Chennai:
The
returning officer of Thiruvarur Assembly constituency has urged the Madras High
Court to dismiss the petition of former chief minister and DMK president M
Karunanidhi stating that false declaration of assets as per the decision of Supreme
Court may not be a ground to reject nomination paper during the elections but
certainly a ground for institution of prosecution.
In a counter
affidavit which was filed in the High Court challenging the petition of Karunanidhi,
the returning officer P Paramasivan said that the petitioner has admitted in
his petition that the property referred to in the complaint has not been
disclosed by him in the affidavit filed along with nomination papers.
Interestingly,
Karunanidhi in his petition has challenged summons issued to him by the
Judicial Magistrate of Thiruvarur, taking cognizance of a complaint filed by the
Returning Officer alleging that he had not furnished particulars about certain
properties at the time of filing his nomination papers for the April 13, 2011 assembly
polls. Karunanidhi had submitted that nomination papers can not be rejected
even if there was any failure or suppression in disclosure of any asset of a
candidate as per the direction of ECI.
He also said
that the petition filed by DMK chief appears to be filed on imaginary grounds
like --- the returning officer ceases to be a returning officer on completion
of election; there is no decision by the election commission of India to
prosecute the petitioner; the returning officer was not examined on oath and
the complaint is barred by limitation.
“These
contentions has absolutely no legal basis and thefore the petition is liable to
be dismissed,” he contended.
“The
averments in the petition that the returnining officer function ceases to exist
after returning the candidate is not legally correct and is specifically
denied. The returning officer performs the duties of returning officer as and
when election related duties arises and he is also notified as the electoral
registration officer,” he said.
“In fact
during the hearing of the election petition, the returning officer of the
constituency wherever, is required to appear before the court and produce the
records. While section 28 A of the Representation of People Act 1950 including
Section 13 CC applies during both election and non-election period. In the
circumstances, the contention of the petition is totally unsustainable,” he
submitted.
He also said
that on July 12, 2013, the Election Commission of India directed the chief
electoral officer of the state that the returning officer may be advised to
file a complaint against Karunanidhi before the appropriate authority as such
the complaint was filed before judicial magistrate, Thruvarur.
“Whether a
complaint is barred by time or not is a mixed question of law and fact can be
gone into only by the concerned magistrate as in the complaint there is a clear
averment that the complaint is within time,” Paramasivam submitted.
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