Case ID: 303

Judgment:
Appeal No. 61 of 1954. Appeal under Article 132(1) of the Constitution of India from the Judgment and Order dated the 4th November 1953 of the High Court of Judicature at Nagpur in Civil Miscellaneous Petition No. 174 of ' 1953. N. C. Chatterjee	 Bakshi Tek Chand and Veda Vyas	 (section K. Kapur and Ganpat Rai	 with them)	 for the appellant. G. section Pathak	 (Rameshwar Nath and Rajinder Narain	 with him)	 for respondent No. 1. 1954. December 9. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by VENKATARAMA AYYAR J. The appellant and respondents 1 to 5 herein were duly nominated for election to the House of the People from the Hoshangabad Constituency in the State of Madhya Pradesh. Respondents 4 and 5 subsequently withdrew from the election	 leaving the contest to the other candidates. At the polling the appellant secured 65	201 votes the first respondent 65	375 votes and the other candidates far less; and the Returning Officer accordingly declared the first respondent duly elected. The appellant then filed Election Petition No. 180 of 1952 for setting aside the election on the ground inter alia that 301 out of the votes counted in favour of the first respondent were liable to be rejected under Rule 47 (1) (c) of Act No. XLIII of 1951 on the ground that the ballot papers did not have the distinguishing marks prescribed under Rule 28	 and that by reason of their improper reception	 the result of the election had been materially affected. Rule 28 is as follows: "The ballot papers to be used for the purpose of voting at an election to which this Chapter applies shall contain a serial number and such distinguishing marks as the Election Commission may decide". Under this rule	 the Election Commission had decided that the ballot papers for the Parliamentary Consti 142 1108 tuencies should bear a green bar printed near the left margin	 and that those for the State Assembly should bear a brown bar. What happened in this case was that voters for the House of the People in polling stations Nos. 316 and 317 in Sobhapur were given ballot papers with brown bar intended for the State Assembly	 instead of ballot papers with green bar which had to be used for the House of the People. The total number of votes so polled was 443	 out of which 62 were in favour of the appellant	 301 in favour of the first respondent	 and the remaining in favour of the other candidates. Now	 Rule 47(1)(c) enacts that "a ballot paper contained in a ballot box shall be rejected if it bears any serial number or mark different from the serial numbers or marks of ballot papers authorised for use at the polling station or the polling booth at which the ballot box in which it was found was used". In his election petition	 the appellant contended that in accordance with this provision the ballot papers received at the Sobhapur polling stations not having the requisite mark should have been excluded	 and that if that had been done	 the first respondent would have lost the lead of 174 votes	 and that he himself would have secured the largest number of votes. He accordingly prayed that he might be declared duly The first respondent contested the petition. He pleaded that the Returning Officer at Sobbapur had rightly accepted the 301 votes	 because Rule 47 was directory and not mandatory 	 and that further the votes had been accepted as valid by the Election Commission	 and the defect	 if any	 had been cured. He also filed a recrimination petition under section 97 of Act No. XLIII of 1951	 and therein pleaded inter alia that at polling station No. 299 at Malkajra and at polling station No. 371 at Bammangaon ballot papers intended for use in the State Legislature election had been wrongly issued to voters to the House of the People by mistake of the polling officers	 that all those votes had been wrongly rejected by the Returning Officer	 and that if they had been counted	 he would 1109 have got 117 votes more than the appellant. He accordingly challenged the right of the appellant to be declared elected. The Election Tribunal held by a majority that Rule 47(1)(c) was mandatory	 and that the 301 ballot papers found in the box of the first respondent bearing the wrong mark should not have been counted; while the third Member was of the opinion that rule was merely directory	 and that the Returning Officer had the power to accept them. The Tribunal	 however	 was unanimous in holding that the result of the election had not been materially affected by the erroneous reception of the votes	 and on that ground dismissed the petition. The appellant then moved the High Court of Nagpur under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution for the issue of a writ of certiorari or other order or direction for quashing the decision of the Election Tribunal on the ground that it was illegal and without jurisdiction. Apart from supporting the decision on the merits	 the first respondent contended that having regard to article 329(b) the High Court was not competent to entertain the petition	 as in substance it called in question the validity of an election. The petition was heard by a Bench consisting of Sinha	 C. J.	 Mudholkar and Bhutt	 JJ.	 who differed in their conclusions. Sinha	 C. J.	 and Bhutt	 J.	 held that no writ could be issued under article 226	 firstly because the effect of article 329(b) was to take away that power	 and secondly	 because the Election Tribunal had become functus officio after the pronouncement of the decision	 and that thereafter there was no Tribunal to which directions could be issued under that article. Mudholkar	 J.	 agreed with this conclusion	 but rested it on the second ground aforesaid. As regards article 227	 while Sinha	 C. J. and Bhutt	 J. held that it had no application to Election Tribunals	 Mudholkar	 J. was of the view that they were also within the purview of that article	 but that in view of article 329(b)	 no relief could be granted either setting aside the election of the first respondent	 or declaring the appellant elected	 and that the only 1110 order that could be made was to set aside the decision of the Tribunal. On the merits	 Sinha	 C.J. and Bhutt	 J. took the view that the decision of the Tribunal that the result of the election had not been materially affected by the erroneous reception of votes was one within its jurisdiction	 and that it could not be quashed under article 226	 even if it had made a mistake of fact or law. But Mudholkar	 J. held that as in arriving at that decision the Tribunal had taken into consideration irrelevant matters	 such as the mistake of the polling officer in issuing wrong ballot papers and its effect on the result of the election	 it had acted in excess of its jurisdiction. He was ac cordingly of opinion that the decision should be quashed leaving it to the Election Commission "to perform their statutory duties in the matter of the election petition". The petition was dismissed in accordance with the majority opinion. The learned Judges	 however	 granted a certificate under article 132(1)	 and that is how this appeal comes before this Court. The first question that arises for decision in this appeal is whether High Courts have jurisdiction under article 226 to issue writs against decisions of Election Tribunals. That article confers on High Courts power to issue appropriate writs to any person or authority within their territorial jurisdiction	 in terms absolute and unqualified	 and Election Tribunals functioning within the territorial jurisdiction of the High Courts would fall within the sweep of that power. If we are to recognise or admit any limitation on this power	 that must be founded on some provision in the Constitution itself. The contention of Mr. Pathak for the first respondent is that such a limitation has been imposed on that power by article 329(b)	 which is as follows: "Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution no election to either House of Parliament or to the House or either House of the Legislature of a State shall be called in question except by an election petition presented to such authority and in such manner 1111 as may be provided for by or under any law made by the appropriate Legislature". Now	 the question is whether a writ is a proceeding in which an election can properly be said to be called in question within the meaning of article 329(b). On a plain reading of the article	 what is prohibited therein is the initiation of proceedings for setting aside an election otherwise than by an election petition presented to such authority and in such manner as provided therein. A suit for setting aside an election would be barred under this provision. In N. P. Ponnuswami vs Returning Officer	 Namakkal Constituency and Others(1) it was held by this Court that the word "election" in article 329(b) was used in a comprehensive sense as including the entire process of election commencing with the issue of a notification and terminating with the declaration of election of a candidate	 and that an application under article 226 challenging the validity of any of the acts forming part of that process would be barred. These are instances of original proceedings calling in question an election	 and would be within the prohibition enacted in article 329(b). But when once proceedings have been instituted in accordance with article 329(b) by presentation of an election petition	 the requirements of that article are fully satisfied. Thereafter when the election petition is in due course heard by a Tribunal and decided	 whether its decision is open to attack	 and if so	 where and to what extent	 must be determined by the general law applicable to decisions of Tribunals. There being no dispute that they are subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the High Courts under article 226	 a writ of certiorari under that article will be competent against decisions of the Election Tribunals also. The view that article 329 (b) is limited in its operation to initiation of proceedings for setting aside an election and not to the further stages following on the decision of the Tribunal is considerably reinforced	 when the question is considered with reference to a candidate	 whose election has been set aside (1) ; 1112 by the Tribunal. If he applies under article 226 for a writ to set aside the order of the Tribunal	 he cannot in any sense be said to call in question the election; on the other hand	 he seeks to maintain it. His application could not	 therefore	 be barred by article 329(b). And if the contention of the first respondent is well founded	 the result will be that proceedings under article 226 will be competent in one event and not in another and at the instance of one party and not the other. Learned counsel for the first respondent was unable to give any reason why this differentiation should be made. We cannot accept a construction which leads to results so anomalous. This question may be said to be almost concluded by authority. In Durga Shankar vs Raghuraj Singh(1) the contention was raised that this Court could not entertain an appeal against the decision of an Election Tribunal under article 136 of the Constitution	 as that would be a proceeding in which an election is called in question	 and that could be done only before a Tribunal as provided in article 329(b). In overruling this contention	 Mukherjea	 J. observed: "The 'non obstante ' clause with which article 329 of the Constitution begins and upon which the respondent 's counsel lays so much stress	 debars us	 as it debars any other court in the land	 to entertain a suit or a proceeding calling in question any election to the Parliament or the State Legislature. It is the Election Tribunal alone that can decide such disputes and the proceeding has to be initiated by an election petition and in such manner as may be provided by a statute. But once that Tribunal has made any determination or adjudication on the matter	 the powers of this Court to interfere by way of special leave can always be exercised". By parity of reasoning it must be held that the power of the High Court under article 226 to issue writ of certiorari against decisions of Election Tribunals remains equally unaffected by article 329(b). It is next contended that even if there is jurisdic (1) [1955] S.C.R. 267. 1113 tion in the High Court under article 226 to issue certiorari against a decision of an Election Tribunal	 it is incapable of exercise for the reason that under the scheme of Act No. XLIII of 1951	 the Tribunal is an ad hoc body set up for determination of a particular election petition	 that it becomes functus officio when it pronounces its decision	 and that thereafter there is no authority in existence to which the writ could be issued. The question thus raised is of considerable importance	 on which there is little by way of direct authority; and it has to be answered primarily on a consideration of the nature of a writ of certiorari to quash. At the outset	 it is necessary to mention that in England certiorari is issued not only for quashing decisions but also for various other purposes. It is issued to remove actions and indictment pending in an inferior court for trial to the High Court; to transfer orders of civil courts and sentences of criminal courts for execution to the superior court; to bring up depositions on an application for bail when the prisoner has been committed to the High Court for trial; and to remove the record of an inferior court when it is required for evidence in the High Court. These are set out in Halsbury 's Laws of England	 Volume IX	 pages 840 to 851. It is observed therein that the writ has become obsolete in respect of most of these matters	 as they are now regulated by statutes. That is also the position in America appears from the following statement in Corpus Juris Secundum	 Volume 14	 at page 151: "At common law the writ of certiorari was used both as a writ of review after final judgment and also to remove the entire cause at any stage of the proceeding for hearing and determination in the superior court. In the United States it is now the general rule that the writ will be refused where there has been no final determination and the proceedings in the lower	 tribunal are still pending". As we are concerned in this appeal with certiorari to quash a decision	 it is necessary only to examine whether having regard to its nature such a writ for 1114 quashing can be issued to review the decision of a Tribunal	 which has ceased to exist. According to the common law of England	 certiorari is a high prerogative writ issued by the Court of the King 's Bench or Chancery to inferior courts or tribunals in the exercise of supervisory jurisdiction with a view to ensure that they acted within the bounds of their jurisdiction. To this end	 they were commanded to transmit the records of a cause or matter pending with them to the superior court to be dealt with there	 and if the order was found to be without juirsdiction	 it was quashed. The court issuing certiorari to quash	 however	 could not substitute its own decision on the merits		 or give directions to be complied with by the court or the tribunal. Its work was destructive; it simply wiped out the order passed without jurisdiction	 and left the matter there. In T. C. Basappa vs T. Nagappa(1)	 Mukherjea	 J. dealing with this question observed: "In granting a writ of 'certiorari ' the superior court does not exercise the power of an appellate tribunal. It does not review or reweigh the evidence upon which the determination of the inferior tribunal purports to be based. It demolishes the order which it considers to be without jurisdiction or palpably erroneous but does not substitute its own view for those of the inferior tribunal. The offending order or proceeding so to say is put out of the way as one which should not be used to the deteriment of any person. Vide per Lord Cairns in Walsall 's Overseers vs L. and N. W. Ry. Co.(2)". In Corpus Juris Secundum	 Volume 14 at page 123 the nature of a writ of certiorari for quashing is thus stated: "It is not a proceeding against the tribunal or an individual composing it; it acts on the cause or proceeding in the lower court	 and removes it to the superior court for reinvestigation". The writ for quashing is thus directed against a record	 and as a record can be brought up only (1) ; (2) [1879] 4 A.C.30	 39. 1115 through human agency	 it is issued to the person or authority whose decision is to be reviewed. If it is the record of the decision that has to be removed by certiorari	 then the fact that the tribunal has become functus officio subsequent to the decision could have no effect on the jurisdiction of the court to remove the record. If it is a question of issuing directions	 it is conceivable that there should be in existence a person or authority to whom they could be issued	 and when a certiorari other than one to quash the decision is proposed to be issued	 the fact that the tribunal has ceased to exist might operate as a bar to its issue. But if the true scope of certiorari to quash is that it merely demolishes the offending order	 the presence of the offender before the court	 though proper	 is not necessary for the exercise of the jurisdiction or to render its determination effective. Learned counsel for the first respondent invites our attention to the form of the order nisi in a writ of certiorari	 and contends that as it requires the court or tribunal whose proceedings are to be reviewed	 to transmit the records to the superior court	 there is	 if the tribunal has ceased to exist	 none to whom the writ could be issued and none who could be compelled to produce the record. But then	 if the writ is in reality directed against the record	 there is no reason why it should not be issued to whosoever has the custody thereof. The following statement of the law in Ferris on the Law of Extraordinary Legal Remedies is apposite: "The writ is directed to the body or officer whose determination is to be reviewed	 or to any other person having the custody of the record or other papers to be	 certifled". Under section 103 of Act No. XLIII of 1951 the Tribunal is directed to send the records of the case after the order is pronounced either to the relative District Judge or to the Chief Judge of the Court of Small Causes	 and there is no legal impediment to a writ being issued to those officers to transmit the record to the High Court. We think that the power to issue a 143 1116 writ under article 226 to a person as distinct from an authority is sufficiently comprehensive to take in any person who has the custody of the record	 and the officers mentioned in section 103 of Act No. XLIII of 1951 would be persons who would be amenable to the jurisdiction of the High Court under the article. It is argued that the wording of article 226 that the High Court shall have power to issue writs or directions to any person or authority within its territorial jurisdiction posits that there exists a person or authority to whom it could be issued	 and that in consequence	 they cannot be issued where no such authority exists. We are of opinion that this is not the true import of the language of the article. The scope of article 226 is firstly that it confers on the High Courts power to issue writs and directions	 and secondly	 it defines the limits of that power. This latter it does by enacting that it could be exercised over any person or authority within the territories in relation to which it exercises its jurisdiction. The emphasis is on the words "within the territory"	 and their significance is that the jurisdiction to issue writ is co extensive with the territorial jurisdiction of the court. The reference is not to the nature and composition of the court or tribunal but to the area within which the power could be exercised. The first respondent relied on the decision in Clifford O 'Sullivan(1) as authority for the position that no writ could be issued against a Tribunal after it had ceased to exist. There	 the facts were that the appellants had been tried by a military Court and convicted on 3 5 1921. They applied on 10 5 1921 for a writ of prohibition against the officers of the Court	 and that was refused on the ground that they bad become functi officio. The respondent contended that on the same reasoning certiorari against the decision of an Election Tribunal which bad become functus officio should also be refused	 and he further relied on the observations of Atkin	 L.J. in Rex vs Electricity Com missioners; London Electricity Joint Committee Co. (1920)	 Exparte(2) as establishing that there was no (1) (1921] 2 A.C. 570. (2) 	 204	 205. 1117 difference in law between a writ of prohibition and a writ of certiorari. What is stated there is that both writs of prohibition and certiorari have for their object the restraining of inferior courts from exceeding their jurisdiction	 and they could be issued not merely to courts but to all authorities exercising judicial or quasi judicial functions. But there is one fundamental distinction between the two writs	 and that is what is material for the present purpose. They are issued at different stages of the proceedings. When an inferior court takes up for hearing a matter over which it has no jurisdiction	 the person against whom the proceedings are taken can move the superior court for a writ of prohibition	 and on that	 an order will issue forbidding the inferior court from continuing the proceedings. On the other band	 if the court hears that cause or matter and gives a decision	 the party aggrieved would have to move the superior court for a writ of certiorari	 and on that	 an order will be made quashing the decision on the ground of want of jurisdiction. It might happen that in a proceeding before the inferior court a decision might have been passed	 which does not completely dispose of the matter	 in which case it might be necessary to apply both for certiorari and prohibition certiorari for quashing what had been decided	 and prohibition for arresting the further continuance of the proceeding. Authorities have gone to this extent that 	in such cases when an application is made for a writ of prohibition and there is no prayer for certiorari	 it would be open to the Court to stop further proceedings which are consequential on the decision. But if the proceedings have terminated	 then it is too late to issue prohibition and certiorari for quashing is the proper remedy to resort to. Broadly speaking	 and apart from the cases of the kind referred to above	 a writ of prohibition will lie when the proceedings are to any extent pending and a writ of certiorari for quashing after they have terminated in a final decision. Now	 if a writ of prohibition could be issued only if there are proceedings pending in a court	 it must follow that it is incapable of being granted when the 1118 court has ceased to exist	 because there could be then no proceeding on which it could operate. But it is otherwise with a writ of certiorari to quash	 because it is directed against a decision which has been rendered by a court or tribunal	 and the continued existence of that court or tribunal is not a condition of its decision being annulled. In this context	 the following passage from Juris Corpus Secundum	 Volume 14	 page 126 may be usefully quoted: "Although similar to prohibition in that it will lie for want or excess of jurisdiction	 certiorari is to be distinguished from prohibition by the fact that it. . is directed to the cause or proceeding in the lower court and not to the court itself	 while prohibition is a pre ventive remedy issuing to restrain future action and is directed to the court itself". The decision in Clifford O 'Sullivan(1) which was concerned with a writ of prohibition is	 therefore	 inapplicable to a writ of certiorari to quash. It has also to be noted that in that case as the military Court had pronounced its sentence before the application was filed	 a writ of prohibition was bound to fail irrespective of the question whether the Tribunal was functus officio or not	 and that is the ground on which Viscount Cave based his decision. He observed: "A further difficulty is caused to the appellants by the fact that the officers constituting the so called military Court have long since completed their investigation and reported to the commanding officer	 so that nothing remains to be done by them	 and a writ of prohibition directed to them would be of no avail. [See In re Pope(2) and Chabot vs Lord Morpeth(3)]". In this connection	 reference must be made to the decision in B. vs Wormwood Scrubbs (Governor)(4). There.	 the applicant was condemned by a court martial sitting in Germany	 and in execution of its sentence		 he was imprisoned in England. He applied for a writ of habeas corpus	 and contended that the military Court had no jurisdiction over him. The Court (1) (3) 118481 15 Q. B. 446. (2) (1833] ; (4) 	 1119 agreed with this contention	 and held that the conviction was without jurisdiction and accordingly issued a writ of habeas corpus. But as he was in the custody of the Governor of the Prison under a warrant of conviction	 unless the conviction itself was quashed no writ of habeas corpus could issue. In these circumstances	 the Court issued a writ of certiorari quashing the conviction by the court martial. It is to be noted that the military Court was an ad hoc body	 and was not in existence at the time of the writ	 and the respondents to the application were the Governor and the Secretary for War. The fact that the court martial was dissolved was not considered a bar to the grant of certiorari. Our attention has also been invited to a decision of this Court in The Lloyds Bank Ltd. vs The Lloyds Bank Indian Staff Association and others(1). In that case	 following the decision in Clifford O 'Sullivan(2) the Calcutta High Court had refused applications for the issue of writs of certiorari and prohibition against the decision of the All India Industrial Tribunal (Bank Disputes) on the ground	 amongst others	 that the Tribunal had ceased to exist. In appeal to this Court against this judgment	 it was contended for the appellant that on a proper construction of section 7 of the Industrial Disputes Act	 the Tribunal must be deemed to be not an ad hoc body established for adjudication of a particular dispute but a permanent Tribunal continuing "in a sort of suspended animation" and "functioning intermittently". This Court agreeing with the High Court rejected this contention. But the point was not argued that certiorari could issue even if the Tribunal had become functus officio	 and no decision was given on the question which is now under consideration. Looking at the substance of the matter	 when once	 it is held that the intention of the Constitution was to vest in the High Court a power to supervise decisions of Tribunals by the issue of appropriate writ and directions	 the exercise of that power cannot be (1) Civil Appeal No. 42 of 1952. (2) (1921] 2A. C. 570. 1120 defeated by technical considerations of form and procedure. In P. C. Basappa vs T. Nagappa(1)	 this Court observed: "In view of the express provisions in our Constitution we need not now look back to the early history or the procedural technicalities of these writs in English law	 nor feel oppressed by any difference or change of opinion expressed in particular cases by English Judges. We can make an order or issue a writ in the nature of 'certiorari ' in all appropriate cases and in appropriate manner	 so long as we keep to the broad and fundamental principles that regulate the exercise of jurisdiction in the matter of granting such writs in English law". It will be in consonance with these principles to hold that the High Courts have power under article 226 to issue writs of certiorari for quashing the decisions of Election Tribunals	 notwithstanding that they become functus officio after pronouncing the decisions. We are also of opinion that the Election Tribunals are subject to the superintendence of the High Courts under article 227 of the Constitution	 and that superintendence is both judicial and administrative. That was held by this Court in Waryam Singh and another vs Amarnath and another(2)	 where it was observed that in this respect article 227 went further than section 224 of the Government of India Act	 1935	 under which the superintendence was purely administrative	 and that it restored the position under section 107 of the Government of India Act	 1915. It may also be noted that while in a certiorari under article 226 the High Court can only annul the decision of the Tribunal	 it can	 under article 227	 do that	 and also issue further directions in the matter. We must accordingly hold that the application of the appellant for a writ of certiorari and for other reliefs was maintainable under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution. Then the question is whether there are proper grounds for the issue of certiorari in the present case. (1) (1955] S.C.R. 250. (2) ; 1121 There was considerable argument before us as to the character and scope of the writ of certiorari and the conditions under which it could be issued. The question has been considered by this Court in Parry & Co. vs Commercial Employees ' Association	 Madras(1)	 Veerappa Pillai vs Raman and Raman Ltd. and Others(2)	 Ibrahim Aboobaker vs Custodian General(3) and quite recently in T. C. Basappa vs T. Nagappa(4). On these authorities	 the following propositions may be taken as established: (1) Certiorari will be issued for correcting errors of jurisdiction	 as when an inferior Court or Tribunal acts without jurisdiction or in excess of it	 or fails to exercise it. (2) Certiorari will also be issued when the Court or Tribunal acts illegally in the exercise of its undoubted jurisdiction	 as when it decides without giving an opportunity to the parties to be heard	 or violates the principles of natural justice. (3) The Court issuing a writ of certiorari acts in exercise of a supervisory and not appellate jurisdiction. One consequence of this is that the Court will not review findings of fact reached by the inferior Court or Tribunal	 even if they be erroneous. This is on the principle that a Court which has jurisdiction over a subject matter has jurisdiction to de cide wrong as well as right	 and when the Legislature does not choose to confer a right of appeal against that decision	 it would be defeating its purpose and policy	 if a superior Court were to re hear the case on the evidence	 and substitute its own findings in certiorari. These propositions are well settled and are not in dispute. (4) The further question on which there has been some controversy is whether a writ can be issued	 when the decision of the inferior Court or Tribunal is erroneous in law. This question came up for consideration in Rex vs Northumberland Compensation Appeal Tribunal; Ex parte Shaw(5)	 and it was held that when a Tribunal made a "speaking order" and the reasons given in that order in support of the decision (1) ; (2) ; (3) ; (4) (1955] S.C.R. 250. (5) 1122 were bad in law	 certiorari could be granted. It was pointed out by Lord Goddard	 C. J. that had always been understood to be the true scope of the power. Walsall Overseers vs London and North Western Ry. Co.(1) and Rex vs Nat Bell Liquors Ld. (2) were quoted in support of this view. In Walsall Overseers vs London and North Western Ry. Co.(1)	 Lord Cairns	 L.C. observed as follows: "If there was upon the face of the order of the court of quarter sessions anything which showed that order was erroneous	 the Court of Queen 's Bench might be asked to have the order brought into it	 and to look at the order	 and view it upon the face of it	 and if the court found error upon the face of it	 to put an end to its existence by quashing it". In Rex vs Nat Bell Liquors Ld. (2) Lord Sumner said: "That supervision goes to two points; one is the area of the inferior jurisdiction and the qualifications and conditions of its exercise; the other is the observance of the law in the course of its exercise". The decision in Rex vs Northumberland Compensation Appeal Tribunal; Ex parte Shaw(3) was taken in appeal	 and was affirmed by the Court of Appeal in Rex vs Northumberland Compensation Appeal Tribunal; Ex parte Shaw(4). In laying down that an error of law was a ground for granting certiorari	 the learned Judges emphasised that it must be apparent on the face of the record. Denning	 L.J. who stated the power in broad and general terms observed: "It will have been seen that throughout all the cases there is one governing rule: certiorari is only available to quash a decision for error of law if the error appears on the face of the record". The position was thus summed up by Morris	 L.J. "It is plain that certiorari will not issue as the cloak of an appeal in disguise. It does not lie in order to bring an order or decision for rehearing of the issue raised in the proceedings. It exists to correct error of law where revealed on the face of an order or decision	 (1) (3) (2) (4) ; 1123 or irregularity	 or absence of	 or excess of	 jurisdiction where shown". In Veerappa Pillai vs Raman & Raman Ltd. and Others(1)	 it was observed by this court that under article 226 the writ should be issued "in grave cases where the subordinate tribunals or bodies or officers act wholly without jurisdiction	 or in excess of it	 or in violation of the principles of natural justice	 or refuse to exercise a jurisdiction vested in them	 or there is an error apparent on the face of the record". In T. C. Basappa vs T. Nagappa(2) the law was thus stated: "An error in the decision or determination itself may also be amenable to a writ of 'certiorari ' but it must be a manifest error apparent on the face of the proceedings	 e.g.	 when it is based on clear ignorance or disregard of the provisions of law. In other words	 it is a patent error which can be corrected by 'certiorari ' but not a mere wrong decision". It may therefore be taken as settled that a writ of certiorari could be issued to correct an error of law. But it is essential that it should be something more than a mere error; it must be one which must be manifest on the face of the record. The real difficulty with reference to this matter	 however	 is not so much in the statement of the principle as in its application to the facts of a particular case. When does an error cease to be mere error	 and become an error apparent on the face of the record? Learned Counsel on either side were unable to suggest any clear cut rule by which	 the boundary between the two classes of errors could be demarcated. Mr. Pathak for the first respondent contended on the strength of certain observations of Chagla	 C. J. in Batuk K. Vyas vs Surat Municipality(3) that no error could be said to be apparent on the face of the record if it was not self evident	 and if it required an examination or argument to establish it. This test might afford a satisfactory basis for decision in the majority of cases. But there must be cases in (1) ; (2) ; (3) A.I.R. 1953 Bom. 144 1124 which even this test might break down	 because judicial opinions also differ	 and an error that might be considered by one Judge as self evident might not be so considered by another. The fact is that what is an error apparent on the face of the record cannot be defined precisely or exhaustively	 there being an element of indefiniteness inherent in its very nature	 and it must be left to be determined judicially on the facts of each case. These being the principles governing the grant of certiorari	 we may now proceed to consider whether on the facts found	 this is a fit case for a writ being issued. The Tribunal	 as already stated	 held by a majority that Rule 47 (1) (c) was mandatory	 and that accordingly the 301 ballot papers found in the box of the first respondent should have been rejected under that rule on the ground that they had not the distinguishing marks prescribed by Rule 28. It bad also held under section 100(2) (c) of Act No. XLIII of 1951 that the result of the election had not been materially affected by the failure of the Returning Officer to comply with Rule 47(1)(c). It accordingly dismissed the petition. Now the contention of Mr. N. C. Chatterjee for the appellant is that in reaching this conclusion the Tribunal had taken into account matters which are wholly extraneous to an enquiry under section 100(2)(c)	 such as the mistake of the polling officer in issuing wrong ballot papers and its possible effect on the result of the voting	 and that accordingly the decision was liable to be quashed by certiorari both on the ground of error of jurisdiction and error in the construction of section 100(2) (c) apparent on the face of the record. The first respondent	 on the other hand	 contended that the decision of the Tribunal that the 301 ballot papers found in his box should have been rejected under Rule 47 (1) (c) was erroneous	 because that rule was only directory and not mandatory and because the Election Commission had validated them	 and that its decision was final. He also contended that even if the ballot papers in question were liable to be rejected under Rule 47 (1) (c)	 for the purpose of deciding under section 100(2)(c) 1125 whether the result of the election had been materially affected the Tribunal had to ascertain the true intention of the voters; and the mistake of the polling officer under Rule 23 and its effect on the result of the election were matters which were within the scope of the enquiry under that section. The correctness of these contentions falls now to be determined. On the question whether Rule 47(1) (c) is mandatory	 the argument of Mr. Pathak is that notwithstanding that the rule provides that the Returning Officer shall reject the ballot papers	 its real meaning is that he has the power to reject them	 and that on that construction	 his discretion in the matter of accepting them is not liable to be questioned. He relies on certain well recognised rules of construction such as that a statute should be construed as directory if it relates to the performance of public duties	 or if the conditions prescribed therein have to be performed by persons other than those on whom the right is conferred. In particular	 he relied on the following statement of the law in Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes	 10th Edition	 pages 381 and 382: "To hold that an Act which required an officer to prepare and deliver to another officer a list of voters on or before a certain day	 under a penalty	 made a list not delivered till a later day invalid	 would in effect	 put it in the power of the person charged with the duty of preparing it to disfranchise the electors	 a conclusion too unreasonable for acceptance". He contended that to reject the votes of the electors for the failure of the polling officer to deliver the correct ballot papers under Rule 23 would be to disfranchise them	 and that a construction which involved such a consequence should not be adopted. It is well established that an enactment in form mandatory might in substance be directory	 and that the use of the word "shall" does not conclude the matter. The question was examined at length in Julius vs Bishop of Oxford(1)	 and various rules were (1) 1126 laid down for determining when a statute might be construed as mandatory and when as directory. They are well known	 and there is no need to repeat them. But they are all of them only aids for ascertaining the true intention of the legislature which is the determining factor	 and that must ultimately depend on the context. What we have to see is whether in Rule 47 the word "shall" could be construed as meaning "may". Rule 47(1) deals with three other categories of ballot papers	 and enacts that they shall be rejected. Rule 47(1) (a) relates to a ballot paper which "bears any mark or writing by which the elector can be identified". The secrecy of voting being of the essence of an election by ballot	 this provision must be held to be mandatory	 and the breach of it must entail rejection of the votes. That was held in Woodward vs Sarsons(1) on a construction of section 2 of the Ballot Act	 1872. That section had also a provision corresponding to Rule 47(1) (b)	 and it was held in that case that a breach of that section would render the vote void. That must also be the position with reference to a vote which is hit by Rule 47 (1) (b). Turning to Rule 47(1) (d)	 it provides that a ballot paper shall be rejected if it is spurious	 or if it is so damaged or mutilated that its identity as a genuine ballot paper cannot be established. The word "shall" cannot in this sub rule be construed as meaning "may"	 because there can be no question of the Returning Officer being authorized to accept a spurious or unidentifiable vote. If the word "shall" is thus to be construed in a mandatory sense in Rule 47(1) (a)	 (b) and (d)	 it would be proper to construe it in the same sense in Rule 47(1) (c) also. There is another reason which clinches the matter against the first respondent. The practical bearing of the distinction between a provision which is mandatory and one which is directory is that while the former must be strictly observed	 in the case of the latter it is sufficient that it is substantially complied with. How is this rule to be worked when the Rule provides that a ballot paper shall be rejected? There can be no degrees (1) 1127 of compliance so far as rejection is concerned	 and that is conclusive to show that the provision is mandatory. It was next contended that the Election Commission had validated the votes in question	 and that in consequence the acceptance of the ballot papers by the Returning Officer under Rule 47 (1) (c) was not open to challenge. It appears that interchange of ballot papers had occurred in several polling stations where election was held both for the House of the People and the State Assembly	 and the Election Commission had issued directions that the rule as to the distinguishing mark which the ballot paper should bear under Rule 28 might be relaxed	 if its approval was obtained before the votes were actually counted. The Returning Officer at Hoshangabad reported to the Chief Electoral Officer	 Madhya Pradesh that wrong ballot papers had been issued owing to the mistake of the polling officers	 and obtained the approval of the Commission for their being included	 before the votes were counted. It is contended by Mr. Pathak that the power of the Election Commission to prescribe a distinguishing mark includes the power to change a mark already prescribed	 and substitute a fresh one in its stead	 and that when the Election Commission approved of the interchange of ballot papers at Hoshangabad	 it had	 in effect	 approved of the distinguishing mark which those ballot papers bore	 and that they were therefore rightly counted as valid by the Returning Officer. There is no dispute that the Election Commission which has the power to prescribe a distinguishing mark for the ballot papers has also the power to change it. But the question is	 was that done? The Commission did not decide in terms of Rule 28 that the ballot paper for election to the House of the People should bear a brown bar and not a green bar. The green bar continued to be the prescribed mark for the election under that rule	 and the overwhelming majority of the ballot papers bore that mark. What the Commission has done is to condone the defects in a specified number of ballot papers issued in the 1128 Hoshangabad polling stations. That is not prescribing a distinguishing mark as contemplated by Rule 28	 as that must relate to the election as a whole. There can be no question of there being one distinguishing mark for some of the voters and another for others with reference to the same election and at the same polling station. There is another difficulty in the way of accepting the contention of the first respondent. The approval of the Election Commission was subsequent to the actual polling	 though it was before the votes were counted. Rule 23 throws on the polling officer the duty of delivering a proper ballot paper to the voter. If a distinguishing mark had been prescribed under Rule 28	 the ballot paper to be delivered must bear that mark. Therefore	 if any change or alteration of the original distinguishing mark is made	 it must be made before the commencement of the poll	 and the ballot paper should contain the new distinguishing mark. The approval by the Election Commission ' subsequent	 to the polling	 therefore	 cannot render valid the 301 ballot papers which did not bear the distinguishing mark prescribed for the election	 and they are liable to be rejected under Rule 47 (1) (c). The conclusion of the majority of the Tribunal that in accepting the ballot papers in question the Returning Officer had contravened that rule must therefore be accepted. It remains to deal with the contention of the appellant that the decision of the Election Tribunal under section 100(2)(c) that the result of the election bad not been materially affected is bad	 as it is based on considerations extraneous to that section. This opens up the question as to the scope of an enquiry under section 100(2)(c). That section requires that before an order setting aside an election could be made	 two conditions must be satisfied: It must firstly be shown that there had been improper reception or refusal of a vote or reception of any vote which is void	 or noncompliance with the provisions of the Constitution or of the Act (No. XLIII of 1951) or any rules or orders made under that Act or of any other Act or rules re 1129 lating to the election or any mistake in the use of the prescribed form. It must further be shown that as a consequence thereof the result of the election had been materially affected. The two conditions are cumulative	 and. must both be established	 and the burden of establishing them is on the person who seeks to have the election set aside. That was held by this Courtin Vashist Narain vs Dev Chandra(1). The Tribunal has held in favour of the appellant that Rule 47 (1) (c) is mandatory	 and that accordingly in accepting the 301 ballot papers which had not the requisite distinguishing marks the Returning Officer had contravened that rule. So	 the first condition has been satisfied. Then there remains the second	 and the question is whether the appellant has established that the result of the election had been materially affected by contravention of Rule 47(1)(c). The contention of Mr. Chatterjee is that when once he has established that the Returning Officer had contravened Rule 47 (1) (c)	 he has also established that the result of the election had been materially affected	 because the marginal difference between the appellant and the first respondent was only 174 votes	 and that if the ballot papers wrongly counted under Rule 47 (1) (c) had been excluded and the valid votes alone counted	 it was be and not the first respondent that should have been declared elected under Rule 48	 and that the result of the election bad thus been materially affected. In reply	 Mr. Pathak contends that this argument	 though it might have proved decisive if no other factor had intervened	 could not prevail in view of the other facts found in this case. He argued that Rule 47 was not the only rule that had been broken; that owing to the mistake of the polling officer wrong ballot papers had been issued	 and thus Rule 23 had been broken; that the printing of the distinguishing mark was faint and that Rule 28 had not also been properly complied with; that there was thus a chain of breaches all linked together	 the final phase of it being the breach of Rule 47 (1) (c) and the effective cause thereof being the violation of Rule 23	 and that (1) ; 1130 in judging whether the result of the election had been affected	 these were matters relevant to be taken into consideration. The object of the election	 be contended	 was to enable the majority of the voters to send a representative of their choice and for that purpose it was necessary to ascertain the intention of the voters from the ballot papers	 irrespective of the question whether they were formally defective or not; that it was accordingly open to the Tribunal to look behind the barriers created by Rules 23	 28 and 47 (1) (c)	 discover the mind of the voters	 and if that was truly reflected in the result of the election as declared under Rule 48	 dismiss the petition under section 100(2) Mr. Chatterjee disputes this position	 and contends that the enquiry under that section must be limited to the matters raised in the election petition	 and that as there was no complaint about the breach of Rule 23 in that petition	 it was outside the scope of the enquiry. It is unnecessary to consider whether it was open to the Tribunal to enquire into matters other than those set out in the petition	 when the returned candidate merely seeks to support the declaration. He has in this case presented a recrimination petition tinder section 97 raising the question of breach of Rule 23	 and that is therefore a matter which has to be determined. The Tribunal has gone into that question	 and has held that there was a violation of that rule	 and its conclusion is not open to attack in these proceedings	 and has not	 in fact	 been challenged. The real controversy is as to the effect of that finding on the rights of the parties. The answer to this is to be found in section 97. Under that section	 all matters which could be put forward as grounds for setting aside the election of the petitioner if be had been returned under Rule 48 could be urged in answer to the prayer in his petition that he might be declared duly elected. And the result of this undoubtedly is that the first respondent could show that if the appellant had been returned under Rule 48 his election would have been liable to be set aside for breach of Rule 23	 and that therefore he should not be declared 1131 elected. That according to the Tribunal having been shown	 it is open to us to hold that by reason of the violation of Rule 23	 the appellant is not entitled to be declared elected. Can we go further	 and uphold the election of the first respondent under section 100 (2) (c) on the ground that if Rule 23 had not been broken	 the wasted votes would have gone to him? The argument of the appellant is that would	 in effect	 be accepting the very votes which the Legislature says in Rule 47(1) should be rejected	 and that it is not warranted by the scheme of the Act. We think that this contention is well founded. Section 46 of the Act provides that "when the counting of the votes has been completed	 the Returning Officer shall forthwith declare the result of the election in the manner. provided by this Act or the rules made thereunder". The rule contemplated by this section is Rule 48. That provides that the Returning Officer should after counting the votes "forthwith declare the candidate or candidates to whom the largest number of valid votes has been given	 to be elected". Under this rule quite clearly no candidate can be declared elected on the strength of votes which are liable to be rejected under Rule 47. The expression "the result of the election" in section 100(1) (c) must	 unless there is something in the context compelling a different interpretation	 be construed in the same sense as in section 66	 and there it clearly means the result on the basis of the valid votes. This conclusion is further fortified when the nature of the duties which a Returning Officer has to perform under Rule 47 is examined. Under that Rule	 the Returning Officer has to automatically reject certain classes of votes for not being in conformity with the rules. They are set out under Rule47(1)(b) and (c). In other cases	 the rejection will depend on his decision whether the conditions for their acceptance have been satisfied. Thus in Rule 47 (1) (a) he must decide whether the mark or writing is one from which the elector could be identified; under Rule 47 (1) (d)	 145 1132 whether the ballot paper is spurious or mutilated beyond identification; and under Rule 47(2)	 whether more than one ballot paper has been cast by the voter. Rule 47 (4) is important. It provides that "the decision of the Returning Officer as to the validity of a ballot paper. .shall be final subject to any decision to the contrary given by a Tribunal on the trial of an election petition calling in question the election". Under this provision	 the Tribunal is constituted a Court of appeal against the decision of the Returning Officer	 and as such its jurisdiction must be co extensive with that of the Returning Officer and cannot extend further. If the Returning Officer had no power under Rule 47 to accept a vote which had not the distinguishing mark prescribed by Rule 28 on the ground that it was due to the mistake of the presiding officer in delivering the wrong ballot paper it is not contended that he has any such power	 and clearly he has not the Tribunal reviewing this decision under Rule 47(4) can have no such power. It cannot accept a ballot paper which the Returning Officer was bound to reject under Rule 47. It is argued with great insistence that as the object of the Election Rules is to discover the intention of the majority of the voters in the choice of a representative	 if an elector has shown a clear intention to vote for a particular candidate	 that must be taken into account under section 100(2) (c)	 even though the vote might be bad for non compliance with the formalities. But when the law prescribes that the intention should be expressed in a particular manner	 it can be taken into account only if it is so expressed. An intention not duly expressed is	 in a Court of law	 in the same position as an intention not expressed at all. The decision in Woodward vs Sarsons(1) was cited in support of the contention that for deciding whether the result of the election had been affected it was permissible to take into account votes which bad been rendered invalid by the mistake of the polling officer. That was a decision on section 13 of the Ballot Act	 (1) 1133 1872 which provided that no election should be declared invalid by reason of non compliance with the rules	 if it appeared to the Tribunal "that the election was conducted in accordance with the principles laid down in the body of this Act	 and that such noncompliance or mistake did not affect the result of the election". What happened in that case was that all the ballot papers issued at polling station No. 130 had been marked by the polling officer and bad become invalid under section 2 of the Act. It was con. tended on behalf of the unsuccessful candidate that the mistake of the polling officer rendered the whole election void	 without reference to the question whether the result of the election had been affected. In repelling this contention	 the Court observed at page 750: "Inasmuch	 therefore	 as no voter was prevented from voting	 it follows that the errors of the presiding officers at the polling stations No. 130 and No. 125 did not affect the result of the election	 and did not prevent the majority of electors from effectively exercising their votes in favour of the candidate they preferred	 and therefore that the election cannot be declared void by the common law applicable to parliamentary elections". This was merely a decision on the facts that the departure from the prescribed rules of election at the polling stations was not so fundamental as to render the election not one "conducted in accordance with the principles laid down under the body of this Act" Reliance was placed on certain observations in Re South Newington Election Petition(1). In that case	 the ballot paper had been rejected by the Returning Officer on the ground that it did not bear the requisite official mark. The Court in a petition to set aside the election held on an examination of the ballot paper that the official stamp had been applied	 though imperfectly	 and that it should have been accepted. The actual decision is in itself of no assistance to the respondent; but the Court observed in the course of its judgment: (1) (1948] 2 All E.R 503. 1134 "We think that	 in a case where the voter is in no sense to blame	 where he has intended to vote and has expressed his intention of voting in a particular way	 and	 so far as his part of the transaction is concerned	 has done everything that he should	 and the only defect raised as a matter of criticism of the ballot paper is some defect on the part of the official machinery by which the election is conducted	 special consideration should (and	 no doubt	 would) be given	 in order that the voter should not be disfranchised". These observations are no authority for the proposition that if there was no mark at all on the ballot paper it could still be accepted on the ground of intention. On the other hand	 the whole of the discussion is intelligible only on the hypothesis that if there was no mark at all on the ballot paper	 it must be rejected. In the result	 we must bold that in maintaining the election of the first respondent on the basis of the 301 votes which were liable to be rejected under Rule 47(1)(c) the Tribunal was plainly in error. Mr. Chatterjee would have it that this error is one of jurisdiction. We are unable to take this view	 because the Tribunal had jurisdiction to decide whether on a construction of section 100 (2) (c) it could go into the fact of breach of Rule 23	 and if it committed an error	 it was an error in the exercise of its jurisdiction and not in the assumption thereof. But the error is mani fest on the face of the record	 and calls for interference in certiorari. We have held that the election of the first respondent should be set aside. We have further held that if the Returning Officer had	 after rejecting the 301 ballot papers which did not bear the correct marks	 declared the appellant elected	 his election also would have to be declared void. The combined effect of section 97 and section 100(2)(c) is that there is no valid election. Under the circumstances	 the proper order to pass is to quash the decision of the Tribunal and remove it out of the way by certiorari under article 226	 and to set aside the election of the first respondent in exercise of the powers conferred by article 1135 227. As a result of our decision	 the Election Commis sion will now proceed to hold a fresh election. This appeal must accordingly be allowed	 the decisions of the High Court and the Tribunal quashed and the whole election set aside. The parties will bear their own costs throughout. Appeal allowed.

Summary:
Article 226 of the Constitution confers on High Courts power to issue appropriate writs to any person or authority within their territorial jurisdiction	 in terms absolute and unqualified	 and Election Tribunals functioning within the territorial jurisdiction of the High Courts would fall within the sweep of that power. The power of the High Court under article 226 to issue writ of certiorari against decisions of Election Tribunals remains unaffected by article 329(b) of the Constitution. The High Courts have power under article 226 of the Constitu tion	 to issue writs of certiorari for quashing the decisions of Election Tribunals	 notwithstanding that they become functus officio after pronouncing the decisions. The writ of certiorari for quashing the offending order or proceeding is directed against a record	 and as a record can be brought up only through human agency	 it is ordinarily issued to the person or authority whose decision is to be reviewed. If it is the record of the decision that has to be removed by certiorari	 then the fact that the tribunal has become funtus officio subsequent to the decision could have no effect on the jurisdiction of Court to remove the record. As the true scope of the writ of certiorari to quash is that it merely demolishes the offending order	 the presence of the offender before the court	 though proper	 is not necessary for the exercise of the jurisdiction or to render its determination effective. The writ of certiorari being in reality directed against the record	 there is no reason why it should not be issued to whosoever has the custody thereof. The writ of certiorari is directed to the body or officer whose determination is to be reviewed	 or to any other person having the custody of the record or other papers to be certified. 1105 The scope of article 226 of the Constitution is firstly that it confers on the High Courts power to issue writs and directions and secondly it defines the limits of that power. This latter it does by enacting that it could be exercised over any person or authority within the territories in relation to which it exercises its jurisdiction. The emphasis is on the words "within the territory"	 and their significance is that the jurisdiction to issue writs is coextensive with the territorial jurisdiction of the court. The reference is not to the nature and composition of the court or tribunal but to the area within which the power could be exercised. There is one fundamental distinction between a writ of prohibition and a writ of certiorari. A writ of prohibition will lie when the proceedings are to any extent pending and a writ of certiorari for quashing will lie after the proceedings have terminated in a final decision. If a writ of prohibition could be issued only if there are proceedings pending in a court	 it must follow that it is incapable of being granted when the court has ceased to exist	 because there could be then no proceeding on which it could operate. But it is otherwise with a writ of certiorari to quash	 because it is directed against a decision which has been rendered by a Court or tribunal	 and the continued existence of that court or tribunal is not a condition of its decision being annulled. Election Tribunals are subject to the superintendence of the High Courts under article 227 of the Constitution	 and that superintendence is both judicial and administrative. While in a certiorari under article 226 the High Court can only annul the decision of the Tribunals	 it can	 under article 227 do that	 and also issue further directions in the matter. As respects the character and scope of the writs of certiorari the following propositions may be taken as well established: (1) Certiorari will be issued for correcting errors of jurisdiction	as when an inferior Court or Tribunal acts without jurisdiction or in excess of it	 or fails to exercise it. (2) Certiorari will also be issued when the Court or Tribunal acts illegally in the exercise of its undoubted jurisdiction	 as when it decides without giving an opportunity to the parties to be heard	 or violates the principles of natural justice. (3) The court issuing a writ of certiorari acts in exercise of a supervisory and not appellate jurisdiction. One consequence of this is that the court will not review findings of facts reached by the inferior Court or Tribunal	 even if they be erroneous. (4) An error in the decision or determination itself may also be amenable to a writ of "certiorari" if it is a manifest error apparent on the face of the proceedings	 e.g.	 when it is based on clear ignorance or disregard of the provisions of law. In other words	 it is a patent error which can be corrected by "certiorari" but not a mere wrong decision. What is an error apparent on the face of the record cannot be defined precisely or exhaustively	 there being an element 1106 of indefiniteness inherent in its very nature	 and it must be left to be determined judicially on the facts of each case. It is well established that an enactment in form mandatory might in substance be directory	 and that the use of the word "shall" does not conclude the matter. There are well known rules for determining when a statute should be construed as mandatory and when directory. All of them are only aids for ascertaining the true intention of the legislature which is the determining factor	 and that must ultimately depend on the context. The word "shall" in Rule 47(1)(c) of the Representation of the People (Conduct of Elections and Election Petitions) Rules	 1951 which enacts that "a ballot paper contained in a ballot box shall be rejected if it bears any serial number or mark different from the serial numbers or marks of ballot papers authorised for use at the polling station or the polling booth at which the ballot box in which it was found was used"	 cannot be construed as meaning "may". The provisions of Rule 47(1)(c) are mandatory like the provisions of Rule 47(1)(a)	 Rule 47(1)(b) and Rule 47(1)(d). Held	 that in maintaining the election of the first respondent in the present case on the basis of the 301 votes which were liable to be rejected under Rule 47(1)(c) the Tribunal was plainly in error. As the error was manifest on the face of the record	 it called for interference in certiorari. Held further	 that the prayer of the appellant to be declared elected must be refused under section 97	 as the respondent had pleaded in his recrimination petition that there had been violation of Rule 23	 and that by reason thereof the election of the appellant was liable to be set aside	 if he had been declared elected and that plea had been established. In the result the entire election was set aside. N. P. Ponnuswami vs Returning Officer	 Namakkal Constituency and Others ([1952] S.C.R. 218)	 Durga Shankar vs Raghuraj Singh ([1955] S.C.R. 267)	 T. C. Basappa vs T. Nagappa ([1955] S.C.R. 250)	 Clifford O 'Sullivan ([1921) 2 A.C. 570)	 Rex vs Electricity Commissioners ([1924] 1 K.B. 171)	 B. vs Wormwood Scrubbs (Governor) ([1948] 1 All E.R. 438)	 Waryam Singh and another vs Amarnath and another ([ ; 	 Parry & Co. vs Commercial Employees ' Association	 Madras ([1952] S.C.R. 519)	 Veerappa Pillai vs Raman and Raman Ltd. and Others ([1952] S.C.R. 583)	 Ibrahim Aboobaker vs Custodian General ([1952] S.C.R. 696)	 Rex vs Northumberland Compensation Appeal Tribunal; Ex parte Show ([1951] ; 1 K.B. 711; 	 Rex vs Nat Bell Liquors Ltd. ([1922] 2 A.C. 128)	 Batuk K. Vyas vs Surat Municipality (A.I.R. 	 Julius vs Bishop of Oxford ([1880] L.R. 5 A.C. 214)	 Woodward vs Sarsons ([1875) 	 Vashist Narain v Dev Chandra ([1955] S.C.R. 509) and In Be South Newington Election Petition ([1948] 2 A.E.R. 503)	 referred to.