A couple of months later, Saran migrated to India and on 1 November 1947, became a member of East Punjab Legislative Assembly.[6] Despite, he did not resign from the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan. In January 1949, the "Committee on Addition and/or Redistribution of Seats", while recommending the dissolution of the two vacant non-Muslim seats in the Assembly,[d] hinted that it was constitutionally suspect whether Saran was entitled to retain his seat.[citation needed]
^Securing 552 votes, Saran barely scraped through against R.S. Ramjawaya Kapur, another independent candidate. The incumbent legislator Lala Sita Ram managed a paltry 51 votes.[2]
^All members of the '46 legislature, who won from what was now Pakistan's share of Punjab, were appointed to the assembly until re-elections were held in January, 1949.
^Both Sachar and Gujral had resigned, before migrating to India. The population of Hindus, as of May 1948, was deemed insufficient by the Committee to secure representation in the Assembly.