Panchayat Leader's Caste Flip-Flop Fails: Patna HC Draws Line on Reservation Fraud

In a decisive ruling that reinforces the integrity of caste-based reservations, the Patna High Court's Division Bench of Justice Sudhir Singh and Justice Shailendra Singh dismissed an intra-court appeal by Manoj Prasad, the elected Mukhiya of Gram Panchayat Bagahi Baghambarpur. The court upheld his potential disqualification from the Extremely Backward Class (EBC) reserved seat, slamming attempts to juggle caste identities for electoral gain.

From Land Deals to Leadership: The Seeds of Dispute

Manoj Prasad won the Mukhiya election in 2021 from a seat reserved for EBC candidates, claiming Dangi caste status backed by certificates issued in 2016 and 2021. Trouble brewed when rival Santosh Kumar filed a complaint under Section 136(2) of the Bihar Panchayat Raj Act, 2006 , alleging Prasad actually belonged to the Koeri (Kushwaha) caste—not EBC.

The State Election Commission registered the complaint as Case No. 72 of 2021 and, on July 15, 2022, referred the caste issue to the Caste Scrutiny Committee under the General Administration Department (GAD). Despite Prasad's writ petition challenging this reference (C.W.J.C. No. 14258 of 2022), the Committee probed ahead. On January 12, 2023, it ruled Prasad was Koeri, citing land revenue records (khatiyan) listing his ancestor Bhagelu Mahato as Koeri, a 2018 land purchase where Prasad himself declared as Koeri, and a CID enquiry report—even noting his cousin, a government teacher, held a Koeri certificate.

A Single Judge dismissed Prasad's writ on August 9, 2023, prompting the Letters Patent Appeal No. 1001 of 2023, decided on April 22, 2026.

Appellant's Plea: Guidelines Ignored, Justice Denied?

Prasad's counsel, including Mr. S.B.K. Manglam, argued the Election Commission's reference lacked jurisdiction, citing a Full Bench ruling in Rajani Kumari v. State Election Commission (2019 4 PLJR 673) that caste disputes belong to fact-finding authorities. They claimed the Committee's finding was "arbitrary and perverse," ignoring GAD letters (e.g., April 6, 2011) allowing Dangi certificates via local enquiry despite Koeri revenue entries. Principles of natural justice were allegedly breached—no adjournments despite counsel's medical issues, discarded evidence, and reliance on "forged" documents.

Respondents' Stand: Documents Don't Lie, Motives Do

Respondents, represented by counsel like Mr. Ravi Ranjan for the Commission and Mr. Santosh Bharti for Santosh Kumar, countered that the Scrutiny Committee was the competent authority. They highlighted Prasad's flip: Koeri in official 2018 records, Dangi for 2021 polls. Revenue records held primacy per GAD guidelines (March 8, 2011 letter), with CID and genealogy reports sealing Koeri status. Natural justice was followed, and inconsistent claims smacked of fraud.

Court's Razor-Sharp Scrutiny: No Room for 'Caste Chameleons'

The Division Bench meticulously reviewed evidence, affirming the Single Judge's reliance on "foundational records" like khatiyan, which carry a "presumption of correctness." Prasad's 2018 self-declaration as Koeri drew fire: voluntary official acts can't be brushed aside.

Dismissing GAD guidelines as a shield for "shifting stands," the court invoked precedents: - R. Vishwanatha Pillai v. State of Kerala (2004) 2 SCC 105: Fraudulent caste claims void appointments ab initio; no Article 311 protection. - Ishwar Dayal Sah v. State of Bihar (1987): Tainted entry into service bars constitutional safeguards. - Union of India v. N. Murugesan (2022) 2 SCC 25: Doctrine against "approbate and reprobate"—no blowing hot and cold.

The Election Commission merely referred, not adjudicated, distinguishing Rajani Kumari . As one report aptly noted, such conduct "undermines the sanctity of the system of reservation."

Key Observations from the Bench

"A person cannot be allowed to oscillate between two caste identities claiming to be Koeri for one purpose and Dangi for another depending upon the benefit sought to be derived. Such conduct not only undermines the sanctity of the system of reservation but also strikes at the root of fairness in public administration." (Para 13)

"The petitioner cannot be allowed to change colours like the Chameleons inasmuch as he cannot become a ‘Koeri’ (under OBC category) to purchase a land in 2018 and immediately thereafter turn into a ‘Dangi’ (under EBC category) to contest 2021 election..." (Single Judge, Para 89)

"Such revenue records, being contemporaneous and maintained in the ordinary course of official business, carry a presumption of correctness and constitute primary evidence..." (Para 11)

Verdict Locked: Appeal Dismissed, Integrity Upheld

The appeal stands dismissed: "The present intra court appeal is, accordingly, dismissed." Prasad's Koeri status sticks, paving the way for disqualification proceedings. This ruling signals zero tolerance for caste manipulation in reservations, prioritizing consistent evidence over convenience. Future claimants beware—revenue roots and past declarations will haunt flip-flops, ensuring fair play in Bihar's panchayat polls.