Strangely unique that a Chief Minister lost her seat, but the party
registered a bigger victory than achieved in the previous Assembly Election.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee earned this distinction on May 02,
2021 as the results for West Bengal Assembly election were announced. Mamata
Banerjee pushed the Modi-Shah juggernaut of the BJP off the track in West Bengal
as her Trinamool Congress won 213 of 292 seats that went to the polls between
March 27 & April 29, 2021. But she lost the election from Nandigram Constituency
to Suvendu Adhikari of the BJP.
The results left a dilemma involving political morality giving rise to the
following questions of law;
Whether a non-member of the Legislature can be appointed as Chief Minister
under the Constitution of India?
If the answer to the said question is in the affirmative, then what is the time
period for a non-member of the Legislature to be permitted to become the Chief
Minister?
Whether the appointment of a person, who is not a member of the House, as Chief
Minister will not be against the democratic principles and national interest?
If the answer to the said questions is in the affirmative, then whether a
non-member, who fails to get elected during the period of six consecutive months
after he/she is appointed as a Minister or while a Minister has ceased to be a
Legislator, can be reappointed as a Minister, without being elected to the
Legislature after the expiry of the period of six consecutive months?
Article 164 (4) of the Constitution of India provides that a Minister who for
any period of six consecutive months is not a member of the Legislature of the
State shall at the expiration of that period cease to be a Minister. This clause
[originally taken from Section 10 (2) of the Government of India Act, 1935],
provides that there is no bar for anyone who is not a member of Legislature to
become Minister.
However, some important objections were raised in the Constitutional Assembly
during the enactment of Article 164 (4) [Article 144 (3) of the Draft
Constitution], which is relevant to discuss before proceeding to deal with issue
in hand. Prof. Shibban Lal Saksena in the Constituent Assembly Debates on June
01, 1949 Part I (Volume III) suggested to change the word Legislative
Assembly in place of Legislature of the State in Article 144 (3) of
the Draft Constitution.
He opined that:
That means that if a person is not a Lower House but is made a Minister, and
supposing that the man fails to get elected to the Lower House on the basis of
adult suffrage in six months, then under this Article we are providing that
he/she can still continue to remain a Minister if he/she is nominated to the
Upper House by the Governor. I think it is undemocratic that our Ministers
should be persons who cannot even win an election by adult suffrage.
I have therefore suggested that we should say ‘Legislative Assembly’ instead of
Legislature’ in this Article. In the Assembly nobody is nominated and all
Ministers shall therefore have to win an election by adult suffrage within six
months of their appointment in order to continue to be Ministers. Otherwise
persons who are not representatives of the people but are favourites of the
Premier may be nominated to the Upper House in the provincial Legislatures and
they can continue to remain Minister under this clause (3) of the Article. I
desire that only members who are able the post of a Minister. Anybody who is not
able to get elected by member of the Council of Minister.
Another important objection was raised by Shri R. K. Sidhva (C.P. and Berar:
General) in the Constituent Assembly Debates on June 01, 1949 Part I (Volume
III) in the following words:
…I feel that this is merely a repetition or imitation of a clause which exists
in the present Government of India Act of 1935. I do not think is necessary now,
because, under the new Constitution, the number of members in the provincial
legislatures will be ranging from 300 to 600 and I do not think we will be
wanting in people to fill even special posts.
I am opposed to an outsider who is not a member of the Legislature, however
highly qualified he/she may be, being called upon to hold the very responsible
Office of a Minister even for six months. From the experience we have gained, we
find that in some cases where Ministers have been so appointed, eventually it
has led to corruption. After the period of six months, somebody has to vacate a
seat and it has so happened in one or two provinces that to make room for this
Minister, that gentleman had to be provided with some job for which he/she was
not qualified.
Therefore, when we are going to have large Houses in which there will be members
with vast experience, and experts in many respects, I feel that it is not
proper, and it is not a very good principle to imitate what is existing in the
Government of India Act, 1935, and say that if the Chief Minister feels that so
and so who is not a member is required for expert advice, he/she should be taken
as a Minister. Sometimes, the Chief Minister would like to favour somebody.
In the name of the special qualifications that he/she may possess, he will be
asked to become a Minister, and at the end of six months, he/she will have to be
made a member of the Legislature, because he/she cannot hold the Office after
six month. As I stated, Sir, some other member who will be asked to vacate will
have to be offered something and this will lead to corrupt public life.
Dr. Ambedkar rejected the said objections or any other proposal on the said
Article on two grounds:
Ultimately after the long-drawn debate Article 164 (4) was finalized. On a plain
reading of Article 164 (4) or Article 75 (5), it is evident that the
Constitution makers desired to permit a person who is not a member of either
House to be appointed as Minister for a period of six months and if during the
said period she/he was not elected to either House, he/she would cease to be
Minister.
Article 164 of the Constitution of India deals with appointment of Chief
Minister and other ministers. It reads as follows:
Article 164. Other provisions as to Ministers
However Article 164 (4) provides as follows:
A Minister who for any period of six consecutive months is not a member of the
Legislature of the State shall at the expiration of that period cease to be a
Minister.
The ambit and scope of Article 164 (4) of Constitution of India has already been
discussed by the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in catena of its decision. The
Constitution Bench of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in [Har Sharan Verma Vs. Shri
Tribhuvan Narain Singh, Chief Minister, U.P. & Anr., 1971(1) SCC 616] dealt with
the similar issue in detail.
The Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court considered the issue whether a
person who is not a member of State Legislature can be appointed as the Chief
Minister? In the said case, the appointment of Tribhuvan Narain Singh as Chief
Minister of Uttar Pradesh was challenged on the ground that he was not a member
of either House of Legislature at the time of appointment.
Before the High Court, Har Sharan Verma contended that Clause (1) of Article 164
of the Constitution of India prohibits the appointment of any person not a
member of the Legislature as Chief Minister.
Rejecting the challenge, the Allahabad High Court held that a Chief Minister,
like any other Minister, can hold Office for six months without being a member
of the Legislature.
The High Court held:
Article 164 is divided into five clauses. The first deals with the appointment
of the Chief Minister and other Ministers; the second enjoins the collective
responsibility of the Council of Ministers to the Legislative Assembly of the
State; [the third makes it incumbent upon the Governor to administer the Oath of
Office and of Secrecy to every Minister before he/she enters upon his/her
Office; the fourth provides that a Minister who is not a member of the
Legislature for six consecutive months shall vacate his/her Office; and the
fifth confers upon the Legislature the power to fix the salaries and allowances
of Ministers by law.
If the word. Minister throughout this Article was not intended to include the
Chief Minister, it would follow that the Chief Minister is exempted from the
Constitutional duty to take the Oath of Office, and shall not cease to be a
Minister if after his/her appointment his/her election to the Legislature is set
aside and he/she is not re-elected within six months of being unseated.
Moreover, the salary and allowances of the Chief Minister, unlike those of
his/her colleagues, will not be under the control of the Legislature of the
State as in the case of his/her other colleagues. The Court cannot accept an
interpretation which will lead to such absurd results. It is clear that the word
'Minister' in clauses second, third, fourth and fifth of Article 164 includes
the Chief Minister. Under clause five (sic) a Chief Minister like any other
minister can hold office for six months without being a member of the
Legislature
Another issue raised was whether a person who has been elected by the majority
of the members of the Legislative Assembly as their party leader be appointed
Chief Minister before he/she acquires membership of the legislature?
The Supreme Court held as follows:
I think Clause (4) of Article 164 does not prohibit such a stop-gap arrangement.
It says that a Minister who for any period of six consecutive months is not a
member of the State Legislature of the State shall at the expiration of that
period cease to be a Minister. This implies that any Minister can hold Office
for six months without being a member of the legislature. I have indicated that
the word Minister in this clause includes the Chief Minister. It follows
that the appointment as Chief Minister of a person who is not a member of the
Legislative Assembly but commands its support, pending his/her election to that
House within six months, is not prohibited by the Constitution of India nor does
it violate the basic principle of Parliamentary Government that the Chief or the
Prime Minister must have the confidence of the Legislature. Whether such a
stop-gap appointment is politically desirable or proper is not a matter for this
Court to consider. It appears to me, therefore, that the appointment of the
first Respondent as Chief Minister was not illegal
The Allahabad High Court thus dismissed the challenge and the case reached the
Constitution Bench of Supreme Court of India.
Upholding the High Court Judgment, the Supreme Court said:
It seems to us that by virtue of Article 177 the Ministers, even if they are not
Members of a Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council would be entitled to be
present at such a meeting. It seems to us that in the context of the other
provisions of the Constitution of India referred to above there is no reason why
the plain words of clause (4) of Article 164 of Constitution of India should be
cut down in any manner and confined to a case where a, Minister loses for some
reason his/her seat in the Legislature of the State.
The said issue was once again raised in [Har Sharan Verma Vs. State of U.P. &
Anr., (1985) 2 SCC 48]. However, a new argument of the qualification of the
Minister was taken that as per the changes brought in Article 173 (1) (a), a
person shall not be qualified to be chosen to fill a seat in the Legislature of
a State unless he-
(a) is a citizen of India, and makes and subscribes before some person
authorised on that behalf by the Election Commission an oath or affirmation
according to the form set out for the purpose in the Third Schedule.
Rejecting the above contentions, the Supreme Court held that there is no
material change brought about by reason of the amendment of Article 173 (a) of
the Constitution in the legal position that a person who is not a member of the
State Legislature may be appointed as a Minister subject, of course, to clause
(4) of Article 164 of the Constitution which says that a Minister who for any
period of six consecutive months is not a member of the Legislature of the State
shall at the expiration of that period cease to be a Minister.
The Supreme Court also observed that the debates of the Constituent Assembly
does not suggest that a person shall be a member of the Legislature at the time
of his/her being chosen as a Minister. An amendment was proposed to that effect
in the Constituent Assembly to the draft Constitution but was not accepted, the
Court noted. The Court further added that the makers of the Constitution
provided for a situation where a Minister may lose a seat in the Legislature
after appointment- as the result of an election petition for example - or may
not be a member when he/she is appointed.
Verma, a few years later again filed a Petition before the Apex Court
challenging the appointment of Sita Ram Kesari as a Minister of State of the
Central Cabinet. The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of [Har Sharan Verma
Vs. Union of India & Anr., 1987 (Supp.) SCC 310] made the important
observation combining the effect of Article 75 (5) [Pari-Materia to Article 164
(4)] and Article 88 that the combined effect of these two Articles is that a
person not being a Member of either House of Parliament can be a Minister up to
a period of six months. Though he/she would not have any right to vote, he/she
would be entitled to participate in the proceedings thereof.
The Supreme Court in the case of [S. P. Anand, Indore Vs. H. D. Deve Gowda &
Ors., (1996) 6 SCC 734] considered similar legal issue in a petition filed
by one S. P. Anand, where Shri H. D. Deve Gowda, who was not a Member of either
House of Parliament was appointed as the Prime Minister of India. His
appointment was questioned. The Hon’ble Supreme Court upheld the appointment of
Shri H. D. Deve Gowda as Prime Minister and held that:
…Therefore, even though a Prime Minister is not a member of either House of
Parliament, once he is appointed he becomes answerable to the House and so also
his Ministers and the principle of collective responsibility governs the
democratic process. Even if a person is not a member of the House, if he has the
support and confidence of the House, he can be chosen to head the Council of
Ministers without violating the norms of democracy and the requirement of being
accountable to the House would ensure the smooth functioning of the democratic
process. We, therefore, find it difficult to subscribe to the Petitioner’s
contention that if a person who is not a member of the House is chosen as Prime
Minister, national interest would be jeopardised or that we would be running a
great risk…
In this Judgment, the Supreme Court also noted the speech made by Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar in Constituent Assembly in this regard (Reproduced below:)
Now with regard to the first point, namely, that no person shall be entitled to
be appointed a Minister unless he is at the time of his appointment an elected
member of the House, I think it forgets to take into consideration certain
important matters which cannot be overlooked.
First is this and it is perfectly possible to imagine that a person who is
otherwise competent to hold the post of a Minister has been defeated in a
Constituency for 'some reason and which, although it may be perfectly good,
might have annoyed the Constituency, and he might have incurred the displeasure
of that particular Constituency. It is not a reason why a member so competent as
that should not be permitted to be appointed a member of the Cabinet on the
assumption that he shall be able to get himself elected from the same
Constituency or from another Constituency.
After all the privileges that he is permitted is a privilege that extends only
to six months. It does not confer a right on that individual to sit in the House
being elected at all. My second submission is this that the fact that a
nominated Minister is a member of the Cabinet does not either violate the
principle of collective responsibility nor does it violate the principle of
confidence because he is a member of the cabinet if he is prepared to accept the
policy of the Cabinet stands part of the Cabinet and resigns with the Cabinet
when he ceases to have the confidence of the House, his membership of the
Cabinet does not in any way cause any inconvenience or breach of the fundamental
principles on which parliamentary government is based. Therefore, this
qualification in my judgment is quite unnecessary.
A person cannot be consecutively appointed using the provision of six months.
In [S. R. Chaudhuri Vs State Of Punjab, (2001) 7 SCC 126] considered a
connected legal issue -
Can a non- member, who fails to get elected during the period of six consecutive
months, after he is appointed as a Minister or while a Minister has ceased to be
a Legislator, be reappointed as a Minister, without being elected to the
Legislature after the expiry of the period of six consecutive months?
The Supreme Court held that it is illegal to permit an individual, who is not a
member of the Legislature, to be appointed a Minister repeatedly for a term of
six consecutive months, without him/her getting himself/herself elected in the
meanwhile. The practice would be clearly derogatory to the constitutional
scheme, improper, undemocratic and invalid. Article 164 (4) is at best only in
the nature of an exception to the normal rule of only members of the Legislature
being Ministers, restricted to a short period of six consecutive months.
This exception is essentially required to be used to meet very extraordinary
situation and must be strictly construed and sparingly used. The clear mandate
of Article 164 (4) that if an individual concerned is not able to get elected to
the legislature within the grace period of six consecutive months, he shall
cease to be a Minister, cannot be allowed to be frustrated by giving a gap of
few days and reappointing the individual as a Minister, without his securing
confidence of the electorate in the meanwhile. Democratic process which lies at
the core of constitutional schemes cannot be permitted to be flouted in this
manner., the Supreme Court said holding that reappointment of Tej Parkash Singh
as a Minister in the State of Punjab was invalid and unconstitutional.
The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of [Ashok Pandey Vs. Km Mayawati,
AIR 2007 SC 2259] reiterated the fact that person who is not a member of
Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council can be appointed as Chief Minister
or as a Minister. However, it should also be noted that the period of six months
implies that the period must continuously and not even intermittently run.
Thus, the constitutional position in relation to appointment of Minister which
includes Chief Minister is clear that even a non-member of Legislature can be
appointed as Minister/Chief Minister but only for continuous period of six
months. Within six months, a non-member has to become the member of the House.
There are instances where a non-member of the Legislature has been appointed as
Chief Minister. This took place in the case of Shri C. Rajagopalachari who was
made the Chief Minister of Madras in 1952, or of Shri Anajiah, who was made
Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, in 1980.
These precedents make it clear that there is no embargo in appointing a person
who is not a member of the Legislature as the Chief Minister of the State.
Though technically and legally, one can fairly argue that there is no difference
between a non-member (who did not contest the election at all) and a non-member
(who contested and lost the election), the question still remains whether it is
ethical or moral to appoint a person who lost the election as Chief Minister?
Written By: Dinesh Singh Chauhan, Advocate - J&K High Court of
Judicature, Jammu.
Email: [email protected], [email protected]
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