Electoral Purity Over Topographic Barriers: High Court Orders Membership Audit to End 11-Year Deadlock in Cooperative Society
This judgment by the High Court of Himachal Pradesh in Rakesh Kumar v. State of H.P. addresses a protracted dispute within the Baghal Land Loosers Transport Cooperative Society, which manages transport for a major cement company. To end an 11-year hiatus in democratic governance, the Court upheld a unique zoning method based on membership serial numbers and ordered a comprehensive audit of the society’s entire membership list by a neutral statutory authority.
The Zoning Dispute: Geography vs. The Register
The primary challenge involved the Registrar’s decision to carve out 11 electoral zones based on the ascending order of membership serial numbers rather than geographical boundaries.
- The Hilly Terrain Factor: The Registrar found that the society’s area of operation, spread across five Panchayats, featured a hilly topography with no clear geographical demarcation. This made identifying contiguous boundaries for 11 equal zones practically impossible.
- Legal Validity: The Court ruled that under Rule 37 and Appendix “A” of the H.P. Cooperative Societies Rules, using the membership register is a legally permissible alternative when “contiguity is not discernible”. The Court concluded that this provided a transparent and objective criterion to divide the 619 members into equal zones.
The Membership Crisis: Alleged “Clout” and Illegal Enrollment
The petitioners also sought the removal of 126 members (Respondents 16 to 141), alleging they were enrolled in violation of the society’s Bye-law 6(b).
- Unauthorized Enrollment: An inquiry report suggested that an unauthorized Administrator had enrolled members in disregard of the requirement that members must have land acquired specifically for the plant, conveyor belt, or mines.
- Preventing a “Farce”: The Court emphasized that a valid election must be built on a valid voters’ list. It noted that holding an election on a “grossly invalid” list would turn the democratic process into a farce.
The Court’s Directives and Timeline
Recognizing that the society had been managed by an ad-hoc committee for over a decade, Justice Sandeep Sharma invoked the Court’s extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 226 to ensure “electoral purity”. Rather than relying on the current management, the Court referred the dispute to a neutral party to settle it “for all times to come”.
The Final Mandate:
- Assistant Registrar (AR) Audit: The AR (Cooperative Societies), Solan, must convene a General House meeting within one month to begin a complete verification of all members against the Act, Rules, and Bye-laws.
- Due Process: The AR must notify the list of valid members and afford those found ineligible an opportunity to raise objections via a speaking order.
- Strict Deadlines: The verification process must be completed by March 15, 2026.
- Final Elections: The society must conduct elections based on the serial-number zones and the newly validated membership list on or before June 30, 2026.
Himachal Pradesh High Court
Rakesh Kumar and Ors. V. State of Himachal Pradesh and Ors. : STPL (Web) 2026 HP 32




