Judgment Case ID: 4727

Judgment:
Civil Appeal No. 688 of 1981. From the Judgment and Order dated 5th January	 1981 of the Allahabad High Court at Allahabad in Election Petition No. 25 of 1980. S.C. Birla and R.L. Kureel for the Appellant. Yogeshwar Prasad and Ms. Rani Chhabra for the Respondent No. 1 Pramod Swarup for Respondent No.2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHINNAPPA REDDY	 J. At the General Election to the Uttar Pradesh Vidhan Sabha held in 1979	 Jhilmit Ram was elected from 968 the Jakhsuie Constituency reserved for the Scheduled Castes. He secured 17822 votes	 Chhedi Ram	 the runner up secured 17449 votes. Thus the difference between the successful candidate and the candidate who secured the next highest number of votes was 373 votes. There were four other candidates of whom Moti Ram secured 6710 votes. Chhedi Ram challenged the election of Jhilmit Ram on the ground that Moti Ram was a Kahar by caste	 not entitled to seek election from the reserved constituency	 that his nomination had been improperly accepted and that the result of the election was materially affected. The Election Tribunal found that Moti Ram was a Kahar by caste and not a member of the Scheduled Castes. It rejected the evidence offered on behalf of Moti Ram that be was a Gond and not a Kahar and recorded a finding that deliberate attempts had been made to manufacture evidence to show that Moti Ram was a Gond. The Tribunal also noticed that Moti Ram himself was not prepared to enter the witness box to give evidence. Having a rived at the finding that Moti Ram 's nomination had been improperly accepted	 however	 the Tribunal was not prepared to set aside the election of Jhilmit Ram as it took the view that the result of the election had not been shown to have been materially affected as a result of the improper acceptance of the nomination. The election petition was	 therefore	 dismissed. Chhedi Ram has preferred this appeal. We are afraid the appeal has to be allowed. Under sec. 100(1)(d) of the Representation of the People Act	 1951	 the election of a returned candidate shall be declared to be void if the High Court is of opinion that the result of the election	 in so far as it concerns the returned candidate	 has been materially affected by the improper acceptance of any nomination. True	 the burden of establishing that the result of the election has been materially affected as a result of the improper acceptance of a nomination is on the person impeaching the election. The burden is readily discharged if the nomination which has been improperly accepted was that of the successful candidate himself. On the other hand	 the burden is wholly incapable of being discharged if the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted obtained a less number of votes than the difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the number of votes secured by the candidate who got the next highest number of votes. In both these situations	 the answers are obvious. The complication arises only in cases where the candidate	 whose nomination was improperly accepted	 has secured a larger number of votes than the difference between the number of votes secured by 969 the successful candidate and the number of votes got by the candidate securing the next highest number of votes. The complication is because of the possibility that a sufficient number of votes actually cast for the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted might have been east for the candidate who secured the highest number of votes next to the successful candidate	 so as to upset the result of the election	 but whether a sufficient number of voters would have so done	 would ordinarily remain a speculative possibility only. In this situation	 the answer to the question whether the result of the election could be said to have been materially affected must depend on the facts	 circumstances and reasonable probabilities of the case	 particularly on the difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes	 as compared with the number of votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted and the proportion which the number of wasted votes (the votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted) bears to the number of votes secured by the successful candidate. If the number of votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was rejected is not disproportionately large as compared with the difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes	 it would be next to impossibility to conclude that the result of the election has been materially affected. But	 on the other hand	 if the number of votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted is disproportionately large as compared with the difference between the votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes and if the votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted bears a fairly high proportion to the votes secured by the successful candidate	 the reasonable probability is that the result of the election has been materially affected and one may venture to hold the fact as proved. Under the Indian Evidence Act	 a fact is said to be proved when after considering the matters before it	 the Court either believes it to exist or considers its existence so probable that a prudent man ought	 under the circumstances of the particular case	 to act upon the supposition that it exists. If having regard to the facts and circumstances of a case	 the reasonable probability is all one way	 a court must not lay down an impossible standards of proof and hold a fact as not proved. In the present case	 the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted had obtained 6	710 votes	 that is	 almost 20 times the difference between 970 the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes. Not merely that. The number of votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted bore a fairly high proportion to the number of votes secured by the successful candidate it was a little over one third. Surely	 in that situation	 the result of the election may safely be said to have been affected. The learned counsel for the respondents invited our attention to the decisions of this court in Vashist Narain Sharma vs Dev Chandra and Others(1)	 and Samant N. Balakrishna vs George Fernandez and Others	 etc.(2) In Vashist Narain case	 the difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the number of votes secured by the candidate who got the next largest number of votes was very nearly the same as the number of votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted. Unless it was possible to say that all the wasted votes would have gone to the candidate who secured the highest number of votes next to the successful candidate	 it was not possible to hold that the result of the election had been materially affected. It was in those circumstances that Ghulam Hasan	 J. observed: "But we are not prepared to hold that the mere fact that the wasted votes are greater than the margin of votes between the returned candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes must lead to the necessary inference that the result of the election has been materially affected. That is a matter which has to be proved and the onus of proving it lies upon the petitioner. It will not do merely to say that all or a majority of the wasted votes might have gone to the next highest candidate. The casting of votes at an election depends upon a variety of factors and it is not possible for any one to predicate how many of which proportion of the votes will go to one or the other of the candidates. While it must be recognised that the petitioner in such a case is confronted with a difficult situation	 it is not possible to relieve him of the duty imposed upon him by section 100(1)(c) and hold without evidence that the duty has been discharged. Should the petitioner fail to adduce 971 satisfactory evidence to enable the Court to find in his favour on this point	 the inevitable result would be that the Tribunal would not interfere in his favour and would allow the election to stand". We do agree with the observations of Ghulam Hasan	 J. in the context of the facts of that case. It does not	 however	 mean that whatever the number of wasted votes and whatever the margin of difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the number of votes secured by the next highest candidate	 the court would invariably hold that the result of the election had not been materially affected. In an appropriate case having regard to the margin of difference between the votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes and the proporation which such margin bears to the wasted votes	 it is permissible for the court to hold that the burden of proving that the result of the election has been materially affected has been discharged. In Samant Balakrishna 's case	 the court observed: "In our opinion the matter cannot be considered on possibility. Vashist Narain 's case insists on proof. If the margin of votes were small something might be made of the points mentioned by Mr. Hethamalani. But the margin is large and the number of votes earned by the remaining candidates also sufficiently huge. There is no room	 therefore	 for a reasonable judicial guess. The law requires proof. How far that proof should go or what it should contain is not provided by the Legislature. In Vashist 's case the provision was held to prescribe an impossible burden. The law has however remained as before. We are bound by the rulings of this Court and must say that the burden has not been successfully discharged". We do not think that this case lays down any different principle than what we have already said. On the other hand	 the sentence underlined by us indicates that where the difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the number of votes secured by the highest candidate is marginal	 it may be possible in the circumstances of a case to hold that the 972 burden has been discharged. We have already indicated our view that in this case	 the burden has certainly been discharged. An attempt was made by the learned counsel for the respondents to dislodge the finding of the Election Tribunal that Moti Ram was a Kahar and not a Gond. But having gone through the relevant evidence	 we affirm the finding of the Election Tribunal and agree with the Election Tribunal that a crude attempt was made to fabricate evidence that Moti Ram was a member of the Scheduled Castes. In the circumstances	 the appeal has to be allowed. We do so but without costs. H.L.C. Appeal allowed.

Summary:
The appellant	 the respondent and four other candidates contested the election to a legislative assembly from a constituency reserved for Scheduled Castes. While the respondent was declared elected	 the appellant secured the next highest number of votes and the difference in the number of votes secured by them was only 373. The appellant challenged the election of the respondent on the ground that the result of the election had been materially effected by the improper acceptance of the nomination of a third candidate who had secured 6710 votes. The Election Tribunal arrived at the finding that the candidate in question was not a member of the Scheduled Castes and hence is nomination had been improperly accepted	 but nevertheless	 refused to set aside the election of the respondent on the ground that the result of the election had not been shown to have been materially affected as a result of the improper acceptance of the nomination. Allowing the appeal	 ^ HELD: Under section 100(1)(d) of the Representation of the People Act	 1951	 the election of a returned candidate shall be declared to be void if the High Court is of the opinion that the result of the election	 in so far as it concerns the returned candidate	 has been materially affected by the improper acceptance of any nomination and the burden of establishing the same is on the person impeaching the election. Where the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted has secured a larger number of votes than the difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes	 there is a possibility that a sufficient number of votes actually cast for the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted might have been cast for the candidate who secured the highest number of votes next to the successful candidate so as to upset the result of the election. In such a situation	 the answer to the question whether the result of the election could be said to have been materially affected must depend on the facts	 circumstances and reasonable probabilities of the case. If the number of votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted is disproportionately large as compared with the difference 967 between the votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes and if the votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted bears a fairly high proportion to the votes secured by the successful candidate	 the reasonable probability is that the result of the election has been materially affected and one may venture to hold the fact as proved. [968 F G; 969 D F] Under the Evidence Act	 a fact is said to be proved when after considering the matters before it	 the Court either believes it to exist or considers its existence so probable that a prudent man ought	 under the circumstances of the particular case	 to act upon the supposition that it exists. If having regard to the facts and circumstances of a case	 the reasonable probability is all one way	 a court must not lay down an impossible standard of proof and hold a fact as not proved. [969 G H] In the instant case	 the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted had obtained 6710 votes	 that is	 almost 20 times the difference between the number of votes secured by the successful candidate and the candidate securing the next highest number of votes. Further	 the number of votes secured by the candidate whose nomination was improperly accepted bore a fairly high proportion to the number of votes secured by the successful candidate it was a little over one third. In such a situation the result of the election may safely be said to have been affected. [969 H; 970 A B] Vashist Narain Sharma vs Dev Chandra	 [1955] S.C.R. 509; and Samant N. Balakrishna vs George fernandes; 	 ; explained and distinguished.