.W. 2), Shri               Kanhaiyasingh   Thakur   and   Shri   Khaserao               Ghorpade  or  the Editor  Shri  Rameshwar  Sen               (R.W.  5)  or  the  returned  candidate   Shri               Krishnajirao  Pawar (R.W. 17) were in any  way               instrumental  in  getting the  said  complaint               filed against the said petitioner.  This  very               complaint was pending at the time of this bye-               election in question and a number of witnesses               examined               830               by  the  petitioner and also examined  by  the               returned  candidate  have stated that  such  a               complaint was filed in criminal court  against               the  petitioner and it was pending.  In  other               words, filing of such a complaint against  the               petitioner  was  a  notorious  fact  known  to               several persons in Dewas and subsequently  the               charge  was  framed against him  on  the  same               material thus, the impugned statement was  not               founded  on mere suspicion pure or simple  nor               was it the result of pure conjecture or guess.               It   had   positive  basis   and   the   basis               subsequently proved to be prima facie correct,               therefore, the impugned statement falls within               the ambit of bona fide statement.               In  conclusion,  therefore, I  hold  that  the               petitioner  failed to prove that the  impugned               statement was false and was either believed to               be   false  or  not  believed  to   be   true.

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             Accordingly, I decide these two issues as  not               proved  Hence  it follows  that  the  impugned               statement does not fall within the mischief of               section 123(4) of the Act.,’ We  are  in full agreement with the approach and  the  final conclusion  of  the High Court.  The essential  basic  facts seems to us to be incontrovertible, and if that be so,  then clearly   there   is   a   very   heavy   burden   on    the petitioner/appellant  to  prove the most  vital  ingredients prescribed  in  s.  123(4)  of the  Act,  namely,  that  the impugned  statement  of  fact  is not  only  false,  but  in addition  that  the respondent returned  candidate  and  his agents  publishing the impugned statements  either  believed the  same to be false or did not believe them to be  true  : See Dr. Jagjit Singh v. Giani Kartar Singh and others.(1) On this  point there is absolutely no material on  the  record. This challenge by the appellant also fails. Dr.  Singhvi,  we  may in fairness to him  point  out,  took considerable pains to persuade us to hold that the order  of the criminal Court framing the charge is inadmissible in the proceedings.   It was also submitted that the charge  having been  framed afterwards could not be taken into account  for considering   whether  the  impugned  statements  could   be believed to be true at the time they were made.  Dr. Singhvi submitted that if the order of the criminal Court is ignored and  if the appellant’s denial about embezzlement  is  taken into  account  then the statements made at the  meeting  and those published in ’Ranchandi’ must be held to be false  and believed to be so or not believed to be true.  This argument is  difficult to accept.  To begin with, the  appellant  has himself  admitted on oath as a witness that  the  complaint was filed against him for embezzlement and a (1)  A. 1. R. 1966 S. C-773-                             831 charge was also framed in those proceedings.  This admission cannot  be ignored.  We are also not inclined to agree  with Dr.  Singhvi  that  the  order framing  the  charge  or  the complaint are inadmissible in evidence.  Dr. Singhvi has not drawn  our  attention to any provision of  law  which  would render them inadmissible in the present proceedings. The counsel then submitted that Lal Singh’s statement in the criminal  Court is clearly inadmissible as evidence and  the High   Court  was  wrong  in  taking  that  statement   into consideration.  Here again, we think that the counsel in not quite correct.  The statement of Lal Singh would seem to  us to  be relevant and admissible under several  provisions  of the Indian Evidence Act.  We need only refer to ss. 7, 8 and 11(2) of that Act.  In this connection it is interesting  to point  out that Lal Singh’s statement in the Criminal  Court was  got proved in his cross-examination at the instance  of the election petitioner/ appellant.  It would, therefore, be a  question  for consideration if the appellant can  now  be permitted to find fault with what he himself had elicited by cross-examining  R.W.  13.   However,  even  excluding  this cross-examination  there is, in our opinion, ample  material in support of the conclusions of the High, Court. This  takes  us to the charge of corrupt practice  under  s. 123(6)  ,of the Act.  This charge relates to the  respondent returned candidate’s election expenses being in excess  of the limit prescribed by s. 77 of the Act read with r. 90  of the  Election  Rules.   The only point in  respect  of  this charge  pressed before us is that petrol worth  Rs.  2,000/- was  purchased  by  the returned candidate from  M/s  A.  J. Khanuja & Sons, Bombay-Agra Road, Dewas.  If this amount  is added to the admitted expenditure of Rs. 6,576-78, then  the

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expenses would exceed the prescribed limit and the  election must according to the appellant be set aside on this ground. Dr. Singhvi addressed elaborate arguments on this point with the object of showing that the entire petrol purchased  from the aforesaid firm must be held, to have been purchased  for the purpose of the election in question.  We do not consider it  necessary to deal with the arguments at  length  because the  charge must fail for want of evidence  connecting  this item of ,expenditure with the election.  The High Court  has observed in this connection :               "The  petitioner has not adduced any  evidence               on  this point except that of Daulatrao  (P.W.               1) who has also filed extracts of accounts  of               petrol and oil etc. purchased by the  returned               candidate  from his master M/s A.  J.  Khanuja               and Sons, Dewas during the relevant period.               832               Neither  these  extracts nor the  evidence  of               this   witness  establishes   the   additional               expenditure  of Rs. 2000/- as pleaded  by  the               petitioner.    The  returned  candidate   Shri               Krishnajirao Pawar (R.W. 17) has deposed  that               at the relevant time he owned two jeeps,  five               cars,  one  tractor and one  pick-up  van  and               agricultural land of about 500 acres.  He also               deposed   that  during  the  period  of   this               by  election  he  used  only  the  jeeps   for               election  propaganda but petrol was  purchased               not only for the jeeps but for cars also which               were used for house-hold purposes.  He further               deposed that Diesel was used for  agricultural               purposes.  His testimony further shows that he               had  instructed  M/s A. J.  Khanuja  and  Sons               Dewas that petrol and oil purchased for to the               election purposes should be marked  distinctly               and,  therefore, he used to sent the  counter-               foil for purchase of petrol and oil which used               to be marked with latter ’g’ to indicate  that               the same were purchase for election  purposes.               About   marking,  the  petitioner’s   witness,               Daulatrao (P.W. 1) says something.  The  total               costs  of the marked items so called out  from               the  extracts  (Ex.  P. 1 and P. 2)  have  not               been shown to be an additional expenditure and               not  covered by the election  expenses  return               filed by Shri Krishnaji Rao Pawar (R.W. 17).               He  is  the  ruler  of  Senior  Dewas   State,               possessed  several  vehicles at  the  relevant               time and, therefore, undoubtedly needed petrol               and oil for them, as also oil for tractor  and               pick  up  van during the said period  for  his               domestic  purposes and  agricultural  purposes               besides  election purposes.  The  evidence  of               Daulatrao (P.W. 1) himself would show that  in               the  month  of April 1968 when  there  was  no               hectic activity about the election.  The  cost               of petrol and oil purchased by him during that               month  amounted  to Rs. 2604-12  Paise.   That               would indicate that he requires large quantity               of petrol and oil for his motor vehicles,  oil               engine etc. used for domestic and agricultural               purposes.   It  is true that the  extracts  of               accounts  (Ex.  P. 1 and P. 2) show that  cost               of petrol and oil purchased from 31-5-1968 was               about  Rs.  2250/-  but it  is  impossible  to

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             believe  that the entire cost was incurred  in               connection  with this election.  I  hold  that               the  petitioner has failed to  establish  that               the   returned  candidate  had   incurred   or               authorised   additional  expenditure  of   Rs.               2,000/-   from  31-5-1968  to   15-6-1968   in               connection  with  his election  and  I  decide               this. issue as not proved."                             833 The  reasoning  and approach of the High Court  is  unexccp- tionable and nothing urged by Dr  Singhvi has persuaded  us to disagree with the High Court’s conclusions. These  were the only points urged at the bar in  support  of the,  appeal.   As  we  find  all  of  them  to  be  without substance. the appear fails and is dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed. V.P.S. 53-1 S. C. India/71 834