Judgment:
L. Narasimha Reddy, J.
1. Elections to the Gram Panchayat, Bollepally, were held on 02-08-2006. The petitioner and the 1st respondent filed nominations for being elected as members from Second Ward. The petitioner was declared elected as Ward Member. The 1st respondent raised an objection to the nomination of the petitioner, on the ground that she (petitioner) had given birth to a third child, after expiry of one year from the date of commencement of the A.P. Panchayat Raj Act, 1994 (for short 'the Act'). The objection was overruled and the nomination was accepted. In the elections, the petitioner secured 103 votes, and the 1st respondent 86votes.
2. The 1st respondent filed O.P. No. 4 of 2006, challenging the election of the petitioner as ward member. The main ground urged on behalf of the 1strespondent was that the petitioner incurred disqualification under Section 19(3) of the Act. It was alleged that the third child of the petitioner was born on 12-06-1995.
3. The petitioner filed a counter, opposing the allegations of the 1st respondent. She stated that the third child was born on 09-01-1995, that is, before expiry of one year from the date of commencement of the Act. The Tribunal allowed the O.P., through its order dated 10-12-2008.Hence this writ petition.
4. Sri P.V. Vidyasagar, learned Counsel for the petitioner submits that the 1strespondent failed to prove that the third child of the petitioner was born after expiry of one year from the date of commencement of the Act. He contends that Exs. A-2 and A-3 filed by the petitioner are inconsistent with each other, and none of them were proved in accordance with the procedure prescribed by law. He submits that the conclusion arrived at by the Tribunal is not supported by evidence on record.
5. Sri M. Venkatram Reddy, learned Counsel for the 1st respondent, on the other hand, submits that Ex. A-3 is a certified copy of the Births and Deaths Register, maintained for the village, and by filing the same, his client proved that the date of birth of the third child of the petitioner is 12-06-1995, and in that view of the matter, no exception can betaken to the order in the O.P.
6. The only ground on which the election of the petitioner as a Ward Member was challenged was, that she incurred disqualification under Section 19(3) of the Act. The said provision attaches disqualification to a person, either from contesting for, or continuing in, an elected office, if he or she had more children, than two, as on the date on which, the Act came into force. The proviso to Sub-section (3) of Section 19 prevents disqualification from being attached, in case the third child was born before expiry of one year from the date of commencement of the Act. The Act came into force on 30-05-1994. In her election petition, the 1st respondent pleaded that the third child of the petitioner, by name, Shiva Ram Krishna, was born on 12-06-1995. If this is established, the petitioner stands disqualified. In her counter, the petitioner pleaded that her third child was born on 09-01-1995.
7. To prove her case, the 1st respondent examined herself as PW-1, and no other witnesses were examined. She filed Exs.A-1 to A-3. Ex. A-1 is the nomination deposit receipt. Ex. A-2 is the certificate issued by the Zilla Parishad High School, Bollepally, showing the dates of birth of the three children of the petitioner. Ex. A-3 is the certified copy from the register of births and deaths. The petitioner deposed as RW-1. She has also examined RW-2, a midwife, on whose information Ex. A-3 is said to have been prepared.
8. Independently, the petitioner filed Ex. B-1, age certificate of her third child, and Ex. B-2, date of birth certificate of the said child, issued by the Medical Officer.
9. The burden to prove, that the petitioner incurred disqualification under Section 19(3) of the Act, squarely rested upon the 1st respondent. That is evident from the mere reading of Sections 101 - 103 of the Indian Evidence Act. The 1strespondent did make some effort to prove that the third child of the petitioner was born subsequent to 30-05-1995. It has already been mentioned that in he relection petition, the 1st respondent stated that the third child of the petitioner was born on 12-06-1995, whereas the petitioner stated that the date of birth of her third child is 09-01-1995. Ex. A-1 is hardly of any use in the matter. It is only the nomination receipt dated 17-07-2006.Ex.A-2 is a certificate issued by the Head Master of Zilla Parishad High School. Normally, the educational institutions issue date of birth certificates, as per their registers. Ex. A-2 is not such a certificate. It was issued by the Head Master of the School, on a direction issued by the District Deputy Educational Officer, Nalgonda. It pertains to the three children of Sri Punna Sathaiah. The dates of births are mentioned as under:
1. Punna Chaitanya 01-05-19912. Punna Soujanaya 25-03-19933. Punna Shiva Ram Krishna 12-06-1995
10. It was mentioned that the certificates were issued as per the relevant records. Ex. A-2 was marked through PW-1. However, she did not mention as to how she procured it. The petitioner did not cross-examine the 1st respondent, in relation to Ex. A-2. Ex. A-3 is the certified copy of the registrar of births and deaths of the year 1995, maintained for the village. The entry relates to a male child of Punna Sathaiah, and Punna Sujatha. The date of birth is mentioned as 20-10-1995.This is at variance, from the one, in Ex. A-2. The information about the birth of the child is said to have been furnished by the midwife Pandula Lingamma, and the entry in this regard is made in column No. 20. The midwife was examined as RW-2. Her evidence is to the effect that she did not attend to the delivery of the third child of the petitioner. In the cross-examination of PW-1, i.e., the 1st respondent herein, it was suggested that her husband managed to get the certificate from the office of the Mandal Revenue Officer.
11. learned Counsel for the 1st respondent placed reliance upon number of decided cases, in support of his contention that the certified copy of an entry in the register of births and deaths needs to be taken as a proof of the contents thereof. There is no quarrel with the proposition that the contents of a document can be proved by filing the original thereof. Section 61 of the Evidence Act is clear on this aspect. Further under Section 91 of that Act, oral evidence is excluded, vis--vis the contents of a document. Though a document can be said to have been proved by filing the original or certified copy thereof, judicial opinion is divided as to the manner in which the contents of the documents are to be evaluated by the Courts.
12. In Karicherry Charadan Nair v. Edayillam Kunhambur Nair : AIR1982Ker232 , the Kerala High Court took the view that though the document can be said to have been proved, when it filed the probative value of the entries thereof would depend upon host of circumstances, as well as the other evidence, which is on the record, in a given case.
13. In T. Khimchand v. Y. Satyam : AIR1971SC1865 the Supreme Court observed that, mere marking of an exhibit does not dispense with the proof of document.
14. It has already been pointed out that the date of birth of the third child of the petitioner, as mentioned in Ex. A-2, is different from the one, in Ex. A-3. The 1st respondent was not sure as to which of the exhibits, to rely upon. Equally uncertain was the Tribunal. There would have been some justification, to record a finding, in this regard, in case the date of birth in Exs. A-2 and A-3 is one and the same. Notwithstanding the manifest difference; and the evidence of RW-2, that she did not attend to the delivery of the third child of the petitioner, the Tribunal recorded a finding to the following effect:
Para 15: In view of the fact that respondent No. 1 gave birth to her third child one year after commencement of the Act, she has suffered with disqualification under Section 19(3) of the Act and her election to be set aside. Hence, he relection as ward member to the 2nd ward Grampanchayat, Bollepally is to be set aside. There is no dispute that except the petitioner and the respondent No. 1, no other contestants are there in the election and petitioner has secured 194votes and respondent No. 1 secured 103 votes and invalid polls are (5). In view of the said circumstances, as no other contestant is there, petitioner is to be declared as elected candidate to the post of 2nd ward member of Grampanchayath, Bollepally by setting aside the election of respondent No. 1.
15. Though this Court would be slow to interfere with the findings recorded by the Tribunals, and though it cannot act as an Appellate Authority, it cannot approve of findings, which are perverse in nature, and contrary to record. When Exs. A-2 and A-3 are so inconsistent on an important aspect, the Tribunal was under obligation to take note of the same, and to choose one of them, as constituting the basis. If both the documents are taken into account, a definite finding becomes impossible. On her part, the petitioner adduced some evidence, to prove that the date of birth of her third child is 09-01-1995. The correctness of that would have become relevant, if only a consistent picture emerged, on the basis of the evidence adduced on behalf of the 1st respondent. Two documents, viz., Exs. A-2 and A-3, which contained different dates of birth of the same child, cannot constitute the basis for a finding. Therefore, the conclusion arrived at by the Tribunal is perverse.
16. The writ petition is allowed, and the order in O.P. No. 4 of 2006 is set aside. There shall be no order as to costs.