24 November 1997
Supreme Court
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CHARAN LAL SAHU & ANR. Vs K.R. NARAYANAN & ANR.

Bench: S.C.AGRAWAL,G.N.RAY,A.S.ANAND,S.P.BHARUCHA,S.RAJENDRA BABU
Case number: Election Petition 1 of 1997


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CASE NO.: Election Petition  1 of 1997

PETITIONER: CHARAN LAL SAHU & ANR.

RESPONDENT: K.R. NARAYANAN & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/11/1997

BENCH: S.C.AGRAWAL & G.N.RAY & A.S.ANAND & S.P.BHARUCHA & S.RAJENDRA BABU

JUDGMENT: JUDGMENT

Election Petition No. 1 of 1997           

Delivered By: S.C.AGRAWAL, J.

S.C. AGRAWAL, J.

    This election  petition has  been filed  jointly by two petitioners, namely,  Charan Lal  Sahu and  Mitheles  Kumar. They have challenged the election of respondent No. 1 to the office of  the president  of India  in the election that was held for  the said  office in  pursuance of the notification dated June  9, 1997 published by the Returning Officer, Shri S. Gopalan,  Secretary General, Lok Sabha. The said election was conducted  under the  provisions of the presidential and vice-Presidential Elections  Act, 1952 [hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’].      Part  II  of  the  Act  (Sections  3  to  12)  contains provisions relating  to conduct  of presidential  and  Vice- Presidential elections.  Section 3  provides for appointment of  the   Returning  officer  and  the  Assistant  Returning officer/Officers by the Election Commission. Section 4(1) of the Act  makes provision  for issuance  of a notification by the Election Commission prescribing the last date for making nominations, the  date for  the scrutiny of nominations, the last date  for the  withdrawal of  candidatures, the date on which a  poll shall,  if  necessary,  be  taken.  Section  5 provides for  giving of  a public  notice of election by the returning Officer  after the  issuance of  the  notification under sub-section  (1) of  Section 4.  Section 5A prescribes that any person may be nominated as a Candidate for election to the  office of  President  or  Vice-President  if  he  is qualified  to   be  elected   to  that   office  under   the Constitution.  Section   5B  provides  for  presentation  of nomination papers and lays down the requirements for a valid nomination. Sub-section  (1) of Section 5B requires that the nominating paper  completed in  the prescribed  form must be subscribed by  the candidate as assenting to the nomination. In clause  (a) of sub-section (1), as it stood prior to June 5, 1997.  it was  further prescribed  that in  the  case  of presidential Election,  the nomination  papers shall also be subscribed by  at least  ten electors  as proposers  an  dat least ten  electors as seconders. Sub-section (2) of Section 5B lays down that each nomination paper shall be accompanied

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by   a certified copy of the entry relating to the candidate in the  electoral roll for the parliamentary constituency in which  the   candidate  in   the  electoral   roll  for  the parliamentary  constituency   in  which   the  candidate  is registered as  an elector.  A nomination paper to which such certified copy  is not  attached is  required to be rejected under sub-section  (4) of  Section 5B.  Section 5C, prior to June 5,  1997, prescribed  that a  candidate  shall  not  be deemed to  be duly nominated for election unless he deposits or causes to be deposited a sum of two thousand five hundred rupees.  Section   5E  makes   provision  for   scrutiny  of nominations and under sub-section (4) a nomination paper can be rejected  by the  returning officer on the grounds (a) to (e) of  that sub-section.  Ground (c) provides for rejection of  a  nomination  paper  on  the  ground  that  it  is  not subscribed by  the required number of proposers or seconders and g  round (e)  provides for  rejection on the ground that there  has  been  a  failure  to  comply  with  any  of  the provisions of Section 5B or Section 5C. Section 6 deals with withdrawal of candidature. Section 8 lays down the procedure in contested  and uncontested  elections. Section 9 provides for manner  of voting at elections and Section 10 deals with counting of  votes. Section  11 provides  for declaration of result after the counting of votes has been completed.      Part III  of the  Act  [Sections  13  to  20]  contains provisions relating  to Disputes  regarding elections.  Sub- section (1)  of Section 14 prescribes that no election shall be called  in question  excepting by  presenting an election petition and  under sub-section  (2)  this  Court  has  been specified as  the authority which shall have jurisdiction to try an  election petition.  Sub-section (1)  of Section  14A lays down  that an election petition can either be presented by any  candidate at  such  election  or,  in  the  case  of Presidential election,  by twenty  or more  electors  joined together  as  petitioners.  The  expression  "candidate’  is defined in clause (a) of Section 13 to mean a person who has been or claims to have been duly nominated as a candidate at an election.  Section 18 prescribes the grounds on which the election of a returned candidate can be declared to be void.      On June  5, 1997  the president of India promulgate the Presidential  and  Vice-Presidential  Elections  (Amendment) Ordinance, 1997  (No. 13  of 1997), hereinafter referred t o as ’the  Ordinance’,  to  further  amend  the  Act.  By  the Ordinance clause  (a) of  Sub-section  (1)  Section  5B  was amended and  for the  words "ten  electors" the words "fifty electors"  were  substituted  and  as  a  result  it  became necessary that  a nomination paper for presidential election should be subscribed by at least fifty electors as proposers and at  least fifty electors as seconders. By the Ordinance, Section 5C  was also amended and for the words "two thousand five hundred  rupees" the  words "  fifteen thousand rupees" were substituted  and as  a result the amount o be deposited as security was raised from two thousand five hundred rupees to fifteen  thousand rupees.  The Ordinance  was replaced by the Presidential  and Vice-Presidential  Election  Amendment Act, 1997  [Act 35 of 1997], hereinafter referred to as ’the Amendment Act’,  which was  enacted by  parliament on August 29, 1997.  Charan Lal  Sahu, Petitioner  No. 1, filed a writ petition [No.  293/97] in this Court under Article 32 of the Constitution wherein  he  challenged  the  validity  of  the Ordinance. The said writ petition was dismissed by the Court by the following order passed on June 9, 1997:-      ’The Writ petition is dismissed"      Another writ petition [No. 322/97 ] was filed by one P.H. Parmar.  The said  writ petition  was also dismissed by

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the Court by the following order passed on July 11,1997:-      "This writ  petition under  Article      32 is  misconceived. So  far as the      challenge  to   the  Ordinance   is      concerned, this stands concluded by      dismissal  of   an   earlier   writ      petition [W.P.  No. 237/97 entitled      C. L.  Sahu vs. UOI & Ors. ] We are      constrained to observe that this is      misuse of the PIL jurisdiction.      After the  enactment of  the Amendment  Act, petitioner No. 1  again  filed  a  writ  petition  [No.  D13334/97]  to challenge the  validity of  the Amendment Act. The said writ petition was  also dismissed  by the  Court by the following order passed on October 13,1997:-      "This  writ   petition  is   wholly      misconceived.  We   are  unable  to      appreciate     the     petitioner’s      persistence  with   the  same  even      after we  tole him  so and  also in      view of  the fact  that  a  similar      challenge has already been rejected      earlier by  orders dated  19/6/1997      and 11/7/1997 in W.P.(C) No. 293/97      and    W.P.    (C)    No.    322/97      respectively. we have no doubt that      this petition  is a  clear abuse of      the process of the Court.      The writ  petition  is,  therefore,      dismissed."      After the  issuance of  the notification  under Section 4(1) of  the Act  by the  Election Commission  the Returning Officer published  a notification  dated June  9, 1997 under Section 5 of the Act for election of the President of India. In response  to the  said notification nomination forms were filed by  a number of persons including the petitioners. The nominations of respondent Nos. 1 and 2 were accepted and the nominations of  the rest,  including the  petitioners,  were rejected by the Returning officer. Since there was a contest between respondents  Nos. 1  and 2, poll was taken and after counting of  votes, respondent  No. 1  was declared  to have been elected to the office of the president of India on July 17, 1997.  On August  14,1997  the  petitioners  filed  this election petition wherein they have prayed that the election of respondent No. 1 be declared void.      The petitioners  have  asserted  that  they  were  duly nominated candidates  and are competent to file the election petition.  They  have  claimed  that  their  nomination  was improperly rejected  and the nomination of respondent Nos. 1 and  2   was  improperly   accepted.  The  petitioners  have challenged the  validity  of  the  provisions  contained  in Sections 5B  and 5C  of the  Act as  they stood prior to the amendments  introduced   in  the   said  provisions  by  the ordinance and have challenged the validity of the amendments made in  Section 5B  and 5C  by the  Ordinance. There  is no averment in  the election  petition that the nomination form for nomination  of petitioner No.. 1 was subscribed by fifty electors as  proposers and  fifty electors  as seconders  as required by  Section 5B(1) (a), as amended by the Ordinance. On  the  other  hand,  in  the  letter  dated  June  24,1997 addressed by  the petitioner  No. 1 to the Returning Officer which has  been  filed  as  Annexure  III  to  the  Election petition, petitioner  No. 1  has stated  that his nomination paper  was   proposed  by  seven  electors  and  that  fifty proposers and  fifty seconders were not required. As regards

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petitioner No.  2 it  has  been  asserted  in  the  Election petition  that   his  nomination  paper  was  signed  by  64 proposers and 61 seconders.      During  the  pendency  of  the  election  petition  the Ordinance was replaced by the Amendment Act. The petitioners have filed  an application  for amendment  of  the  election petition to substitute the Ordinance by the Amendment Act at pages 5  and 40 of the election petition. The application is allowed and  the petitioners  are permitted to carry out the said amendment in the election petition.      In response  to  the  notice  issued  on  the  Election petition an Affidavit-in-Opposition to the Election petition has been  filed by  respondent No. 1. In the said Affidavit- in-Opposition a  preliminary objection  has been raised with regard to  the maintainability  of the  Election petition by the petitioners  on the ground that the petitioners were not candidates at  the election  and they  are not  entitled  to maintain the Election petition under Section 14A of the Act. Reference has  been made  to the  letter of petitioner No. 1 dated June  24, 1997  addressed  to  the  Returning  Officer (Annexure III  to the  Election petition) wherein petitioner No. 1  had claimed  that he  had seven proposers and did not claim any seconders at all and it is submitted that the said letter shows  that petitioner  No.  1  did  not  have  fifty proposers and  fifty seconders.  As regards  t he nomination paper of  petitioner No.2  it is stated in the Affidavit-in- Opposition  that   in  the  nomination  paper  names  of  64 proposers had  been mentioner  but 29  out of  them had  not subscribed their  signatures  at  all  and,  therefore,  the number of proposers was 35 only. similarly, there were names of 61  seconders but  out of  them  28  did  not  sign  and, therefore, there  were only  33 seconders. It is also stated that the  nomination of petitioner No. 2 was rejected on the threshold as it was not accompanied by the certified copy of the electoral  roll as  required under  Section 5B(2) of the Act. In the said Affidavit-in-Opposition reply has also been given to the averments contained in the Election petition on merits and  it  is  denied  that  the  nomination  paper  of respondent No.  1 was wrongfully accepted and it is asserted that the  certified copy  of the entry in the electoral roll was filed  as required  under Section  5B(2) of  the Act. As regards challenge  to the validity o the ordinance, reliance has been  placed on  the Orders  of  this  Court  dismissing W.P.(Civil) No.  293 of  1997 filed  by petitioner No. 1 and W.P.No. 322 of 1997 filed by Shri P.H. Parmar.      Rejoinder affidavit  of petitioner No. 1 has been filed in reply  to the  said Affidavit-in-Opposition of respondent No. 1.  In the said Rejoinder affidavit the averments in the Affidavit-in-Opposition  that   the  nomination   paper   of petitioner No.1  was subscribed  by 35 electors as proposers and 33  electors as  seconders and that the nomination paper of petitioner No.2 was not accompanied by the certified copy of the  electoral roll  have not been controverted. We must, therefore, proceed  on the  basis that the nomination papers of both  the petitioners  did not fulfil the requirements of Section 5B(1)(  a)   of the Act inasmuch as neither of these nomination papers  was subscribed by the requisite number of fifty electors  as proposers  and fifty elector as seconders and that  in so  far as  petitioner No.  1 is concerned, his nomination paper was not even subscribed by ten propoers but was subscribed  by seven proposers only and further that the nomination paper  of petitioner  No.  2  was  filed  without complying with the requirements of Section 5B(2) of the Act.      Rules governing  election petition filed under part III of the Act are contained in Order XXXIX of the Supreme Court

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Rules, 1966. Rule 34 of Order XXXIX provides that subject to the provisions  of the  said order  or any  special order or direction of the Court the Procedure on an election petition shall  follow,  as  nearly  as  may  be,  the  procedure  in proceedings before the Court in the exercise of its original jurisdiction. As  regards proceedings in the exercise of the original jurisdiction  of  the  Court  Order  XXIII  Rule  6 provides that  the plait shall be rejected (a) where it does not disclose  a cause  of action,  or  (b)  where  the  suit appears from the statement in the plaint to be barred by any law.      The preliminary objection raised by respondent No. 1 in the Affidavit-in-Opposition  is that the petitioners are not entitled to  maintain  the  Election  petition  in  View  of Section 14A of the Act since they were not candidates at the election. if the said preliminary objection is accepted, the election petition  will be  liable to  be rejected  as being barred by  law, i.e.,  section 14A  of  the  Act.  We  have, therefore, heard  the petitioners  as well  as  the  learned counsel for  respondent  No.  1  and  the  learned  Attorney General of India on the said preliminary objection.      Section 14A  of the Act relating to the presentation of the election petition provides as follows:-      "14a.  (1)   An  Election  petition      calling in question an election may      be presented  on one or more of the      grounds  specified  in  sub-section      (1) of Section 18 and Section 19 to      the Supreme  Court by any candidate      at such election, or-      (i) in  the  case  of  Presidential      election,   by   twenty   or   more      election may be presented on one or      more of  the grounds  specified  in      sub-section (1)  of Section  18 and      Section 19  to the Supreme Court by      any candidate at such election, or-      (i) in  the  case  of  Presidential      election,   by   twenty   or   more      electors   joined    together    as      petitioners;      (ii)   in   the   case   of   Vice-      Presidential election,  by  ten  or      more electors  joined   together as      petitioners.      (2)  Any   such  petition   may  be      presented at  any  time  after  the      date  of   publication  of   t   he      declaration containing  the name of      the  returned  candidate    at  the      election under  Section 12  but not      later than  thirty  days  from  the      date of such declaration."      The word "candidate" is defined in section 13(a) of the Act as under:-      "(a) "candidate" means a person who      has been  or claims  to  have  been      duly nominated as a candidate at an      election;"      The word  "elector" is  defined  in      section 2(d)  of the  Act in  these      terms:      "(d) "elector",  in relation   to a      presidential  election,   means   a      member  of  the  electoral  college

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    referred to  in article  54, and in      relation  t   a   Vice-Presidential      election, means  a  member  of  the      electoral college  referred  to  in      article 66;"      Shri Sorabjee, the learned senior counsel appearing for respondent No.1,  arguing  in  support  of  the  preliminary objection, has  urged that  an election  petition calling in question the  presidential election can either be filed by a candidate at  such election  or by  twenty or  more electors joined together  as petitioners.  In the  present  case  the election   petition has  not been  filed by  twenty or  more electors joined  together as  petitioners but has been filed by two  petitioners only.  It can  be  entertained  only  if either of  the petitioners  can be  held to  be a candidate" Referring to  the definition  of "  candidate" contained  in Section 13(a)  of the  Act, Shri Sorabjee has submitted that neither of  the petitioners  was a  duly nominated candidate nor could  he  claim  to  have  been  duly  nominated  as  a candidate  at   an  election  since  the  nomination  papers submitted by  both of  them were  not  subscribed  by  fifty proposers and  fifty seconders  as  required  under  Section 5B(1) a) of the Act, as amended by the Amendment Act. It is, therefore, submitted  that the  petitioners  have  no  locus standi to  file this  election petition  and  it  should  be dismissed as  not maintainable.  It has also been urged that the question as to the validity of Sections 5B and 5C of the Act, cannot  be raised  in an  election petition filed under Section 14A  of the Act and that an Election petition can be maintained only  on any  of the grounds mentioned in Section 18 of  the Act. It has also been submitted that in any event the validity  of Sections  5B and 5C, as the said provisions stood prior  to June  5, 1997, requiring that the nomination should be  subscribed by  ten electors  as proposers and ten electors as seconders has been upheld in Charan Lal Sahu vs. Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy, 1978 (3) SCR 1, decided by a bench of 7 Judges  of this  Court  and  that  the  challenge  to  the validity of  the amendments introduced in Sections 5B and 5C by the Ordinance and the Amendment Act has been negatived by this Court  while dismissing  the three  writ  petitions  to which reference  has been made earlier and that two of these writ petitions were filed by petitioner No. 1 himself.      The learned  Attorney General  has also  taken the same stand  and   has  submitted   that  since   neither  of  the petitioners can  be held  to be  a candidate  under  Section 13(a) of  the Act  they are  not entitled  to  maintain  the election petition  under section 14A of the Act and that the same is liable to be dismissed at the threshold.      Petitioner No.  1, Charan Lal Sahu, has argued the case as  petitioner-in-person   and   as   counsel   representing petitioner No.2.  he has submitted that both the petitioners were candidates  under section  13(a) of  the Act since they were duly  nominated candidates.  it has been urged that the requirement that  the nomination paper  for the presidential election should  be subscribed  by ten electors as proposers and ten  electors as  seconders contained  in Section  5B(1) (a), as  it stood  prior to  the amendment introduced in the said provision  by the  Ordinance and  the Amendment Act and the requirement  introduced in  the  said  provision  y  the Ordinance and  the Amendment  Act that  the nomination paper should be  subscribed by  fifty electors  as  proposers  and fifty electors  as seconders,  is unconstitutional and void. The submission  of the petitioners is that they are entitled to challenge  the validity  of the  provisions contained  in Section 5B, as t stood prior to the amendments introduced by

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the Ordinance  and the  Amendment Act and also the amendment made therein  by the  Ordinance and the Amendment Act in the election petition  and that  such a challenge is not barred. It has  been contended that the earlier decisions negativing the challenge  to the  validity of  Section 5B  did not take into consideration the provision regarding secrecy of ballot contained in  Article 55(3)  of the Constitution and that in view of  the said  provision in the Constitution the earlier requirement that  the nomination paper must be subscribed by ten proposers  and ten seconders and the present requirement about subscription by fifty proposers and fifty seconders is unconstitutional. It  is urged that if the said provision in Section  5B   is  held   to  be  unconstitutional  then  the petitioners must  be regarded  as duly  nominated candidates and they are  entitled to file this Election petition.      In  view of Section 14A of the Act an election petition calling in  question a presidential election can be resented either by  a candidate  at such  election or  twenty or more electors joined  together as  petitioners are  claiming  the right to  file the  petition on  the basis  that  they  were candidates  at   the  election.   The  said   claim  of  the petitioners  has   to  be  examined  on  the  basis  of  the definition of  "candidate"  as contained in Section 13(a) of the Act  whereunder a  person who has been or claims to have been duly  nominated as  a candidate at an election is to be treated as  a ’candidate’. The question for consideration is whether the  petitioners, whose  nomination papers  did  not satisfy the  requirements of  Section 5B(1)(a)   of the Act, can be  regarded as  persons who  had been  nominated  as  a candidate at  an election is to be treated as a candidate at an election is to be treated as a ’candidate’.  The question for  consideration   is  whether   the  petitioners,   whose nomination  papers  did  not  satisfy  the  requirements  of Section 5B(1) (a) of the Act, can be regarded as persons who had been  nominated or can claim to have been duly nominated as ’candidate’ at the election in question.      In Charan  Lal Sahu  vs. Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy [Supra], this Court  has dealt  with the  question of locus standi of the petitioner  (petitioner No.1  herein) who  had filed the Election Petition.  In that  case also the Election petition was filed by a person whose nomination was not subscribed by the requisite  number of  proposers and  seconder as per the provisions contained  in Section  5B (1)  (a) applicable  at that time.  This Court held that the petitioner had no locus standi  to  challenge  the  election  and  to  maintain  the petition. After  stating that the petitioner had admitted in the petition  that he  was  not  nominated  as  provided  by Section 5B  of the Act and had also not deposited the sum of money as  required by  Section 5C  of the Act, the Court has held:-      "Thus,   on the  very admissions in      the   petition   or   plaint,   the      petitioner  was   not  a  candidate      either duly  nominated or  one  who      could claim  to be  son nominated."      [pp. 5-6]      Again in  Charan Lal Sahu & Ors. vs. Giani Zail Singh & Anr., 1984  (2)   SCR 6,  it was  found that  the nomination papers filed  of the  two  petitioners  who  had  filed  the election petition  were not  subscribed by  ten electors  as proposers and ten electors as seconders. It was contended on behalf of  the petitioners that even if it is held that they were  not   duly  nominated   as  candidates,  the  election petitions could  not be  dismissed on that ground since they were "claiming  to have  been duly nominated as candidates".

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Rejecting the said contention this Court said:-      "It is  true that  in the matter of      claim to  candidacy, a  person  who      claims to  have been duly nominated      is on  par with  a person  who,  in      fact, was  duly nominated.  But the      claim to  have been  duly nominated      cannot be  made by  a person  whose      nomination paper  does  not  comply      with the  mandatory requirement  of      Section 5B(1)  (a) of the Act. That      is   to   say,   a   person   whose      nomination paper,  admittedly,  was      not  subscribed  by  the  requisite      number of electors as proposers and      seconders cannot  claim that he was      duly nominated.  Such a  claim  can      only be  made  by  a  person  whose      electors as proposers and seconders      cannot  claim   that  he  was  duly      nominated. Such a claim can only be      made by  a person who can show that      his nomination  paper conformed  to      the provisions  of Section  5B  and      yet it  was the  Returning  Officer      rejects a  nomination paper  on the      ground  that   one   of   the   ten      subscribers who  had  proposed  the      nomination is  not an  elector; the      petitioner can  claim to  have been      duly nominated  if he  proves  that      the said  proposer was  in fact  an      ’elector’.      "Thus, the occasion for a person to      make  a  claim  that  he  was  duly      nominated can  arise  only  if  his      nomination paper  complies with the      statutory requirements which govern      the filing of nomination papers and      not otherwise.  The claim  that  he      was  ’duly’  nominated  necessarily      implies and involves the claim that      his nomination  paper conformed  to      the requirements  of  the  statute.      Therefore,   a   contestant   whose      nomination paper  is not subscribed      by  at   least  ten   electors   as      proposers  and   ten  electors   as      seconders, as  nominated, any  more      than  a   contestant  who  had  not      subscribed his  assent to  his  own      nomination  can.  The  claim  of  a      contestant   that   he   was   duly      nominated must  arise  out  of  his      compliance with  the provisions  of      the Act. It cannot arise out of the      violation of  the act. Otherwise, a      person  who   had  not   filed  any      nomination paper at all but who had      only informed the Returning Officer      orally that  he desired  to contest      the  election  could  also  contend      that he  ’claims to  have been duly      been   duly    nominated    as    a      candidate.’" [pp.- 15-16]

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    In Mithilesh Kumar Sinha etc. vs. Returning Officer for Presidential Election  & Ors.,  1992 (1)  SCR Supp. 651, the same question  arose with  regard to  the election  petition filed by  petitioner No.  2 whose  nomination paper had been rejected on  the ground  that it  was not  subscribed by the requisite number  of proposers  and seconders  since some of the proposers  and  seconders  who  had  subscribed  to  the nomination paper  of petitioner No. 2 had earlier subscribed to  the  nomination  paper  of  another  candidate  and  the subsequent signatures  of such  proposers and  seconders had become Inoperative  on the  nomination paper  of  petitioner No.2. The  Election petition  filed by  Petitioner No. 2 was rejected  by  this  Court  on  the  ground  that  since  the nomination paper of petitioner No.2. did not comply with the mandatory requirements  of Section 5B(1) (a) he had no locus standi to file the petition. It has been held:-      "To  be   entitled  to  present  an      election   petition    calling   in      question an election the petitioner      should have  been a  ’candidate’ at      such election within the meaning of      Section 13(a)  for which  he should      have  been  ‘duly  nominated  as  a      candidate’ and this he cannot claim      unless the  mandatory  requirements      of Section  5B (1)  (a) and Section      5C were complied with by him. Where      on undisputed  facts there was non-      compliance   of    any   of   these      mandatory requirements  for a valid      nomination, the  petitioner was not      a ’candidate’ within the meaning of      Section 13(a)   and, therefore, not      competent according  to Section 14A      to present the petition."      "It  is   also   settled   by   the      decisions of  this  Court  that  in      order to  have the  requisite locus      standi as  a ’candidate’ within the      meaning of  section 13(a) for being      entitled   to   present   such   an      election  petition   in  accordance      with Section  14A of  the  Act  the      petitioner must  be duly  nominated      as a  candidate in  accordance with      Section 5B(1)(a)   and  Section 5C.      Unless  it  is  so  the  petitioner      cannot even claim to have been duly      nominated as  a  candidate  at  the      election  as  required  by  Section      13(a). [pp. 685-686]      In view  of the decisions referred to above, it must be held that  neither of  the petitioners  was a ‘candidate’ as the said  expression is  defined in  Section 2(d) of the Act since neither  of them  had been duly nominated nor could he claim to  have been nominated as a candidate inasmuch as the nomination papers  filed by both of them did not comply with the mandatory  requirements of  Section 5B(1)(a)  of the Act and nomination  paper of  petitioner No.2. was filed without complying with the requirements of Section 5B(2) of the Act. On that view it must be held that neither of the petitioners has the locus standi to maintain the petition.      As regards  the  submission  urged  on  behalf  of  the petitioners regarding  the Validity  of  the  provisions  of Sections 5B  and 5C  as they stood prior to June 5, 1997, it

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may be  stated that  the sad  provisions has  been upheld by this Court in Charan Lal Sahu VS. Shri Fakruddin Ali Ahmed & Ors. AIR  1975 SC  1288; Charan Lal Sahu vs. Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy [supra]  and Charan  lal sahu  vs.  Giani  Zail  Singh [supra].  Petitioner   No.  1  was  a  party  to  all  these decisions. The  challenge to  the validity of the amendments introduced by  the Ordinance  and the Amendment Act has been negatived by this court in the three writ petitions referred to above,  two out  of which  were filed by petitioner No.1. The  petitioners  have  urged  that  in  this  petition  the challenge to  the validity  of Section  5B is  based on  the ground that  it violates  the principle of secrecy of ballot incorporated in  Article 55(3)  of the Constitution and that this  ground   has  not   been  considered  in  the  earlier decisions. We do not find any merit in this contention.  The requirement in  Section 5B(1)(a)  about the nomination paper being subscribed  by a  particular  number  of  electors  as proposers and  seconders does  not, in  any way, involve the infringement of  the  secrecy  of  ballot  at  the  election inasmuch as  the elector  who has  subscribed the nomination paper of  a person as a proposer or as a seconder is free to cast his vote in favour of any candidate and is not bound to vote for the person whose nomination paper he has subscribed as a  proposer or seconder. The identity of the candidate in whose favour he has cast his vote is not to be disclosed.      In order  to  get  over  the  requirements  of  Section 5B(1)(a) of  the Act  petitioner No.1 has submitted that his nomination paper  was subscribed  by seven  members  of  the Legislative Assembly  of Uttar  Pradesh as proposers and six members of  the said  Assembly as  seconders.  It  has  been pointed out  that as  per the statement of value of votes of elected members  of the  State Legislative Assemblies issued as per  the provisions  of Article 55(2) of the Constitution value of  vote of  a member  of the  Legislative Assembly of Uttar Pradesh  is 208  while the  value of  a member  of the Legislative  Assembly   of  Arunachal   Pradesh  is  8.  The submission is  that the  combined value  of the votes of the seven members  of the  Legislative Assembly of Uttar Pradesh who had  subscribed the nomination paper of petitioner No. 1 as proposers and six members who had subscribed as seconders is much  more than  the value  of votes of 50 members of the Legislative Assembly  of Arunachal  Pradesh and,  therefore, the nomination  paper of  petition No.  1 must be treated as having been  subscribed by  50  electors  as  proposers  and seconders. Under Section 5B(1) (a)  what is required is that the nomination  paper must  be subscribed  by 50 electors as proposers and  by 50 electors as subscribers. In relation to Presidential election the expression "elector" is defined in Section 2(d)  of the  Act to  mean a member of the electoral college referred  to in  Article 54.  Under Article 54 every elected member of the Legislative Assembly of the State is a member  of   the  electoral  college  for  election  of  the President. In  other words,  each member  of the Legislative Assembly of  a State is an elector under Section 2(d) of the Act to mean a member of the electoral college referred to in Article 54.  Under Article  54 every  elected member  of the Legislative Assembly  of  the  State  is  a  member  of  the electoral college  for election  of the  President. In other words, each member of the Legislative Assembly of a State is an elector under Section 2(d) of the Act. For the purpose of Section 5B(1)  (a) of  the Act  the nomination paper must be subscribed by  the requisite  number of members of the State Legislative  Assemblies   or  parliament  as  proposers  and seconders and  the value  of the  votes of the member has no bearing  on  the  said  requirement  laid  down  in  Section

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5B(1)(a) of the Act.      For the  reasons aforementioned,  it must  be held that since the  nomination papers  of  the  petitioners  did  not fulfil the  mandatory requirements  of Section  5B(1) (a) of the Act  and Petitioner No. 2 also failed to comply with the requirements of  Section 5B(2)  of the  Act, the petitioners were not  duly nominated  as candidate  at the  election and they cannot  also claim to be duly nominated as candidate at the election and they cannot also claim to be duly nominated as candidate  at the  election and they cannot also claim to be duly  nominated as  candidate at  the election  and  they cannot also  claim to  be duly nominated as candidate at the election and  they cannot  be regard  as  "candidate"  under Section 13(a)  of the  Act. The preliminary objection raised by respondent No. 1 that the petitioners cannot maintain the election petition  must,  therefore,  be  accepted  and  the election petition must be dismissed on this ground alone.      Before we  conclude, we  would like  to  advert  to  an aspect which cannot be ignored. Before filling this election petition, petitioner  no. 1 had earlier filed three election petition challenging the election of the returned candidates in the  presidential elections  held in years 1974, 1977 and 1982. All  these election  petition were  dismissed  on  the ground that  petitioner had  no locus standi to maintain the election petition.  [See: Charan Lal Sahu vs. Shri Fakruddin Ali Ahmed  & Ors.  [supra]; Charan  Lal Sahu vs. Shri Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy;  and Charan  Lal Sahu  vs. Gaini  Zail Singh [supra]. Similarly  petitioner No.2  had earlier  filed  two election petitions  challenging the election of the returned candidates in  the presidential  elections  challenging  the election of  the returned  candidates  in  the  presidential elections held  in the  years  1987  and  1992.  Both  these election  petitions   were  dismissed  on  the  ground  that petitioner had  no locus  standi to  maintain  the  Election petition. [See  : Mithilesh  Kumar vs. Sri R. Venkataraman & Ors. (1988)  1  SCR  525  and  Mithilesh  Kumar  Sinha    vs Returning Officer  for Presidential  Election  (supra)].  In Charan Lal  Sahu vs.  Giani Zail  Singh {Supra]  this Court, while referring  to the Election petition fled by petitioner No.1. had observed:      " It  is regrettable  that election      petition challenging  the  election      to the high office of the president      of  India  should  be  filed  in  a      fashion  as  cavalier  as  the  one      which   characterises   these   two      petitions. The  petitions  have  an      extempore appearance and not even a      second look,  leave alone  a second      thought appears  to have  given  to      the  manner   of   drafting   these      petitions  or  to  the  contentions      raised   therein.   In   order   to      discourage  the   filing  of   such      petitions,  we   would  have   been      justified in  passing a heavy order      of costs against the two petitions,      we would  have  been  justified  in      passing a  heavy order    of  costs      against the  two  petitioners.  But      that is likely to create a needless      misconception  that   this   Court,      which has  been constituted  by the      Act  as  the  exclusive  forum  for      deciding election  petition whereby

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    a presidential or vice-presidential      election is  challenged, is  loathe      to entertain  such petitions. It is      of the  essence of  the functioning      of a  democracy  that  election  to      public offices  must be open to the      scrutiny    of    an    independent      tribunal. A heavy order of costs in      these  two   petitions,   howsoever      justified on their own facts should      not result  in nipping in the bud a      well-founded  claim   on  a  future      occasion.  Therefore,   we  refrain      from passing any order of costs and      , instead,  express our disapproval      of    the     light-hearted     and      indifferent manner  in which  these      two  petitions   are  drafted   and      filed."[1.7]      In Mithilesh  Kumar vs.  Sri  R.  Venkataraman  &  Ors. [supra],       this        Court        had        observed:      "While     we      expect     every      conscientious citizen  eligible  to      file  an   election   petition   to      question an election on the grounds      prescribed by  the Act,  we do  not      wish  that  any  petitioner  should      make use  of this  Court as a forum      to file  a petition  without giving      adequate thought  to  its  contents      and  also  the  provisions  of  law      governing the  case merely  to seek      some chap  publicity. We  regret to      say  that   seeing  one’s  name  in      newspapers  everyday   has   lately      become the worst intoxicant and the      number of  people who  have  become      victims of  it is increasing day by      day." [.537]      In Mithilesh  Kumar Sinha.  vs. Returning  Officer  for presidential Election  it was  observed  by  this  Court  as follows:      "..........  Experience  has  shown      that the solemnity and significance      attaching  to  such  petitions  has      been reduced  to  a  farce  by  the      cavalier fashion in which resort is      had to  this remedy.  The mere fact      that the entire gamut of both these      petitions  is   fully  covered   by      several earlier  decisions of  this      Court to  some of  which these very      petitioners were parties shows that      the   existing    provisions    are      inadequate to prevent such abuse of      the process of law."      [p.698]      We find  that these  observations have  had no  effect. This election  petition which  has been jointly filed by the two petitioners  shows no  improvement. It  suffers from the same  defects   as  the   earlier  petitions  filed  by  the petitioners. It seems that the petitioners are obsessed with a desire  that they  should find  a place  in some  Book  of Records. They  find  the  temptation  to  file  an  election petition after  the presidential  election too  difficult to

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resist. It  is a  matter of  regret the petitioner No.1, who happens to  be an  advocate himself,  has been persisting in this past  time knowing  well that such conduct  on his part amounts to an abuse of the process of law. This Court has so far refrained  from imposing costs in the election petitions that were  filed by the petitioners earlier. It is high time that the  petitioners who  have persisted  in  filling  this petition in  spite of  the law  laid down authoritatively by this Court in the earlier decisions are saddled with costs.      The Election  petition is  accordingly  dismissed  with costs. The  costs are  quantified at R. 10,000/- [Rupees ten thousand only].  The said amount of costs shall be deposited with the  Supreme Court Legal Services Committee. It is also directed that no petition filed by either of the petitioners in person shall be entertained in this Court till the amount of costs imposed in paid.