03 October 1963
Supreme Court
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MOHAN SINGH Vs BHANWARLAL & OTHERS.

Bench: GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.,SUBBARAO, K.,WANCHOO, K.N.,SHAH, J.C.,DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
Case number: Appeal (civil) 530 of 1963


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PETITIONER: MOHAN SINGH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: BHANWARLAL & OTHERS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/10/1963

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. SUBBARAO, K. WANCHOO, K.N. DAYAL, RAGHUBAR

CITATION:  1964 AIR 1366            1964 SCR  (5)  12  CITATOR INFO :  R          1965 SC1243  (5)  F          1967 SC 836  (8)  D          1967 SC1445  (9)  E          1969 SC 872  (21)  D          1970 SC1231  (13)  E          1970 SC2097  (318)  D          1973 SC2513  (12)  R          1976 SC 744  (26,40)  R          1979 SC 154  (36)  RF         1979 SC 234  (40)  F          1985 SC  89  (16,23)  C          1991 SC2001  (21)

ACT: Election--Corrupt   practice--Ingredients--Publication    of leaflets--If   and   when   constitute   corrupt   practice- "Gratification"  -Meaning  of--The  Representation  of   the People Act,  1951  (43 of 1951), ss. 82, 123(1) (B) and  123 (4).

HEADNOTE:      The  appellant  was  declared  elected  to  the  Madhya Pradesh  Legislative  Assembly.   Another  candidate  Himmat Singh  withdrew his candidature before the date of  polling. Respondent 1 one of the defeated candidates, challenged  the election  by  a  petition under the  Representation  of  the People  Act  alleging that the  appellant  had  disqualified himself by committing corrupt practices. It was alleged that he  had  shortly before the polling of votes  published  two leaflets in Hindi containing statements of fact with  regard to  the personal character or conduct of respondent 1  which were  false and which the appellant believed to be false  or did  not  believe to be true and that  the  statements  were calculated to prejudice the prospects of respondent 1 at the election.  The appellant denied    13 the  said allegations and applied to the  Election  Tribunal for  dismissing the petition in limine because Himmat  Singh against  whom allegations of corrupt practice in  regard  to

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the withdrawal of candidature were made, was not joined as a respondent.  The Tribunal rejected the application and  held that  it was established on the evidence that the  appellant did commit corrupt practice by publishing the two  leaflets. In  appeal the High Court agreed with the Tribunal.  It  was urged on behalf of the appellant that the election  petition was  liable to be dismissed in limine, as it did not  comply with the requirements of s.82 of the Act, that the appellant did  not  publish the leaflets, and that in  any  event  the publication did not constitute a corrupt practice within the meaning s. 123(4) of the Act.     Held: (i) The election petition was not detective. There was no allegation of corrupt practice against Himmat  Singh. It  was  merely alleged that the appellant  had  offered  to assist  or  help Himmat Singh in obtaining  employment  with "Dalauda  Sugar  Factory or elsewhere".  The  acceptance  of offer  which constitutes a motive or reward for  withdrawing from  the candidature must be acceptance  of  gratification. Gratification  does  not include offers and  acceptances  of mere  promises,  but  requires  ,an  offer  and   acceptance relating  to a thing of some value, though  not  necessarily estimable  in  terms  of money.  A mere  offer  to  help  in getting employment is not such offer of gratification within the  meaning of s. 123(1)(B) as to constitute it  a  corrupt practice.    On  the  allegations  therefore,  it  was   not necessary  to  implead Himmat Singh as a respondent  to  the petition.     (ii)  The  onus of establishing a  corrupt  practice  is undoubtedly  on the person who sets it up, and the  onus  is not   discharged   on  proof  of   mere   preponderance   of probability,  as in the trial of a civil suit;  the  corrupt practice  must  be established beyond  reasonable  doubt  by evidence which is clear and unambiguous.     (iii) In considering whether a publication amounts to  a corrupt  practice  within  the  meaning  of  s.  123(4)  the Tribunal  would be entitled to take into account matters  of common   knowledge  among  the  electorate  and   read   the publication  in that background, for one of the  ingredients of  the particular corrupt practice is the tendency  of  the statement in the publication to be reasonably calculated  to prejudice  the prospects of that candidate’s election.   The test  in  cases under s. 123(4) is whether  the  imputation, besides being false in fact, is published with the object of lowering  the candidate in the estimation of the  electorate and  calculated to prejudice his prospects at the  election. In  ascertaining  whether the candidate is  lowered  in  the estimation  of the electorate, the imputation made  must  be viewed in the light of matters generally known to them.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 530  of 1963. 14     Appeal  from the judgment and order dated  February  14, 1963,  of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in First Appeal  No. 34 of 1962.     U.M.  Trivedi, Malik Arjun Das, Shanti  Swarup  Khanduja and Ganpat Rai, for the appellant.     G.S.  Pathak,  U.N. Bhachawat, Rameshwar Nath  and  S.N. Andley, for respondent no. 1.     October  3,  1963.   The  Judgment  of  the  Court   was delivered by     SHAH  J.---Eight  candidates  (including  the  appellant

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Mohan  Singh  and  the first  respondent  Bhanwarlal)  filed nomination  papers  for   election  to  the  Madhya  Pradesh Legislative  Assembly  from the  Sitamau  constituency.  The nomination of one Hussain Khan was rejected by the Returning Officer at the initial scrutiny and another candidate Himmat Singh  withdrew his candidature before the date of  polling, which  took place on February 24, 1962.  On the counting  of the votes Mohan Singh was found to have secured the  largest number  of  votes  at  the election,  and  he  was  declared elected.     Bhanwarlal applied under s. 80 read with ss. 100 and 101 of the Representation of the People Act (43 of 1951), to the Election  Commission  of India for an  order  declaring  the election  of Mohan Singh void, and Mohan Singh  disqualified because  of  committing corrupt practices  detailed  in  the petition and for an order declaring the applicant Bhanwarlal elected.   Among  the  many  grounds  of  corrupt  practices alleged  in the petition, two grounds set out in cls. (c)  & (d) of para 11 of the petition survive for consideration  in this  appeal.   It was averred in these clauses  that  Mohan Singh  the  successful  candidate  had  shortly  before  the polling of votes published two leaflets in Hindi  containing statements of fact with regard to the personal character  or conduct  of  the applicant Bhanwarlal which were  false  and which Mohan Singh believed to be false or did not believe to be true and that the statements were calculated 15 to  prejudice the prospects of Bhanwarlal at  the  election. Copies of the two leaflets were annexed to the petition, and were marked annexures ’D’ & ’E’.     The  petition  was referred for trial  by  the  Election Commission to the Election Tribunal, Ratlam, under s. 86  of the  Representation of the People Act.  Mohan Singh  by  his written statement denied that he had published the  leaflets and submitted that the leaflets which appeared to have  been published  by the electorate contained "a factual  and  fair criticism of the public; activities" of Bhanwarlal and  that they  were not calculated to prejudice his prospects at  the election.     Mohan  Singh  applied  to  the  Tribunal  for  an  order dismissing  the  petition  in limine on  the  ground,  among others, that there was non-compliance with s. 82 of the Act, because  one of the candidates at the election named  Himmat Singh--against  whom  allegations  of  corrupt  practice  in regard  to the withdrawal of his candidature were  made--was not  joined  as  a respondent.  The  Tribunal  rejected  the application  for dismissal of the petition and held that  it was  established  on the evidence that Mohan Singh  and  his agents  did  commit, amongst others,  the  corrupt  practice defined in s. 123(4) of the Act by publishing the  leaflets, annexures ’D’& ’E’, containing statements which were  false, to  the knowledge and belief of Mohan Singh, and  made  with the  knowledge  that  they would  reasonably  prejudice  the election   chances  of  Bhanwarlal.   In  coming   to   that conclusion the Tribunal primarily relied upon the  testimony of  one  Rameshchandra,  a  compositor  in  the   Maheshwari Printing  Press,  Mandsaur, and upon  certain  corroborative circumstances.     In  appeal  by Mohan Singh against the order,  the  High Court  of Madhya Pradesh on a review of the evidence  agreed with  the  Tribunal  that Mohan Singh  was  instrumental  in getting  printed  leaflets  annexures  ’D’  &  ’E’  and  the leaflets  were  distributed  in  certain  villages  in   the constituency by Mohan Singh and his agents Satyanarayan  and Kailash.

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16     In this appeal with special leave it was urged that  the election  petition  filed  by Bhanwarlal was  liable  to  be dismissed  in  limine,  as  it  did  not  comply  with   the requirements  of s. 82 of the Representation of  the  People Act.   On the merits it was urged that Mohan Singh  did  not publish  the  leaflets annexures ’D’ & ’E’ and that  in  any event the publication did not constitute a corrupt  practice within the meaning of s. 123 (4) of the Act.     Whether for alleged non-compliance with the requirements of  s.  ,82 of the Act, the petition by Bhanwarlal  was  not maintainable  must first be determined, for if the  petition did not comply with the mandatory provisions of the statute, irrespective of whether a corrupt practice was committed  by Mohan  Singh,  the  petition must  stand  dismissed  without further investigation.     In  paragraph 11(b) of the petition it was averred  that on  January 20, 1962, Mohan Singh, "offered at Nahargarh  to Shri  Himmat Singh an independent candidate to help  him  in procuring  a  job  for  him  in  Dalauda  Sugar  Factory  or elsewhere  to  withdraw his candidature from  the  election. That as a consequence of this offer of illegal gratification Himmat  Singh  withdrew  his candidature  from  the  Sitamau Assembly  constituency."   The  language  used  is  somewhat ungrammatical,  but the purport is clear--that  Mohan  Singh with  a view to persuade Himmat Singh to withdraw  from  the election  offered to help him to secure employment with  the Dalauda  Sugar Factory, or with some other employer, and  in consequence   of  this  offer  which  amounted  to   illegal gratification--Himmat Singh had withdrawn himself from being candidate at the election for the Sitamau constituency.     Section   123  (1)  defines  the  corrupt  practice   of "bribery"  and  by  el.  (B) receipt  of,  or  agreement  to receive,  any  gratification,  whether  as  a  motive  or  a reward--                  (a)  by  a  person  for  standing  or   not               standing as, or for withdrawing from being,  a               candidate; or               17                  (b) by any person whomsoever for himself or               any other person for voting or refraining from               voting,  or inducing or attempting  to  induce               any elector to vote or refrain from voting, or               any candidate to withdraw his. candidature, constitutes  the  corrupt practice of bribery  by  a  person other  than the candidate.  It is submitted that by para  11 (b)  it  was  averted that Himmat Singh who  had  filed  his nomination  paper had agreed to receive gratification, as  a motive  or a reward for withdrawing from being a  candidate, and  that  it was necessary in view of s. 82 of the  Act  to implied  Himmat  Singh  as ?. party  to  the  petition,  and failure  to  implied  him would  involve  dismissal  of  the petition.   To  appreciate the argument it is  necessary  to refer  to certain relevant provisions of the Act.  By s.  80 no election is liable to be called in question except by  an election   petition   presented  in  accordance   with   the provisions of Part VI of the Act.  Section 81 prescribes the g.  rounds  on  which, the persons by whom  and  the  period during which an election petition may be presented, and also the procedure for presentation of the petition. By s. 82  it is enacted that all contesting candidates shall be joined as party  respondents  where  the petitioner,  in  addition  to claiming  a declaration that the election of all or  any  of the   returned   candidates  is  void,  claims   a   further declaration that he himself or any other candidate has  been

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duly  elected,  and  where no such  further  declaration  is claimed, all the returned candidates shall be joined.  Again where  allegations  of  corrupt practice  are  made  against another candidate, such other candidate shall be joined as a respondent.  Section 79 which is the interpretation  section in  respect of Parts VI, VII and VIII (and s. 82  occurs  in Part  VI)  defines the expression "candidate" as  meaning  a person who has been or claims to have been duly nominated as a  candidate at any election, and any such person  shall  be deemed to have been a candidate as from the time when,  with the  election in prospect, he began to hold himself out as a prospective candidate.  If the provisions, among others, 1/SCI/64--2 18 of  ss. 81 or 82 have not been complied with,  the  Election Commissioner  must dismiss the petition (s. 85), and if  the Commission does not so order the Tribunal is enjoined by  s. 90(3) to dismiss the petition which does not comply with the provisions of ss. 81 or 82.     Himmat Singh had filed his nomination paper, and on that account  by  virtue  of the definition of s.  79  he  was  a candidate for the purposes of Parts VI, VII & VIII, and  did not  cease to be a candidate merely because he withdrew  his candidature.   If  therefore  the  petition  contained   any imputation  of corrupt practice made against Himmat   Singh, it  could not be regarded as properly constituted unless  he was  impleaded  as a respondent, for, by the  definition  of "candidate"   in  s.  79(b),  the  expression   "any   other candidate"  in  s, 82(b) must include a  candidate  who  had withdrawn  his candidature.  But in our judgment in para  11 (b)  there  is  no allegation of  corrupt  practice  against Himmat   Singh.   What is alleged is that  Mohan  Singh  had offered to help Himmat Singh "in procuring a job in  Dalauda Sugar  Factory  or elsewhere" and that as a  consequence  of that  offer Himmat Singh had withdrawn his candidature  from the  election. There is no express averment in the  petition about  the acceptance of the offer by Himmat Singh,  but  it would  border  upon supererogation to insist  that  even  if offer  to  help  to  procure a  job  amounted  to  offer  of gratification,  an  allegation that in consequence  of  this offer  Himmat Singh had withdrawn his candidature  from  the election  did  not amount to a plea of  acceptance  of  that offer  unless  it was so expressly averred. However  in  our view a mere offer of help to secure employment without  more is  not offer of gratification within the meaning of s.  123 (1)  (B) of the Act.  The expression "gratification" is  not defined  in the Act but the Explanation to sub-s. (1) of  s. 123  furnishes an indication as to what in the view  of  the Parliament   amounts  to  gratification.   The   Explanation states:                 "For  the purposes of this clause  the  term               ’gratification’ is not restricted to pecuniary               graft-               19               fications or gratifications estimable in money               and it includes all forms of entertainment and               all forms of employment for reward but it does               not  include  the  payment  of  any   expenses               bonafide  incurred at, or for the purpose  of,               any  election and duly entered in the  account               of  election expenses referred to  in  section               78." The  Explanation extends the expression  "gratification"  to include  all  forms  of  entertainment  and  all  forms   of employment   for  reward  but  not  payment  of  bona   fide

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expenditure  incurred at or for the purpose of  election  if duly   entered   in  the  account  of   election   expenses. Gratification    in   its   ordinary    connotation    means satisfaction.   In  the context in which the  expression  is used  and its delimitation by the Explanation, it must  mean something valuable which is calculated to satisfy a person’s aim,  object  or  desire,  whether  or  not  that  thing  is estimable  in  terms of money; but a mere offer to  help  in securing  employment  to a person with a  named  or  unnamed employer would not amount to such gratification.      There   is  no  plea  that  Mohan  Singh  had   offered employment to Himmat Singh with the Dalauda Sugar Factory or with  another  employer; it was merely  alleged  that  Mohan Singh  had  offered  to  assist  or  help  Himmat  Singh  in obtaining employment with the "Dalauda Sugar Factory or else where".  The acceptance of offer which constitutes a  motive or  reward  for  withdrawing from the  candidature  must  be acceptance  of gratification; and if gratification does  not include  all  offers and acceptances of mere  promises,  but requires, to constitute it, an offer and acceptance relating to  a thing of some value, though not necessarily  estimable in  terms  of  money,  a  mere  offer  to  help  in  getting employment  is  not such offer of gratification  within  the meaning  of  s.  123(1)(B) as to  constitute  it  a  corrupt practice.  It was in the circumstances not necessary on  the allegations  made in para 11(b) of the petition  to  implead Himmat Singh as a respondent to the petition.  We  therefore agree 20 with the High Court, though for different reasons, that  the petition filed by Bhanwarlal was not defective.     Counsel  for Mohan Singh challenged the finding  of  the High  Court that Mohan Singh was instrumental in  publishing the  leaflets  annexures ’D’ & ’E’.   He urged that  in  the trial of an election petition approach to the evidence  must be  as  in a criminal trial and no fact may be  held  proved unless it is established beyond reasonable doubt.  The  onus of  establishing  a corrupt practice is undoubtedly  on  the person  who  sets it up, and the onus is not  discharged  on proof of mere preponderance of probability, as in the  trial of  a civil suit: the corrupt practice must  be  established beyond  reasonable  doubt  by evidence which  is  clear  and unambiguous.     But   the   testimony   of    Rameshchandra corroborated  by the circumstances set out in detail in  the judgments  of the Tribunal and the High Court  was  accepted and  the testimony of witnesses for Mohan Singh who  claimed that  other persons without his consent or  connivance  were responsible   for   getting   the   leaflets   printed   was disbelieved.   The  evidence about the distribution  of  the leaflets  in  question by the appellant and his  agents  was also  accepted  by the Tribunal and the High Court.  It  was also   found   that   these   leaflets   were    distributed simultaneously.  In recording their conclusions the Tribunal and  the  High  Court did not proceed  on  mere  grounds  of probability.  The findings recorded by the Tribunal and  the High Court are therefore concurrent findings of fact rounded on  appreciation of oral evidence and no ground is made  out for departing from the settled practice of the Court against interference with those concurrent findings of fact.     The  next  question  to be  considered  is  whether  the publication  of  the  leaflets amounts to  commission  of  a corrupt  practice  within  the terms of s. 123  (4)  of  the Representation  of the People Act, 1951.  Section  123  sets out what the diverse corrupt practices recognised by the Act are.   Clause (4) defines a corrupt practice by  publication

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of false statements calculated 21 to  prejudice  the prospects of a candidate’s  election.  To bring a corrupt practice within the purview of el. (4) there must  be  a publication by a candidate or his  agent  or  by another  person  with the consent of the  candidate  or  his election agent: the publication must contain a statement  of fact  which is false, and which the candidate or  his  agent believes  to  be false or does not believe to be  true,  the statement  must be in relation to the personal character  or conduct  of  the  candidate;  and  it  must  be   reasonably calculated  to  prejudice the prospects  of  the  candidates election.  The expression "statement of fact" in s. 123  (4) includes not only an express imputation but also an innuendo if  one such may reasonably be raised from the  language  in which it is couched and the manner of its publication Annexure  ’D’ is in Hindi.  The caption of that  leaflet  is "The  surety (security) of Shri Nahata has to  be  forfeited because  he has defrauded the public and has shown his  face after  five  years to take votes." Counsel for  Mohan  Singh submitted  that the expression "defrauded" is not a  correct rendering  into   English  of the  Hindi  expression  "dhoka diya";  it   means "misled".  The caption is followed  by  a photograph of Mohan Singh together with his election  symbol and it is stated that the ballot paper of Mohan Singh is  of pink colour and that the election symbol is the picture of a tamp  It then  proceeds to state that "Sitamau  constituency has  awakened.  Nahata (Bhanwarlal) has run  away.   Shinde, Kishen Gupta Patil Patel, you may safeguard the interests of your  Bhanwarlal Nahata as much as you like but  his  surety (security)  is  sure  to be forfeited."   Then  follow  nine paragraphs the third of which alone is material.  That para- graph reads:                 "We   have  heard  that  your   friend   has               collected    28 thousand rupees  from  several               villages   in  the    name  of   opium.    The               agriculturists did not  get   the licenses and               those  agriculturists  who got   them  had  to               spend  a  lot  of money  and  time  and    the               licenses for opium were received on  execution               of bonds for 8 seers."               22                 The leaflet concludes by a note which reads:                    "Every voter will get’ two ballot  papers               one   is   of  pink  colour  for   Legislative               Assembly      for      Thakur            Mohan               Singh   .      .    .    Put the seal  on  the               symbols  of lamp on both the ballots pink  and               white.  You read this pamphlet and give it  to               your friends to spread the message from  house               to house.  Submitted by Nahata Virodhi  Morcha               Sitamau Constituency."  Annexure  ’E’  bears  the  caption:  "The  Bureaucrats   of yesterday--Congressmen  of  to-day".   It  consists  of  two parts-the  first relates to certain allegations against  one Dr.  Raghubir Singh who it appears was a candidate from  the constituency  for  Parliament  and  the  second  relates  to Bhanwarlal.   The  portion dealing  with  Bhanwarlal  Nahata states:               "Let Sriman Shri 1008 of Shri Nahata tell?                    (1)    Did    you   not    defraud    the               agriculturists with respect to the licences of               opium ?                (the  other six questions are  not  relevant,               and need not be reproduced)

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              Public has already decided and now it is  not               going  to fall prey to your fraud  and  greed.               On  all sides "the public has decided  to  put               seal   on   lamp  and  make   it   victorious.               Therefore the congressmen should not be misled               while making propaganda. Submitted by  Goswami               Mahant Ratnagir."  It  is  said  that  the last  paragraph  is  not  correctly rendered  into English: it merely stated, it is urged,  that the  public  have already known the truth and they  are  not going  to  fall  a  prey  to  the  misleading  promises  and inducements  etc.   No  authorised translation  of  the  two leaflets is furnished, but we will proceed to ascertain  the purport  of  the  relevant  parts of  the  two  leaflets  as incorporated  in  the printed book, with  the  modifications suggested by counsel for Mohan Singh.       Paragraph 3 of annexure ’D’ as it stands rendered into English  is  not  very clear in its  import.   To  a  person completely  unacquainted  with  the  local  conditions   the expression  "in  the name of opium" may convey  no  meaning. But in considering whether a 23 publication amounts to a corrupt practice within the meaning of  s.  123(4) the Tribunal would be entitled to  take  into account matters of common knowledge among the electorate and read  the  publication in that background, for  one  of  the ingredients  of  the  particular  corrupt  practice  is  the tendency   of  the  statement  in  the  publication  to   be reasonably  calculated  to prejudice the prospects  of  that candidate’s election.  The test in cases under s. 123(4)  is whether  the  imputation beside being false in fact,  is  it published  with the object of lowering the candidate in  the estimation of the electorate and calculated to prejudice his prospects  at the election? And in ascertaining whether  the candidate  is lowered in the estimation of  the  electorate, the  imputation made must be viewed in the light of  matters generally known to them.     It  is common ground that in the territory  which  forms the Sitamau constituency, licences for cultivation of  opium are  granted by the authorities to agriculturists,  and  the statement made in paragraph 3 apparently is that  Bhanwarlal had  collected  Rs. 28,000 from the  agriculturists  in  the constituency for securing licences for cultivation of  opium but  the  agriculturists did not get the licences  and  even those  who obtained the licences had to  spend  considerable sums  of  money.  The innuendo in the  statement  cannot  be mistaken:  it is that a large amount of money was  collected from  agriculturists  by Bhanwarlal on  the  ’representation that he would obtain licences for opium cultivation, but  he did  nothing in that behalf and misappropriated the  amount. That  is further made clear by paragraph 1 in  annexure  ’E’ relating  to Bhanwarlal.  The form in which that  allegation is  made  is  in the interrogative form.   By  annexure  ’E’ certain  questions were addressed to Bhanwarlal and  one  of the   questions  was  whether  he  had  not  defrauded   the agriculturists  with respect to the licences of opium?   The interrogative  form  is often employed not with  a  view  to secure  information but to make and emphasize an  assertion. The  use  of  the  interrogative form  would  not  make  the statement any the less an imputation if it is fairly capable of being 24 so   read.  As  we  have  already  observed   the   evidence establishes  that  the  leaflets annexures ’D’  &  ’E’  were published  simultaneously  and  annexure  ’D’  contains   an

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allegation  about the collection of Rs. 28,000 by Bhanwarlal Nahata  "in  the  name of opium", and  in  annexure  ’E’  an express  imputation of defrauding the agriculturists in  the matter of licences for opium cultivation is made.       On  a reasonable reading of these two  leaflets  there was no doubt that the person responsible for the publication of these two leaflets intended to convey that Bhanwarlal had deceived the agriculturists into parting with the sum of Rs. 28,000  on the representation that licences for  cultivation of opium would be obtained for them.  The two leaflets  also clearly imply that he misappropriated the fund collected  by him.   Bhanwarlal  denied  that he  had  utilised  any  fund collected from the agriculturists for his own purposes.   He stated  that  some  amounts of  money  were  collected  from cultivators of opium by the District Congress Committee, and receipts  were given by the District Congress  Committee  in respect  of  those  collections on behalf  of  the  District Congress  Committee.   He  denied that  he  had  misled  the agriculturists  or  that he had misappropriated  any  amount collected  from  the agriculturists.  He asserted  that  the amounts  collected  from  the agriculturists  were  for  the District  Congress  Committee, and did in fact  go  to  that body.  The  imputation  is undoubtedly in  relation  to  the personal  conduct  of Bhanwarlal, and if  the  testimony  of Bhanwarlal  be accepted, the imputation must be held  to  be false.  No attempt was made at the trial to prove the  truth of the imputations.  Even in the written statement filed  by Mohan Singh it was not his plea that the imputations against Bhanwarlal were true or that he believed them to be true.       From  the  manner  in  which and  the  time  when  the leaflets annexures ’D’ and ’E’ were published, there can  be no  doubt that those leaflets were published as a part of  a political campaign to injure the prospects of Bhanwarlal  at the election, and if without making an 25 enquiry about the collection of the amount of Rs. 28,000 and the destination therefore, it was imputed against Bhanwarlal that he had defrauded the agriculturists and misappropriated the amount collected, the inference that the statement  made was to the knowledge of the maker false or was not  believed by  him to be true, would readily be made.   The  imputation was on the face of it one reasonably calculated to prejudice the  prospects of the candidate Bhanwarlal at the  election. The  High  Court  was therefore right in  holding  that  the corrupt practice charged against the appellant  Mohan  Singh under s. 123 (4) was established. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.                                    Appeal dismissed.