07 January 1969
Supreme Court
Download

MANUBHAI, NANDLAL AMERSEY Vs POPATIAL MANILAL JOSHI & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1438 of 1968


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10  

PETITIONER: MANUBHAI, NANDLAL AMERSEY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: POPATIAL  MANILAL JOSHI & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/01/1969

BENCH: BACHAWAT, R.S. BENCH: BACHAWAT, R.S. SIKRI, S.M. HEGDE, K.S.

CITATION:  1969 AIR  734            1969 SCR  (3) 217  1969 SCC  (1) 372  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1970 SC2097  (264)  RF         1975 SC1788  (8)  R          1982 SC 515  (20)  R          1986 SC1253  (14,18)  D          1990 SC1731  (9)

ACT: Representation  of  the People Act (43 of 1951),  ss.  86(5) 116A, 23(2), proviso (a)(ii)-Amendment of election petition- When  should be allowed-Jurisdiction of Supreme Court  under s.  116 A-Interference with discretion of  High  Court-Undue influence-Threat of divine displeasure.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant, the Swatantra party candidate, was  declared elected  to  the  Lok Sabha as against  the  Congress  party candidate.   On  April 10, 1967, the  first  respondent,  an elector in the constituency filed an election petition.   In the petition he charged the appellant with corrupt  practice under  s. 123(2) proviso (a) (ii) of the  Representation  of the  People Act, 1951.  The allegation was that  one:  S.M., with  the consent of the appellant or his  election  agents, told  the  electors in speeches that if they voted  for  the Congress  candidate,  they  would  commit  the  sin  of  cow Slaughter  and would become objects of  divine  displeasure. On  September  25, 1967 the first respondent  ’obtained  ’an order  giving  him leave ,o amend the petition by  adding  a charge  with  regard to the sin of Brahma  hatya  and  Sadhu hatya.  On February 29, 1968 the trial commenced and one  of the  witnesses  said that he heard S.M. giving a  speech  on February  8,  1967, where S.M. told the  electors  that  Sri Shankaracharya  had  commanded  them not  to  vote  for  the Congress  and that a contravention of the mandate  would  be visited  with  spiritual  censure.  On  an  objection  being raised  by  the appellant’s counsel,  the  first  respondent agreed  that  the  statement of the witness  should  not  be treated  as part of the evidence.  The trial  proceeded,  11 witnesses  were  examined and the appellant  agreed  to  the marking  of  the  full reports of the speeches  of  S.M.  as exhibits and adopted a definite line of cross-examination on

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10  

the footing that the first respondent would not rely on  the charge  with  regard to the command of  Sri  Shankaracharya. However on March 5, 1968, the first respondent ’applied  for an amendment of his petition to include a charge of  corrupt practice based on the command of Sri Shankaracharya and  the High Court allowed the amendment.  The, High Court set aside the  ’appellants  election on its finding that  the  corrupt practice  in relation to the command of  Sri  Shankaracharya was proved. In  appeal to this Court on the questions  (1) Whether  the High  Court  should  have allowed  the  amendment;  and  (2) Whether the appellant was guilty of any corrupt practice, HELD : The appellant’s election was rightly set aside. (Per  Bachawat, J.) : (1) The High, Court erred in  allowing the amendment. When  a  corrupt practice is charged  against  the  returned candidate   the  election  petition  Must  set  forth   full particulars of the corrupt practice so as to give the charge a  definite character and to enable the Court to  understand what the charge is.  It must be substantially proved as laid and  evidence cannot be allowed to be given in respect of  a charge not dis 7Sup CI/69-15 218 closed  in  the  particulars.  Section  86(5)  of  the  Act, however,  allows  amendment of particulars,  but  the  Court shall  not  allow any amendment of the petition  which  will have  the  effect of introducing particulars  of  a  corrupt practice  not  previously  alleged  in  the  petition,   and normally, an application for amendment should be made within a  reasonable time.  Though the Court has power to allow  an amendment  even  after commencement of the trial,  leave  to amend would not he granted if the petitioner was not  acting in good faith or had kept back facts known to him. [221 B-D, G-H; 222 A-B] In the present ease, the first respondent knew of both items of corrupt practice’ from his witnesses who were present  at the  speeches  made by S.M. If S.M. had  told  the  electors about the mandate of Sri Shankaracharya, the witnesses  must have  given  information  to the first  respondent,  and  no explanation  was given by the first respondent as to why  he withheld the information at the time of filing the  petition or when he first amended his petition.  He was aware of  the difference  between the two charges of telling the  electors about  the sin of gohatya and that of telling  the  electors about  the sin of disobeying the command of their  religious leader.   But the :first respondent  deliberately  refrained from taking the new charge earlier and moved the application for  amendment  in  bad faith at a very late  stage  of  the trial.   Ordinarily, in an appeal under s. 116A of the  Act, this  Court would not interfere with the discretion  of  the High  Court in granting amendments, but since the  order  of the  High  Court has resulted in ’manifest  injustice,  this Court has the power and duty to correct the error. [222 B-D, F-H; 223,A-E] (Per  Hegde,  J.) The High Court has given good  reasons  in support of its order allowing the amendment and no case  was made out to interfere with it. [227 D] (2)  (Per  Bachawat,  J.) There is’ no absolute ban  on  cow slaughter  in  several  states in India  and  the  Swatantra party  was agitating for such a total ban.  Public criticism ’of the Congress party for not abolishing cow ’Slaughter was permissible,  but the criticism ceases to be  legitimate  if the speaker commits the corrupt practice of undue  influence under  s. 123(2) of the Act.  Under s. 123(2), proviso  (-a)

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10  

el. (ii), there is such undue influence if any person,  with the consent of the candidate or his election agent, attempts to induce an elector to, believe that he will be tendered an object of divine displeasure or spiritual censure. [224 D-F]      In  the  present  case, S.M. spoke at  the  meeting  on February8, 1967   with  the consent of the election  agent of the appellant. S.M.was a Kirtankar of repute and  well known  and  respected for his lectures  on  Hindu  religion, while his audience consisted mostly of illiterate and ortho- dox Hindus of rural areas who are filled with horror at  the slaughter  of a cow.  The dominant theme of the speech  was that  those who commit the sin of gohatya would  be  visited with  divine  displeasure.  Therefore, even apart  from  the charge  relating to the command of Sri  Shankaracharya,  the speech was calculated to interfere with the free exercise of electroral  right.  The corrupt practice was thus  committed at the meeting on February 8, 1967, with the consent of  the election agent of the appellant. [224 G-H; 225 G-H; 226  F-G 227 B-C] Narbada  Prasad  v.  Chhagan  Lal,  [1969]  1  S.C.R.   499, followed. (Per Hegde, J.) Everyone of the speeches made by S.M.,  read as a whole, are fanatical outpourings and a direct challenge to  the concept of a secular democracy, and fell within  the vice of the proviso (a)(ii) of s. 123(2) of the Act. [227 E] 219

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1438 of 1968. Appeal   under s. 116-A of the Representation of the  People Act,  1951 from the judgment and order dated April  22,  23, 1968  of the Gujarat High Court in Election Petition No.  22 of 1967. I.M. Nanavati, P. M. Raval, D. N. Mishra and J. B.  Dada- chanji, for the appellant. H.R.  Gokhale,  K. G. Vakharia, K. L.  Hathi  and  Atiqur Rahman, for respondents Nos.  1 and 2. The  Judgment  of SIKRI and BACHAWAT, JJ. was  delivered  by BACHAWAT, J. HEGDE, J. delivered a separate opinion. Bachawat,  J. This appeal is directed against a judgment  of single  judge  of the Gujarat High Court setting  aside  the election of the appellant from the Banaskantha Parliamentary constituency.  At the last general election to the Lok Sabha from  the’  Banaskantha constituency in Gujarat  there  were three  contesting candidates.  The appellant, the  Swatantra party  candidate, secured 110,028 votes.  Respondent No.  2, the   Congress  party  candidate  secured  1,05,621   votes. Respondent  No. 3, an independent candidate  secured  14,265 votes.  The appellant was declared elected. The  election  petition was filed by respondent  No.  1,  an elector  in  the constituency.  Respondent No. 1  alleged  a number of corrupt practices on the part of the appellant  or his  election agents, but at the trial, he pressed only  the charge of corrupt practice under s. 123 (2) proviso (a) (ii) of  the  Representation  of the People Act, 195  1.  In  the petition-  the  charge  was that several  persons  with  the consent  of the appellant or his election agents induced  or attempted  to  induce the electors to believe that  if  they voted for the congress party candidate they would become the objects  of divine displeasure and spiritual,  censure.   In the  particulars of this charge it was alleged that  in  the public meetings held at Amirgadh, Ikbalgadh, Wav, Laxmipura, Tharad Bhabhar and other places one Shambhu Maharaj told the

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10  

electors that if they voted for the congress candidate  they would commit the sin of cow slaughter and urged them in  the name  of  mother  cow  to take a vow not  to  vote  for  the congress  candidate with the result that several members  of the audience publicly took the vow. At  a  late stage of the trial on March 7,  1968,  the  High Court gave leave, to respondent No. 1 to, amend the petition by  adding fresh particulars of the corrupt  practice.   The substance  of  the  new charge was that  at  those  meetings Shambhu Maharaj 220 induced or attempted to induce the electors to believe  that their  religious head Jagadguru Shankracharya had  commanded them not to vote for the congress and that contravention  of his  Command  would  be  a sin and  would  be  visited  with spiritual  censure and divine displeasure.  The  High  Court found  that the aforesaid practice was committed by  Shambhu Maharaj  with the Consent of one Punambhai,  the  election agent  of  the  appellant,  and  declared  the   appellant’s election to be void. The appellant challenges the legality of the order passed by the High Court on March 7, 1968 allowing the amendment.  The election  petition  was  filed  on  April  10,  1967.    The appellant  filed  his  written  statement  on  June  1;   on September  9, the High Court gave leave to respondent No.  1 to amend the petition, by adding the charge  that  certain persons  were threatened that they would commit the sins  of go  hatya, Brahma-hatya and Sadhuhatya, if they worked  for the  congress  candidate.  The order  disallowed  amendments seeking  to  introduce, charges of appeal to voters  in  the name of religion under S. 123 (3).  The appellant filed  his additional  written  statement on October 19.   Issues  were framed  on November 30.  Respondent No. 1 filed his list  of witnesses  on January 11, 1968.  On February 21,  the  trial started and P.W. 1, P.W. 2, P.W. 3 and P.W. 4 were examined. P.W. 4, Ram Swarup was a witness with regard to the  meeting at  Amirgadh.  The issues were amended on March 1, so as  to make  it  clear  that there was no  charge  of  any  corrupt practice under S. 123(3).  On the same date, respondent  No. 1 was examined as P.W. 5. On March 2, P.W. 6, P.W. 7, P.W. 8 and P.W. 9 were examined.  P.W. 7 and P.W. 8 spoke about the meetings  at  Palanpur and Bhabhar.  P.W. 9  Bhogilal  spoke about  the  meeting at Ikbalgadh.  On March 4, P.W.  10  and P.W.  11 were examined and spoke, about the meetings at  Wav and  Laxmipura.   On the same day, P.W. 12 S. P.  Pandya,  a sub-inspector  of  police  at Palanpur, and  P.W.  13,  C.B. Barot,  a short-hand writer were examined.  The  examination of  Barot  was concluded on March 6. Barot proved  that  he, took  shorthand notes of the speeches of Shambhu Maharaj  at Ikbalgadh, Amirgadh, Bhabhar, Laxmipura, Wav and Tharad  and sent  reports of the speeches to S. P. Pandya.  On March  6, P.W.  14 and P.W. 15 were examined.  On March 5,  respondent No. 1 filed, an application for leave to amend the  petition by  adding  portions of the speeches which referred  to  the command  of Shankracharya not to vote for the  congress  and the   consequences  of  not-  obeying  the   command.    The application  was allowed on March 7, 1968.  The  trial  was, then adjourned and started again on April 8. Between April 8 and  April  15, P.W. 17, P.W. 18, D.W. 1 and,  D.W.  2  were examined., The judgment was delivered on April,22 and 23. 221 The  first question is whether the trial judge  should  have allowed  the amendment.  Section 83(1)(b) provides that  "An election  petition shall set-forth full particulars  of  any corrupt  practice that the petitioner alleges, including  as

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10  

full  a statement ;as possible of the names of  the  parties alleged  to  have committed such corrupt  practice  and  the date, and place of the commission  of  each such  practice". The  section  is  mandatory.  Where a  corrupt  practice  is charged against the returned candidate the election petition must  set-forth full particulars of the corrupt practice  so as  to give the charge a definite character and  to.  enable the court to understand what the charge is.  The charge must be  substantially  proved  as laid and  evidence  cannot  be allowed to be given in respect of a charge not disclosed  in the particulars.  On a charge, of telling the electors  that by  giving their vote to the Congress candidate, they  would commit the sin of go-hatya, evidence cannot be led to  prove the  charge of telling them that they would commit a sin  of Brahma-hatya  or the sin of disobeying the command of  their religious  leader.   Section 86(5) allows amendment  of  the particulars,.  It provides that "the High    Court may, upon such  terms. as to, costs and otherwise as it may deem  fit, allow  the particulars of- any corrupt’ practice alleged  in the, petition to, be amended or amplified in- such manner as may  in  its opinion be necessary for ensuring  a  fair  and effective  trial  of the petition, but shall not  allow  any amendment  of  the petition which will have  the  effect  of introducing   particulars   of  a  corrupt   practice,   not previously  alleged  in  the petition."  In  Harish  Chandra Bajpai v. Triloki Singh(1) the Court held that though  under the English law the petitioner was not obliged to give,  the particulars  of  the corrupt practice in  his  petition  the difference  was  a matter of form and not of  substance  and that under S. 83(3) as it stood before 1955 the Court  could allow     an  amendment introducing fresh instances  of  the corrupt practice alleged in the petition.  Referring to  the English  practice  the Court observed at page 382 :  "it  is sufficient  if the particulars are ordered to  be  furnished within  a  reasonable time before the  commencement  of  the trial".  Section 83(3) has been repealed and is now replaced by   s.  86(5)  which  forbids  any  amendment   introducing particulars of a corrupt practice not previously  alleged in the petition.  Assuming that the amendment of March 7,  1967 was permissible under s. 86(5), the question is whether  the High Court rightly allowed it.  Normally an application  for amendment under s. 86(5) should be made within a reasonable time  before the commencement of the trial.  The  Court  has power  to allow an amendment even after the commencement  of the  trial,  but as a rule leave to amend at  a  late  stage should  be given in exceptional cases where  the  petitioner could not with (1)[1957] S.C.R. 371. 222 reasonable diligence have discovered the new facts  earlier. Leave  to amend will not be given if the petitioner  is  not acting in good faith or has kept back the facts known to him before the trial started. According  to  respondent No. 1  Shambhu  Maharaj  committed corrupt  practice  at election meetings  held  at  Ikbalgadh where P.W. 9 was present, Amirgadh where P.W. 4 Was  present and  at Wav where. one Chotaji Bhattji was present and  that he  came  to  know  of the,  corrupt  practices  from  those persons.   All the meetings are referred to in the  election petition.  If Shambhu Maharaj had told the electors that Sri Shankracharya  had  commanded  them  not  to  vote  for  the congress  candidate  and that disobedience  of  his  command would  be  sinful,  P.W. 4 and  Chotaji  Bhattji  must  have informed  respondent No. 1 of this corrupt  practice  before April  10,  1967 when the election petition was  filed.   No

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10  

explanation  is  given as to why respondent No.  1  withheld this information in the petition.  Respondent No. 1 now says that  on April’17, 1967 he applied for certified  copies  of the  reports of C. B. Barot to the Deputy  Inspector-General of  Police,  C.I.D.,  Ahmedabad  but  the  application   was rejected  on May 14, 1967.  Assuming that he could  not  get certified  copies of the reports, he could set-forth in  the petition’  the  substance of the charge with regard  to  the command  of Sri Shankracharya from the information  supplied by  his informants.  He knew of the reports of C.  B.  Barot before  April  17,  1967.   Immediately  after  filing   the election  petition he could subpoena the reports  and  under orders  of the Court he could inspect them long  before  the trial started.  He was aware that the charge of telling  the electors  that  they would commit the sin  of  go-hatya  was quite  different from the charge of telling them  that  they would  commit  the  sin  of  Brahma-hatya  or  the  sin   of disobeying  the  command  of  their  religious  leader   Sri Shankracharya.  On September 25, 1967, he obtained an  order giving him leave to amend the petition by adding the  charge with regard to the sins of Brahma-hatya and Sadhu-hatya, but he deliberately refrained from adding the charge with regard to  the sin of disobeying the command of Sri  Shankracharya. The,  trial  commenced on February 29, 1968.  On  that  date P.W.  4  said that at the Amirgadh meeting  Shambhu  Maharaj told  the  electors  that  he had  brought  a  mandate  from Jagadguru  Shankracharya.  On an objection being  raised  by the  appellant’s counsel Mr. Mehta, counsel  for  respondent No.  1,  agreed that the statement of P.W. 4  would  not  be treated  as part of the evidence on the record.   Thereafter the  trial proceeded and 11 more witnesses were examined  on the  footing  that respondent No. 1 would not  rely  on  the charge  with  regard to the, command of  Jagadguru  Shankra- charya.   On that footing the appellant’s counsel adopted  a definite 223 line of cross-examination.  On March 4, he consented to  the marking  of  the full reports of the speeches of  ,  Shambhu Maharaj  as  exhibits  and  on  March  5,  he  extracted  an admission  from  Barot that the witness had  taken  verbatim notes  of the speeches of Shambhu Maharaj.  Counsel  adopted this  line of cross-examination because he took,  the  stand that the speeches did not prove the corrupt practice alleged in  the petition.  The application, for amendment was  filed on  March 5 and was allowed on March 7. The  order  allowing the  amendment  has resulted in manifest  injustice  to  the appellant.  His counsel could not thereafter take the  stand that the reports had been fabricated at the instance of  the congress party , Respondent No. 1 moved the application  for amendment  in bad faith at a very late stage of  the  trial. He  deliberately  refrained  from  taking  the  new   charge earlier. Under  s. 116A an appeal lies to this Court on any  question whether  of  law or fact from the order of the  High  Court. The  procedure in appeal is regulated by s. 116C.   All  the provisions  of the Code of Civil Procedure including s.  105 apply to the appeal, and any error in an order of the  Trial court  affecting the decision of the case may be taken as  a ground  of objection in the appeal.  In an appeal  under  s. 116A  the  whole  case is within the  jurisdiction  of  this Court.   Normally  the  Court does not  interfere  with  the Judge’s discretion in granting amendments except on  grounds of law but where, as in this case, the order has resulted in manifest injustice, the Court has the power and the duty  to correct  the  error.   In Evans  v.  Bartlam(1)  Lord  Atkin

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10  

observed               "Appellate jurisdiction is always statutory  :               there  is in the statute no  restriction  upon               the  jurisdiction of the court of appeal:  and               while  the appellate court in the exercise  of               its  appellate  power  is  no  doubt  entirely               justified in saying that normally it will  not               interfere  with  the exercise of  the  judge’s               discretion except on grounds of law, yet if it               sees, that on other grounds the decision  will               result in injustice being done it has both the               power and the duty to remedy it." We,  therefore,  hold  that the order  of  the  trial  judge allowing the amendment was erroneous and must be set aside. Respondent No. 1 proved six speeches of Shambhu Maharaj.  He did  not  rely  in  the  trial  court  on  the  speeches  at Laxmipura,  Bhabhar and Tharad.  Mr. Gokhale stated that  he did not rely on these ’speeches for any purpose  whatsoever. Accordingly,  those  speeches were not read in  this  Court. There is no charge (1)  [1937] A.C.473,480-481 224 against  the,  appellant  on the ground  of  appeal  to  the electors  ,on  the  ground of religion.   The  only.  charge against  him is that in his speeches at lkbalgadh,  Amirgadh and  Wav, Shambhu Maharaj with the consent- of his  election agent  Punambhai told the electors that "if they  voted  for the  congress party candidates the voters would  commit  the sin  of cow slaughter (gaumata vadh)." Respondent No. 1  has not  proved the charge that the electors were urged  in  the name  of  mother  cow  to take a vow not  to  vote  for  the congress  party  candidates, with the ,result  that  several members  of  the,  audience  publicly  took  the  vow.   The Ikbalgadh speech (Ex.  B1) and the Amirgadh speech (Ex.  B3) were  delivered  on February 8, 1967.  The Wav  speech  (Ex. B4)  was delivered on February 9, 1967.  There was  then  an acute political controversy with regard to the total ban  on cow   slaughter.    Section  5(1)  of  the   Bombay   Animal Preservation  Act,  1954 (Bombay Act No. LXXII of  1954)  as amended  by Gujarat Act No. XVI of 1961, there was  a  total ban on cow slaughter in Gujarat.  But there was no  absolute ban,  on  cow  slaughter  in  several  other  States.    The Swatantra  party  was  agitating  for a  total  ban  on  cow slaughter   throughout  India.   Public  criticism  of   the Congress  party for not abolishing cow slaughter  throughout the  country  was  permissible  and  legitimate.   But   the criticism ceases to be legitimate if the speaker commits the corrupt  practice of undue influence under s.  123(2),  that is, if he interferes or attempts to interfere with the  free exercise  of electoral right.  Under. s. 123(2) proviso  (a) cl.  (ii) there is such undue influence if any  person  with the  consent of the candidate or his election agent  induces or  attempts to induce a candidate or an elector to  believe that be, or any person in whom he is interested, will become or  will  be  rendered an object of  divine  displeasure  or spiritual  censure." The actual effect of the speech is  not material,.  Corrupt practice, is committed if the speech  is calculated to interfere with the free exercise of  electoral right  and  to  leave no choice to  the:  electors  in-  the matter, see Ram Dial v., San; Lal & Others(1). In  considering the speeches the status of the  speaker  and the  character of the audience are relevant  considerations. Shambhu Maharaj was a kirtankar of repute and well known and respected for his lectures on Hindu religion.  The  audience consisted  mostly of illiterate and orthodox Hindus  of  the

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10  

rural areas, adivasis and rabaris belonging to the scheduled tribes and scheduled castes.  In this background, let us now consider  the  speeches.  Respondent No. 1  charges  corrupt practice  in respect of 4 passages in the  Ikbalgadh  speech (Ex.   B1),  passages  in the Wav speech  (Ex.   B4)  and  3 passages’. in the Amirgadh speech (Ex.  B3). (1)  [1959] Supp. 2. S.C.R. 748, 758, 760. 225 The learned trial judge found that the corrupt practice  was not  committed by the 1st and 2nd passages in Ex.   B1,  the 1st,  2nd  and 3rd and 6th passages in Ex.  B4 and  the  1st passage in Ex.  B3. But the learned Judge held that 3rd and 4th passages in  Ex. B1  and  the  4th and 5th passages in Ex.   B4  amounted  to corrupt  practice  as  the  electors  were  told  that   Sri Shankracharya  had  commanded  them  not  to  vote  for  the congress  and that if they disobeyed his command they  would incur  divine  displeasure and spiritual censure.   We  have disallowed the amendment introducing this charge and we must therefore  set aside the finding of the learned  judge  with regard to those passages.  We find that the passages do  not show any corrupt practice as alleged in the petition. In  the 2nd passage, in the, Amirgadh speech (Ex.   B3)  the speaker  referred to-the ban on cow slaughter  in  Pakistan, Afghanistan  and Madhya Pradesh and said that the  Swatantra Party  had  promised  to ban slaughter of  cow  progeny  and exemption  of land revenue.  He also said : "Sun  rises  and twenty  two thousand cows are slaughtered .... In  Ahmedabad there is a prohibition oh cow slaughter but the slaughtering of  calf and ox is continued.  The earth took the form of  a cow  and if the said ’Gaumata’ or ox is slaughtered how  can earth be satisfied and so long as the earth is not satisfied how  can  there  be fertility in the earth."  In  the  third passage (Ex.  B3), the speaker said:-               "In  the year 1942 sixteen lacs and  in.  1946               twenty  four  lacs  and in  1947  after  India               became  separate and at present about 1  crore               cows are slaughtered.  You say whether to vote               for  congress is to become partner in  sin  or               anything  else.  If you give  cooperation  for               good  cause you may get good fruit and if  you               cooperate  in  committing a sin you  become  a               partner  of sin.  Why you become a partner  of               sin by giving votes to congress ?" He  then referred to the command of Sri  Shankracharya  that the  electors should not vote for the Congress  party.   But even  apart  from  the  command  of  Sri  Shankracharya  the electors are distinctly told that though there was a ban  on cow slaughter in Ahmedabad, the congress was permitting  the slaughter  of  crores  of cows elsewhere in  India  and  was committing  the  sin of gohatya and those who vote  for  the congress  would be partners in the sin.  The dominant  theme of the speech was that those who commit the sin of  go-hatya would be visited with divine displeasure.  Having regard  to the character of the audience, the speech was calculated  to interfere with the free exercise of 226 electoral right.  In Narbada Prasad v. Chhagan Lal & Ors. Hidayatullah, C.J., observed :               "It is  not necessary to enlarge upon the fact               that  cow is venerated in our country  by  the               vast  majority  of the people  and  that  they               believe  not  only  in  its  utility  but  its               holiness.   It, is also believed that  one  of               the   cardinal  sins  is  that  of   go-hatya.

9

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10  

             Therefore, it is quite obvious that to  remind               the  voters that they would be committing  the               sin  of go-hatya would be to remind them  that               they would be objects of divine displeasure or               spiritual censure."               In  Encyclopaedia  of  Religion  and   Ethics,               edited  by  James Hastings, vol. 4,  pp.  225,               226, it is stated:-               "A well known verse (Mahabharata, xiii.  74.4)               says  :  ’All that kill, eat  and  permit               the slaughter of cows, rot in hell for as many               years  as there are hairs on the body  of  the               cow so slain.               "Reverence  for the cow has not diminished  in               modem times.  It is well known that the Hindus               of the present day ’are filled with horror  at               the  slaughter of the cow, which is  therefore               prohibited  in  native States  under  treaties               with the English." According   to   B.  N.  Mehta’s   Modern   Gujarati-English Dictionary,  vol.  1, page 480, gohatya  (go,  a  cow+hatya, killing)  means  in Gujarat "slaughter of a cow;  killing  a cow,  being  one of the five great sins according  to  Hindu scriptures  which  can  be  atoned  for  only  with  capital punishment." Accordingly,  the offending passages in the Amirgadh  speech fell  within s. 123 (2) proviso (a) (ii).  We are  satisfied that Shambhu Maharaj spoke at the Amirgadh meeting with  the consent  of Punambhai, the election agent of the  appellant. Punambhai was present at the Amirgadh meeting.  He addressed the meeting before Shambhu Maharaj spoke.  Shambhu  Maharaj addressed  several other election meetings of the  Swatantra party.   Punambhai  issued  a pamphlet calling  one  of  the meetings.  P.W. 10 proved that he was asked by Punambhai  to call  Shambhu Maharaj for addressing another meeting as  the voters  were  uneducated and had deep  belief  in  religion. Punambhai  accompanied  Shambhu Maharaj from  one  place  to another.   On February 8, 1967 he went with Shambhu  Maharaj to the meeting at Ikbalgadh (1)  [1969] S.C.E. 499.                             227 and  thereafter  went to Amirgadh.  On February 9,  he  went with  Shambhu Maharaj to the meeting at Wav.  The  offending passages of the speech at the Amirgadh meeting are  integral parts  of  the dominant theme of the sin of  cow  slaughter. They  cannot  be regarded as stray words spoken  by  Shambhu Maharaj  without  Punambhai’s consent.   Punambhai  did  not raise  any  objection  to  the  impugned  speeches at  the ’meeting.  He gave evidence in Court but did not say that he was  not a consenting party to the offending  passages.   We hold that the corrupt practice under s. 123(2) proviso   (a) (ii)  was committed at the Amirgadh meeting on  February  8, 1967  with  the  consent  of  the  election  agent  of   the appellant. In  the result, the appeal is dismissed.  There will  be  no order as to costs. Hegde,  J. I have had the advantage of reading the  judgment just  now read out by Bachawat, J. I agree that  the  appeal should  be  dismissed.  But I am unable to  agree  that  the amendment  complained  of  was not  properly  allowed.   The learned trial judge has given good reasons in support of his order.  In my opinion no case is made out to interfere  with that order.  I am also of the opinion that each and everyone of  the  speeches  made by Shambhu  Maharaj  which  are  the subject matter of this appeal, read as a whole as we  should

10

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10  

do,  fall within the vice of proviso a(ii) of s.  123(2)  of the Representation of the People Act, 1951.  Nothing so  bad as  those  speeches I have come across  in  election  cases. They are fanatical outpourings and a direct challenge to the concept of a secular democracy. Appeal dismissed. 228