Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BARADAKANTA MISHRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE REGISTRAR OF ORISSA HIGH COURT & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/11/1973
BENCH:
PALEKAR, D.G.
BENCH:
PALEKAR, D.G.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 710 1974 SCR (2) 282
1974 SCC (1) 374
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC 727 (46)
R 1976 SC 921 (11)
RF 1976 SC1899 (14)
RF 1988 SC1208 (17)
RF 1992 SC 165 (55)
RF 1992 SC 904 (9)
ACT:
Contempt of Courts Act 1971 (17 of 1971)-Ss. 2(c)(iii) & 13-
Scope of Contempt of Court-Disciplinary control over
Subordinate judiciary-When High Court functions in a
disciplinary capacity it does so in furtherance of adminis-
tration of justice. What amounts to-Attack on the
administrative act of a judge, if amounts to contempt-
Administration of justice meaning and scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a judicial officer, was convicted and
sentenced under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, by a Full
Bench of the Orissa High Court. Registrar of Orissa High
Court v. Bardakanta Mishra & Ors. I.L.R. [1973] Cuttack
134.
The appellant’s career as a judicial officer was far from
satisfactory. When he was working as Additional District
and Sessions Judge he showed gross indiscretion and
committed grave judicial misdemeanor. The contempt proceed-
ings arose out of the representation he made to the Governor
for canceling the order of suspension passed against him by
the High Court and the allegation he made in a memorandum of
appeal he had filed earlier in the Supreme Court. In his
representation to the Governor the appellant made false
insinuations that the Governor cancelled the previous
disciplinary proceedings against him on the ground that the
same was vitiated as the High Court prejudged the matter and
the government set aside the punishment because three of the
judges were biased and were prejudiced against him, that the
proceeding involved the Government in heavy expenses on
account of the "palpably incorrect views of the High Court",
that the High Court did not gracefully accept the
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Government’s order cancelling his demotion, that the High
Court resorted to "subterfuge’ to counteract the said
decision of the government by taking a novel step and that
the High Court’s action suffered from patent mala fides. He
stated that the other judges had no independent judgment of
their own and were influenced by the Chief Justice to take a
view different from what they bad already taken and
characterised the High Court as an "engine of oppression"
and his order of suspension as "mysterious". In another
representation made to the Governor the appellant alleged
that the High Court on the administrative side was seriously
prejudiced and biased against him and it acted as if the
charges stood established requiring extreme punishment and
as such justice May not be meted out to him by the High
Court, if it conducted the departmental inquiry. He also
stated that he considered it risky to submit his explanation
to the High Court and that the High Court in the best
interests of justice, should not inquire into these charges again
st him. He suggested that "the Court was not in a
position to weigh the evidence and consider the materials on
record and impose a sentence commensurate with his
delinquency." The action taken by the High Court was branded
as "unusual". A copy of this representation was sent to the
High Court with the remark that since the High Court was
likely to withhold the representation it was submitted
direct to the Governor. In the memo of appeal filed in the
Supreme Court, the appellant alleged bias and prejudice
against the High Court and its Chief Justice. He took the
plea that the High Court had become disqualified to deal
with the case and expressed the view that "the judges of the
High Court had fallen from the path of rectitude and were
vindictive" and had decided to impose substantive sentence
and that "they were not in a position to mete even-handed
justice’.
In appeal to this Court. it was contended : (i) that the
passages about which the complaint was made did not amount
to contempt of court since they did not purport to criticize
any ’judicial, acts of the judges and criticism of the
administrative acts of the High Court even in vilification
terms did not amount
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to contempt of court, and (ii) that the acts complained of
were in the court of the appellant challenging his
suspension and holding of disciplinary proceedings, in an
appeal or representation to the Governor from the orders of
the High Court and he gave expression to his grievance or
had otherwise acted not with a view to malign the court or
in defiance of it but with, the sole object of obtaining the
reversal of the orders passed by the High Court against him.
HELD : The imputations have grossly vilified the High Court
tending to affect substantially administration of justice
and, therefore, the appellant was rightly convicted of the
offence of criminal contempt. [304F]
(i)Proceedings in contempt are always with reference to
administration of justice. All the three sub-clauses of s.
2(c) of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, define contempt in
terms of obstruction or interference with administration of
justice and scandalisation within the meaning of sub-clause
(1) must be in respect of the court or the Judge with
reference to administration of justice. [297C-D]
Debi Prasad Sharma v. The King-Emperor. 70 Indian Appeals.
216, referred to.
(a)The question whether contemptuous imputations made with
reference to the administrative acts of the High Court
amount to contempt of court will depend upon whether the
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amputations affect the administration of justice. This is
the basis on which the contempt is punished and must afford
the necessary test. [298E]
(b)The mere functions of adjudication between the parties
is not the Whole of administration of justice for any court.
The presiding judge of a Court embodies in himself the
Court. and when engaged in the task of administering justice
is assisted by a complement of clerks and ministerial
officers. The Acts in which they are engaged are acts in
aid of administration of justice. Therefore, when the Chief
Justice appoints ministerial officers and assumes
disciplinary control over them, that is a function which
through described as administrative, is really in the course
of administration of justice. Judical integrated function
of Judge and cannot suffer any dissection nuance of high
standards of rectitude in judical administration
administration is an so far as maintain concerned. The whole
set up of a court is for who’ purpose of administration of
justice and the controlwhich the judge exercises over his
assistants has also the object of maintaining the purity of
administration of justice. [298F-H; 299A]
(c)The disciplinary control over the misdemeanors of the
subordinate judiciary in their judicial administration is a
function which the High Court must exercise in the interest
of administration of justice. It is a function Which is
essential for the administration of justice in the wide
connotation it has received and, therefore, when the High
Court functions in a disciplinary capacity, it Only does so
in furtherance of administration of justice. it is as
important for the superior court to be vigilant about the
conduct and behaviour of the subordinately judge as it is to
administer the law, because both functions are essential
administration of justice. The Judge of the superior court
in whom this disciplinary control is vested functions as
much as a Judge in such, matters as when he bears and
disposes of cases before him. [300E; 299D]
(d) What is commonly described as an administrative function
has been when vested in the High Court, constantly regarded
by statutes as a function in the administration of justice.
[299F-G]
Letters Patent for the High Courts of Bombay, Calcutta and
Madras a. 8; High Courts Act, 1861, a. 9; the Government of
India Act, 1935, %. 223. 224; Constitution of India, 1950,
Arts. 225, 227 235; State of West Bengal V.Nripendra Nath
Bagchi [1966] 1 S.C.R. 771 referred to.
(e)Thus the courts of justice in a State froth the highest
to the lowest are by their constitution entrusted with
functions directly connected with the administration of
justice and it is the expectation and confidence of all
those who have or likely to ’have business there that the
courts Perform all their functions
284
on a high level of rectitude without fear or favour,
affection or ill-will. And, it in this traditional
confidence in the courts that justice will be administered
in them which is Fought to be protected by proceedings in
contempt. [300F-G]
Rex v. Almon [1765] Wilmot’s Notes of Opinions 243, referred
to.
(f) Scandalisation of the court is a species of contempt and
may take several forms. A common form is the vilification
of the Judge. When proceedings in contempt are taken for
such vilification the question which the court has to ask is
whether the vilification is of the Judge as a Judge or it is
the vilification of the Judge as an individual. If the
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latter, the Judge is left to this private remedies and the
court has no power to commit for contempt. If the former,
the court will proceed to exercise the jurisdiction with
scrupulous care in cases which are clear and beyond
reasonable doubt. Secondly, the court with have also to
consider the degree of harm caused. as affecting
administration of justice and if it is slight and beneath
notice, courts will not punish for contempt. Ibis salutary
practice is adopted by s. 13 of the Contempt of Courts Act,
1971. If the attack on the Judge functioning as a Judge
substantially affects administration of justice it becomes a
public mischief punishable for contempt, and it matters not
whether such an attack is based on what a Judge is alleged
to have done in the exercise of his ’administrative’
responsibilities. A Judge’s functions may be divisible, but
his integrity and authority are not divisible in the context
of administration of justice. [301D-F]
Queen v. Gray, [1900] (2) Queen’s Bench, 36, at page 40,
referred to.
(g)"Judicial capacity" is an ambivalent term which means
"capacity of or properto a Judge" and is capable of
taking in all functional capacities of a Jurodge
whetheradministrative, adjudicatory or any other, necessary
for the administration of justice. There is no warrant for
the narrow view that the offence of scandalisation of the
court takes place only when the imputation has reference to
the adjudicatory functions of a Judge in the seat of
justice. [302D]
Rex v. Almon [1765] Wilmot’s Notes of Opinion 243; MOti Lal
Ghose and Others, XLV-Calcutta, 169, The State of Bombay v.
Mr. P. A.I.R. 1959 Bombay, 182, Debi Prasad Sharma v. The
King Emperor, 70, Indian Appeals, 216, Special Reference
from the Bahama Islands, A.C. 138 at 144, Queen v. Gray
[1900] 2 Q.B. 36, referred to.
Brahma Prak-ash Sharma and others v. The State of Uttar
Pradesh, [1953] S.C.R.- 1169, Gobind Ram v. State of
Maharashtra. [1971] 1 S.C.C. 740 and State v. The Editors
and Publishers of Eastern Times and Prajatantra, A.I.R. 1952
Orissa, 318, held inapplicable.
(ii)If in fact the language used amounts to contempt of
court it will become punishable as criminal contempt. The
right of appeal does not give the right to commit contempt
of court nor can it be used as a cover to bring the autho-
rity of the High Court into disrespect and disregard. [298C-
D]
Jugal Kishore v. Sitamarhi Central Co.op. Bank. AIR 1967
S.C. 1494 referred to.
Per Bhagwati & Krishna Iyer, JJ : (Concurring in ultimate
decision) : The dilemma of the law of contempt arises
because of the constitutional need to balance, two great but
occasionally conflicting principles-freedom of expression and f
air and fearless justice. It is a moot point whether
we should still be bound to the regal moorings of Rex v.
Almon. [306E]
(i)The emphasis in Ss. 2(c), 3 and 13 of the Contempt of
Courts Act, 1971. to the interference with the course of
justice or obstruction of the administration of Justice or
scandalising or lowering the authority of the Court-not the
Judge-highlights the judicial area as entitled to
inviolability and suggests a functional rather than a
personal or ’institutional’ immunity. The unique power to
punish for contempt of itself inheres in a Court qua court,
In its essential role of dispenser of public justice. The
phraseological image projected
285
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by the catena of expressions in the Act, the very conspectus
of the statutory provisions and the ethos and raison d’eire
of the jurisdiction-point to the conclusion that the text of
the Act must take its colour from the general context and
confine the contempt power to the judicial-cum-para-judicial
areas, including such administrative functions as are
intimately associated with the exercise of judicial power.
In short the accent is on the functional personality which
is pivotal to securing justice to the people. Purely
administrative acts like recruitmerits, transfers and
postings, routine disciplinary action against subordinate
staff, executive acts in running the establishment and
ministerial business ancillary to office-keeping-these are
common to all departments in the public sector and merely
because they relate to the judicial wing of government
cannot enjoy a higher immunity from criticism. The
quintessence of the contempt power is protection of the
public, not judicial personnel. If the slant on judict
poalisation as a functional limitation on the contempt
jurisdiction is accepted, it must exclude from its ambit
interference with purely administrative acts of courts and
non-judicial functions of judges. This dichotomy is
implicit in the decided cases. To treat as the High Court
has done. "the image and personality of the lush Court as
an integrated one" and to hold that every shadow that
darkens it is contempt is to forget life, reason and
political progress. The basic ’public duty" of a Judge in
his "judicial capacity" is to dispense public justice in
Court and anyone who obstructs or interferes in this area
does so at his peril. Likewise, personal behaviour of
judicial personnel, if criticised severally or even
sinisterly. cannot be countered by the weapon of the
contempt of court. [309C-E, 3 10 A-F]
The paramount but restrictive jurisdiction to protect the
public against substantial interference with the stream of
justice cannot be polluted or diffused into an intimidatory
power for the judges to strike. at adverse comments on
administrative, legislative (as under articles 225, 226 and
227) and extra-judicial acts. Commonsense and principle can
certainly accept a valid administrative area so closely
integrated with court work as to be stamped with judicial
character such as constitution of benches, transfer of
cases, issue of administrative directions regarding
submission of findings or disposal of cases by subordinate
courts and the like. Not everything covered by art. 225,
227 and 235 will be of this texture. Thus even though
Judges and courts have diverse duties functionally and
historically and jurisprudentially, the value which is dear
to the community and the function which deserves to be
pardoned off from public molestation is judicial. Vicious
criticism of personal and administrative acts of Judges may
indirectly mar their image and weaken the confidence of the
public in the judiciary but the countervailing good, not
merely of free speech but also of greater faith generated by
exposure to the acting light of bona fide even if marginally
overzealous, criticism cannot be over-looked. [315B-E]
In the instant case the suspension of the District Judge was
so woven into and integrally connected with the-
administration of justice that it can be regarded as not
purely an administrative act but a para-judicial function.
The appeal was against the suspension which was a
preliminary to contemplated disciplinary action which was
against the appellant in his judicial capacity for acts of
judicial misconduct. The control was, therefore, judicial
and hence the unbridled attack on the High Court for the
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step was punishable impugned conduct of the condemner was
qua Judge and the evil a supervisory act of the High Court.
[315G-H]
(ii)A large margin must be allowed for allegations in
remedial representation; but extravagance forfeits the
protection of good faith. [315H]
In the matter of a Special Reference from the Bahama
Islands, [1893] AC. 139; 149; Debi Prasad Sharma v. The King
Emperor, [1942] 70 I.A. 216, Kayiath Damodaran v.
Induchoodan, A.I.R. 1961 Kerala 321, K. L. Gauba’s case,
I.L.R. [1942] Lab. 411, 419, Rex v. B. S. Nayyar, A.I.R.
1950 All’. 549. 551. 555, In re S. B. Sarbadhicary, [1906]
14 XX I.A. 41, Brahma Prakash Sharma v. State of Uttar
Pradesh, (1953) S.C.R. 1169, State V. N. Nagamani, A.I.R.
1959 Pat. 373 and In the matter of an. Advocate of
Allahabad, A.T.R. 1935 All. 1, referred to.
28 6
Remedial process cannot be a mask to malign a judge.
Irrelevant or unvarnished amputations under the pretext of
grounds of appeal amount of foul play and perversion of the
legal process. In the instant case the appellant, a senior
officer who professionally weighs his thoughts and words has
no justification for the immoderate abuse he has resorted
to. In this sector even truth is no defence, as in the case
of criminal insult-in the latter because it May produce
violent breaches and is forbidden in the name of public
peace, and in, the former it may demoralise the community
about courts and is forbidden in the interest of public
justice as contempt of court. The Court being the guardian
of the people’s rights, it has been held repeatedly that the
contempt jurisdiction should be exercised with scrupulous
care and only when the case is clear and beyond reasonable
doubt. [317C-E; 318H]
State of Uttar Pradesh v. Shyam Sunder Lal, A.I.R. 1954 All.
308, Rex v. R. S. Nayyar, A.I.R. 1950 All. 549; 554, State
of Madhya Pradesh v. Ravi Sharker. [1959] S.C.R. 1367;
Govind Ram v. State of Maharashtra, [1971] 1 S.C.C. 740,
Swarnamayi Panigrahi v. B. Nayak, A.I.R.- 1959 Orissa 89,
Quintin Hogg. 1968 2 W.L.R. 1204: 1206-7. C. K. Paphtary v.
O. P. Gupta, A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 1132-1141 para ’52, R v.
Gray,, [1900] 2 Q.B. 36, Special ,Reference No. 1 of 1964,
[1965] 1 S.C.R. 413. 501; referred to.
(iii)In sum, the key note word is ’justice, not ’judge’; the
’key note thought is unobstructed public justice, not the
self defence of a judge; the corner-stone of the contempt
law is the accommodation of two constitutional values-the
right of free speech and the right to independent justice.
The ignition of con, tempt action should be substantial. and
mala interference with fearless judicial action, not fair
comment or trivial reflections on the judicial process and
personnel. [319E]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 41
and 77 of 1973.
Appeals under Section 19 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971
from the, Judgment and Order dated the 5th February, 1973 of
the Orissa High Court at Cuttack in Criminal Miscellaneous
Case No. 8 of 1972.
A.K. Ser, G. L. Mukhoty and C. S. S. Rao, for the
appellant (in Cr.A. 41./73).
G. Rath, and B. Parthasarathy, for the appellant (In Cr.
A. 77/73).
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F. S. Nariman, Additional Solicitor General, B. M. Patnaik
and Vinoo Bhagat, for respondent No. 1 (in Cr. A. 41/73)
and respondent NO. 2 (in Or. A. 77/73).
G. Rath and U. P. Singh,for respondent No. 2 (in Cr. A.
41/73),
A. K. Sen and C. S. S. Rao, for respondent No. 1 (in Cr. A.
77/73).
The judgment of the Court were delivered by
PALEKAR J.-This is (Criminal Appeal No. 41 of 1973) an
appeal by one Baradakanta Mishra from his conviction and
sentence under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 by a Full
Bench of fiVe of the. Orissa High Court. The Judgment is
reported in I.L.R. [1913] Cuttack, 134 (Registrar of the
Orissa High Court v. Baradakanta Mishra and Ors.).
The appellant started his career as a Munsif in 1947. His
career as a Judicial Officer was far from satisfactory. In
1956 he was promoted on trial basis to the rank of a sub-
Judge with the observation
28 7
that if he was found incompetent, suitable action would be,
taken. In due course, he, was confirmed as a Subordinate
Judge. On April, 2, 1962 he was promoted, again on trial
basis, to the rank of Additional District Magistrate
(Judicial) which is a post in the cadre of the orissa
Superior Judicial Service (Junior Branch). As his work was
for unsatisfactory, he wag reverted to his substantive post
of a Subordinate Judge on January 4, 1963. The order of
reversion was challenged by him in a Writ Petition which was
dismissible by a Bench of C.J. and , J. The case is reported
in [I.L.R.] 1966, Cutback, 503. An appeal to the Supreme
Court was dismissed on February 6,he 1967. While working as
a Subordinate Judge, after reversion,- ’ was suspended from
service from 15th May, 1964 to 9th April, 1967 during the
pendency of a disciplinary proceeding against him. that
proceeding ended in a light punishment of two of- his
increments being stopped. From the. above order of
punishment, the appellant filed on 10-10-1967 an appeal to
the State Government. The State Government by its order
dated 15-7-1970 allowed tie appeal on the ground that the
Public Service Commission had not heed consulted by the High
Court before imposing the punishment, and that the
Charge--Sheet served on the appellant having indicated the
proposed punishment vitiated the disciplinary proceedings.
After the case, Was sent back to the High Court the charges
which had been earlier established, were framed again and
served on him on 13-2-1971 and we are informed that the
proceeding is still pending.
In the meantime, it appears, he was promoted to the post of
the Additional District Maggistrate in February, 1968
though the High Court was of opinion that he was unbalanced,
quarrelsome, reflect and undisciplined. The High Court
specifically observed that though the appellant suffered
from these defects, It was sincere and working and the other
officers who had superseded him as Additional Districting
Magistratres were not much better. The promotion was made
on trial basis for a period of one year with the.
observation that if during that period his work was found to
be unsatisfactory, he ’would be reverted to the rank of Sub-
Judge.
In that year the High Court had to face an abnormal
situation by the retirement of many District Judges on
account of the decision of the Government reducing the age
of retirement from 58 to ’55 years Many, vacancies occurred
and the appellant was then promoted as an Additional
District and Sessions Judge on trial basis- for six months
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in July, 1968. In January, 1969 he was allowed to continue
on a temporary basis till further orders subject to further
review of his work at the time of confirmation. It is
worthy of note that this decision to continue was taken on
the report of the present Chief. Justice O. K. Mishra who
was at that time the Administrative Judge.
On May 12, 1969 his services were placed at the disposal of
the Government in the Law Department, who appointed him as
Joint Secretary. Law, till October 12, 1969. From October
13, 1960 to December 4, 1970 he was appointed by the
Government as the Commissioner of Endowments. The
Government was thoroughly dissatisfied with his work and on
December 5, 1970 his services were replaced at the disposal
of the High Court. The appellant went on leave.
288
On his return to the Judicial cadre, he functioned as
Addison District and Sessions Judge, Cuttack till July 14,
1971 when he was ,posted to act as District and Sessions
Judge for 12 days in the temporary leave vacancy of the
permanent District Judge Mr. P. K Mohanty. When he was thus
acting as District and Sessions Judge for a short period by
way of stop-gap arrangement, the High Court placed several
restrictions on his administrative powers,.
In the brief period that he was working as Additional
District and Sessions Judge, Cuttack, the appellant showed
gross indiscretion by defying a request made by the Distr
ict, Judge in due course of administration. He also
committed a avejuiudicial misdemeanors. He heard an appeal
and posted it for judgment on June 22, 1971. The judgment
was delivered on that date and the, appeal was dismissed.
The Order-Sheets of the judgment were signed by the
appellant and the judgment was duly sealed. Later in the
day, however, the appellant scored through his signatures
both in the Order-Sheet and in the judgment and returned the
record of the appeal to the District Judge for disposal by
making a false statement that the judgment had not been
delivered and that the parties being known to him it was not
desirable that he should further hear the appeal, after
taking additional evidence for which a petition had been
filed. This was something quite extraordinary from a Judge
of the appellant’s standing. When these matters were
brought to the notice of the High Court the Registrar by
Order of the High Court recommended to the Government that
the appellant be reverted to the post of the Additional
District Magistrate (Judicial). There were already three
departmental proceedings pending against the appellant and
he had also been convicted in a contempt case. The High
Court expressly informed the Government that these four
matters had not been taken into consideration in
recommending his reversion and that his reversion was solely
due to the fact that his work was found unsatisfactory. The
recommendation was accepted by the Government who on
September 1, 1971 reverted the appellant to the post of the
Additional District Magistrate.
On September 10, 1971 the appellant made a representation to
the Chief Minister praying for the withdrawal of the order
of reversion and, if necessary, to suspend him after drawing
up a regular depart7 mental proceeding. The representation
was forwarded to the Government with the comments of the
High Court.
Something unusual happened. Without any further
consultation with the High Court, the Governor cancelled the
reversion order by notification dated March 21, 1972 And on
the same day the Chief Minister wrote a confidential D.O. to
the Chief Justice by name explaining the circumstances under
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which the reversion. order was cancelled. The Chief
Minister appeared. to rely upon a decision of the Orissa
High Court which had no- application to the facts of this
particular case. But any way. it would appear that by
reason of the Order dated March 21, 1972: the reversion of
the appellant to the post of the Additional District
Magistrate stood cancelled and he continued to act in the
post of the Additional District & Sessions Judge, Cuttack.
289
The D.O. letter of the Chief Minister remained unopened till
the return of the Chief Justice from New Delhi where he had
gone to attend the Chief Justices Conference. It was opened
by the Chief Justice on return on March 26, 1972. But in
the meantime, the appellant, who had gone on leave, having
known about the order passed on March 21, 1972 asked for his
posting. The rules required that on return from leave he
should produce, a medical certificate and he was,
accordingly directed to produce one.
On March 28, 1972 the Chief Justice placed the letter of the
Chief Minister for consideration before the Full Court. The
Full Court took the decision to start a disciplinary
proceeding against the appellant and, pending the same, to
place him under suspension in exercise of their powers under
Article 235 of the Constitution. Accordingly on March 30
1972 the appellant was placed under suspension and his
headquarters were fixed at Cuttack.
The present contempt proceedings arise out of events which
took place after the suspension order. On receiving the
suspension order the appellant addressed by letter an appeal
to the Governor of Orissal for cancelling the order of
suspension and for posting him directly under the
Government. That is Annexure 8. As the High Court was of
the view that no appeal lay from an order of suspension
pending disciplinary charges, it did not forward the appeal
to the. Governor. In fact on April 28, 1972 the Registrar
of the High Court intimated the State Government that the
appeal filed by the appellant to the Governor had been
withheld by the High Court as no such appeal lies against
the order of suspension pending disciplinary proceedings.
The appellant was also intimated accordingly.
On April 29, 1972 charges in ’the disciplinary proceeding
were, framed by the High Court and communicated to the
appellant and the appellant was directed to file his reply
to the charges by a certain date.
On May 14, 1972 the appellant wrote three letters. One was
to the Registrar and is Annexure 13. By this letter the
appellant intimated that he had moved the Governor to
transfer the disciplinary proceedings to the Administrative
Tribunal and that he would take all other alternative steps-
administrative and judicial-to avoid the proceeding being
dealt with by the High Court. The second letter was
addressed to the Governor and is Annexure 15. It purports
to be a representation with a prayer to direct the High
Court to forward the appeal withheld by it. There was a
third letter of the same date addressed directly to the
Governor purporting to be a representation. That is
Annexure 16. The prayer was that the departmental pro-.
seedings be reference to the Administrative Tribunal. A
copy of this letter was sent to the Registrar of the High
Court with the following-. remark
"As the Honourable Court are likely to
withhold such petitions, this is submitted
direct with copy to the Honourable Court for
information. Honourable Court may be,,
pleased to send their comments on this
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petition to the Governor."
29 0
On May 22, 1972 the appellant addressed a letter (Annexure
14) to the Registrar intimating him that he would not submit
any explanation to the charges framed against him until his
representation to the Governor was disposed of. He also
stated therein that he may file a writ application for the
purpose and would take the matter to the Supreme Court, if
necessary. He also stated that he cannot wait for the
permission of the High Court for leaving the Headquarters.
It is the contents of these letters on which a show-cause
notice for contempt was issued to the appellant under the
orders of the Full Court on July 3, 1972.
On 27-7-1972 the appellant filed his preliminary objection
to the show-cause notice challenging its maintainability on
the ground that whatever he had said had no reference to
the judicial functions of any Judge of the High Court and,
therefore, no contempt proceedings would lie. He pressed-
for a decision on the point. When the matter came before a
Division Bench on 3-8-1972 the appellant was directed to
file his full reply to the show-cause notice. Accordingly,
it was filed on 7-8-1972 and the appellant again pressed for
a decision on his preliminary objection. The Division Bench
refused to deal with the preliminary objection and so on 30-
8-1972 the appellant filed Criminal Appeal NO. 174 of 1972
in this Court praying for cancellation of the contempt
proceedings challenging therein the maintainability of the
proceeding and complaining of bias and prejudice of the High
Court particularly the Honourable the Chief Justice and Mr.
Justice R.N. Mishra. He said apprehended that he would not
get a fair deal if the matter is disposed of by the High
court
On 21-11-1972 the Supreme Court appeal was withdrawn. At
the instance of the Division Bench, a PM Bench of five
Judges was constituted by the Chief Justice, and the case
came on for hearing before the Full Bench on 4-12-1972. In
the meantime the appeal memo filed by the appellant in the
Supreme Court was available and since it contained matter
which amounted to contempt, additional, charges were framed
and a show-cause notice was issued to the aPPellant in
respect of these additional charges. A copy of, the appeal
memo containing the statements amounting to contempt is
Annexure 20.
The Annexures were examined by the court with a view to
consider whether the statements therein amount to a criminal
contempt.On a full and prolonged consideration the Fall
Bench came to, the unanimous conclusion that Annexures
8,13,14,16, and 20 contain matters which accounted to gross
contempt of court and since the appellant had not even
offered an apology, this was a matter in Which serious
notice ought to be taken, especially, in view of previous
convictions for contempt, and, accordingly sentenced the
appellant to two months simple imprisonment though in their
opinion he deserved the maximum sentence of six months.
The several Annexures referred to above have been extracted
by the Fall Bench in its judgment and it as not necessary to
reproduce them here. It will be sufficient to reproduce
only those portions
29 1
which were regarded as grossly contemptuous and had been
under-lined in the judgment.
Annexure 8.
As already stated this is a letter in the, form of an appeal
addressed to the Governor of Orissa complaining against the
suspension and praying for stay of operation of the
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suspension order on the basis. of the advance copy sent to
the Governor for its cancellation and for posting the
appellant directly under the Government. it is dated 10-4-
1972. The appeal had been routed through the High Court
but the High Court did not forward the same. In this
annexure reference is made to the previous appeal filed by
him against the order of the High Court stopping his two
increments after a departmental proceeding and how the
Governor in appeal had cancelled even the very departmental
proceeding in the appeal. An interpretation was, put on
that order which it did not bear and it was made out, though
falsely, that the punishment had been set aside on the basis
of the allegations made by the appellant that some
Honourable Judges of the High Court had been biased and
prejudiced against him. The appellant also asked the
Governor to appreciate that by the said departmental
proceedings the High Court had put the Exchequer to a very
heavy loss "all on accounts of the palpable incorrect views
of the High Court." Then the appellant says that the
present action,. namely , the order of suspension clearly
disclosed mala fides. He suggested that there were several
"embarrassing events" which he could offer for consideration
of the Governor- but he was content at this stage to refer
to only one of them. In this connection he referred to the
fact that when he intimated to the High Court that he
desired to join duties after his leave on March 20, 1972 he
was informed by the High Court on March 23, 1972 that his
re-posting after leave would be decided after the medical
board reported as to his fitness. to join after leave.
This, according to the appellant, showed that the High Court
had already taken a decision in the absence of the Chief
Justice that the appellant should be re-posted. But on the
return of the Chief Justice from New; Delhi there was a
sudden change., He clearly suggested that after the Chief
Justice’s return, the court took the decision to suspend him
and in this connection he made the following observations :
"This decision of the High Court, reached at
before the Honourable the Chief Justice
attended the High Court on the 27th March
after his 10 days of absence, clearly indi-
cates that no proceeding, much less
suspension, against the appellant was under
contemplation till that day, but on the other
hand, the appellant’s place of posting was
under consideration of the High Court.
Circumstances clearly disclose that after the
return of the Honourable Chief Justice, the
Government’s order, disapproving the High
Court’s views about the appellants demotion,
was not accepted gracefully by the High Court,
and so subterfuge was adopted to counteract
the said decision of. the Government by a
novel step, thus to deprive the appellant of
the result of the said decision. In view of
this patent mala fide alone, such an action
292
is liable to be quashed, by any competent
Court of law."
Then at a later stage the appellant says
"The appellant happens to be the senior-most
judicial officer in the State as regards
length of service, and he has already 20 more
months before attaining the age of superan-
nuation. Hence, he may not deserve the
present unwarranted, sudden and mysterious
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suspension. giving rise to speculations,
touching his integrity."
Then again he says
"........ the treatment of the High Court may
require that after cancellation of this order
of suspension, he be brought under the direct
control of the Government in a special post
for the rest of his service career of hardly
20 months more."
The High Court at para 61 of the judgment has
observed as follows :
"In the appeal memo (Annexure-8) the condemner
attributed mala fides, bias and prejudice to
the High Court. He made false insinuations
that the Governor cancelled the previous
disciplinary proceeding against the condemner
on the ground that the same was vitiated as
the High Court had prejudged the matter and
the Government set aside the punishment on the
ground that three of the Honourable Judges
were biased and prejudiced against him. He
alleged that the disciplinary proceeding
involved the Government in heavy expenses on
account of the palpably incorrect views of the
High Court. He asserted that the order of
suspension as per Annexure-6 was mala fide.
He stated that he would produce more facts
relating to the mala fides of the High Court
before the Governor. He alleged that the High
Court did not gracefully accept the
Government’s order cancelling his demotion,
and the High Court resorted to a subterfuge to
counter-act the said decision of the
Government by taking a novel step, and that
the High Court’s action suffered from patent
mala fide. He stated that there was a turn of
event after return of the Chief Justice from
the Chief Justices’ Conference and that the
High Court did not accept Government’s
decision. gracefully and that the other Judges
had no independent judgment of their own, and
were influenced by the Chief Justice to take a
view, different from what they had
already
taken, to give a posting order to the
contemner, and that the High Court resorted to
a subterfuge. He wanted protection of the
Govern against the High Court which he
insinuates as an engine of oppression. He
characterised the High Court’s order of
suspension as mysterious and prayed that the
Government should post him directly under it."
We have no doubt that the Full Bench has correctly
summarized the effect of Annexure-8, and we have nothing
more, to add.
29 3
Annexures 13 and 14 should go together. Annexure 13 is a
letter by the appellant to the Registrar dated May 14, 1972
in which he told him that he had moved the Governor, Orissa
with a prayer to refer his matter to the Tribunal under the
provisions of the Disciplinary Proceedings Rules, 1951 and
also that he would take all other alternative steps
"administrative and judicial" to avoid this proceeding being
dealt with by the High Court and for this purpose would have
to consult some prominent Advocates of Calcutta and Delhi.
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Annexure-14 is a further letter dated May 22, 1972 to the
Registrar intimating him that he would not submit any
explanation to the charges framed until his representation
to the Governor was disposed of. In this letter he further
pointed out that it would not be possible for him to wait
for the permission of the High Court to leave headquarters,
because he may be called by his legal advisers at any moment
and in those circumstances he said "I hereby inform the
Honourable Court that I may be absent during the entire
period mentioned in my letter dated the 14th May, 1972 and
the Honourable Court may kindly approve of the same."
The effect of Annexares-13 and 14 has been summarised by the
Full Bench in these words :
"Thus, in Annexures-13 and 14, the contemner
exhibited a contemptuous defiance of the
Court’s order, by declaring that he would not
obey the order. and would leave the station
without waiting for permission from the High
Court, as his first consideration was to "go
out in connection with legal advice and filing
applications and appeals in the Supreme Court"
in matters-connocted with his suspension, and
to take all steps to avoid the proceeding
being dealt with by the High Court. These
passages depict, in unequivocal terms, that
the dispensation of justice by the Judges of
the High Court on its administrative side, is
most atrocious and vindictive and it is on
that ground. the contemner would not obey the
Court’s order, could not submit any explana-
tions, and would take all possible measures
before the Supreme Court, the Governor and the
Chief Minister not to surrender to the
jurisdiction of the High Court. His entire
attempt has been to present a lurid picture of
the administration of justice, by the High
Court."
In the context, we are not prepared to say that this summary
of the effect of Annexures 13 and 14 is far wrong.
Annexure 16.
That brings us to Annexure 16. It Is dated May 14, 1972 and
purports to be a representation made by the appellant direct
to the Governor without routing it through the High Court.
The following passages have been underlined by the Full
Bench as being grossly contemptuous.
"...... the High Court have already
contemplated in this departmental
proceedings, a very heavy punishment for the
petitioner."
294
"If on two such allegations, bias and
prejudice of the High Court was disclosed by
strongly pleading for demotion of the
petitioner, the multiple number of such
charges may naturally make the petitioner,
apprehensive of the result of the proceedings,
if conducted by the High Court."
"........ the High Court even without any
authority or jurisdiction in this regard and
on the face of the directions of the
Government in Political and Servoes Department
communicated in the Government’s Memo No.
3559-Gen., dated the 15th March 1958, have
placed the petitioner under suspension-"
"The High Court have also taken unusual move
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in placing the petitioner under suspension in
a ’contemplated proceeding’ "
". . . . the High Court on the administrative
side, is seriously prejudiced and biased
against him, and they act, as if the charges
stand established, requiring extreme punish-
ment and as such, justice, may not be meted
out to the petitioner by the High Court, if
they conduct this departmental inquiry."
"........ the petitioner considers it risky
to submit his explanation to the High Court."
"........ the High Court in-the best interest
of justice,should not enquire into these
charges."
A copy of the above representation was sent to
the Registrar and the following endorsement
appears thereon.
As the Honourable Court are likely to withhold
petitions this is submitted direct with copy
to the Honourable Court for information. The
Honourable Court may be pleased to send their
comments on this petition to the Governor."
The summary of the effect of Annexure-16 is
given by the Full Bench in para 70 of the
judgment which is as follows :
"In Annexure-16 the contemner has suggested
that the Court has already prejudged the
matter and has taken a previous decision to
impose a heavy punishment. Bias and prejudice
on the part of the Court were also alleged by
the contemner. He suggested that the Court is
not in a position to weigh the evidence. and
consider the materials on record and to impose
a sentence commensurate with his delinquency.
The action taken by the High Court has been
branded as unusual............."
"A copy of this Annexure 16 was sent to the
High Court with a contemptuous remark that
since the High Court was likely to withhold
the representation it was submitted direct to
the Governor. Not being satisfied with that,
he issued a further directive to the court to
send their comments on his representation to
the Governor.
295
The above summary of the effect of Annexure-16 is, in our
view, correct.
Annexure-20.
This annexure is the memo of appeal filed by the appellant
in the Supreme Court in Criminal Appeal No. 174 of 1972. The
appeal had been filed because the Division Bench had refused
to consider his preliminary objection with regard to the
maintainability of the present contempt proceedings. The
grievance before the Supreme Court was that the, Orissa High
Court had taken. six contempt proceedings against him and in
view. of what happened in some of those proceedings, the
appellant entertained apprehension that the court may impose
substantive punishment and may refuse bail or time to the
appellant for getting redress from the Supreme Court if the
present contempt-proceedings were also to go on before the
same High Court. In the first contempt proceeding though
the proceedings were dropped, Adverse comments were made
against his conduct thus depriving him of an opportunity to
go in appeal and have the adverse comments exnged. in one of
the other cases he says........ the appellant was brought
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down to the Court-hall, and the Honourable Judges convicted
and sentenced the appellant and without affording him an
opportunity to obtain stay of the sentence from this
Honourable Court, executed the sentence by administering
admonition in the, open court and sounding warning that, if
at any time such contumacious conduct of his was noticed, a
very serious view would be taken about punishment."
In the other contempt matter, he alleged, a Judge wanted to
add a new charge. The appellant objected to the same and
went in appeal to the Suprerac, Court. The appellant says
that when the appellant filed his appeal in this Court and
brought this fact to the notice of the Honourable Judges,,
they dropped the additional charge. In another proceeding,
he says, the Honourable Judges while dropping the proceeding
found out a very innocent and inconsequential mistake in the
sworn counter-affidavit of the appellant and on that account
ordered the filing of a criminal complaint for an offence
under section 199 of the I.P.C. In ground (1) the appellant
alleged that the appellant fears bias of the Honourable High
Court against him in view of the facts and circumstances
stated above.
The Full Bench in its judgment has considered each one of
them allegations in the appeal memo and shows how the
insinuations were false and how plain facts were distorted,
They are entirely right in ,ummarising these facts of
Annexure 20 in these words:
"Thus in Annexure-20 the contemner has, in
clearest terms, alleged bias and prejudice
against the High Court and its Chief Justice.
He has taken the plea that the court itself
has become disqualified to deal with the case-
In his view the Judges of this Court have
fallen from the path of rectitude, and are
vindictive, and have already decided to impose
substantive sentence and refuse bail, and they
are not in a position to mete out even-handed
justice.,
-522SCI/74
296
disrespectful fulminations of an angry insubordinate
officer, there is hardly any doubt that Annexures 8, 16 and
20 contain statements which are deliberately made to grossly
scandalize the High Court. The Judges of the High Court and
especially the Chief Justice are charged with mala fides,
improper motives, bias and prejudice. It is insinuated
that they are oppressing the appellant, have become
vindictive and are incapable of doing him justice. It is
also suggested that they do not administer justice
fearlessly because in one matter affecting the appellant,
they dropped a charge against him for fear of the Supreme
Court. All this, prima facie, amounts to gross
scandalization of the High Court.
The law applicable to this case is the law as contained in
the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 No. 17 of 1971. Section 2
defines "Contempt of Court", as either "civil contempt" or
"criminal contempt". Clause (c) defines "criminal contempt"
as follows :
(c) "criminal contempt" means the
publication (whether by words, spoken or
written, or by signs, or by visible repre-
sentations, or otherwise) of any matter or the
doing of any other act whatsoever which-
(i) scandalises or tends to scandalise, or
lowers or tends to lower the authority of, any
court; or
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(ii) prejudices, or interferes or tends to
interfere with, the due course of any judicial
proceeding; or
(iii) interferes or tends to interfere with,
or obstructs or tends to obstruct, the
administration of justice in any other
manner;"
It will be seen that the terminology used in the definition
is borrowed from the English law of Contempt and embodies
concepts which are familiar to that law which, by and large,
was applied in India. The expressions "scandalize",
"lowering the authority of the court", "interference",
"obstruction" and "administration of justice" have all gone
into the legal currency of our sub-continent and have to be
understood in the sense in which they have been so far
understood by our courts with the aid of the English law,
where necessary.
The first sub-clause generally deals with what is known as
the scandalization of the court discussed by Halsbury 3rd
Edition in Volume 8, page 7 at para 9 : "Scandalous attacks
upon Judges are punished by attachment or committal upon the
principle that they are, as against the public, not the
judge, an obstruction to public justice; and a libel on a
judge, in order to constitute a contempt of court, must have
been calculated to cause such an obstruction...... The
punishment is inflicted, not for the purpose of protecting
either the court as a whole, or the individual judges of the
court from a repetition of the attack, but of protecting the
public, and especially those who either voluntarily or by
compulsion are subject to the jurisdiction of the court,
from the mischief they will incur if the authority of the
tribunal is undermined or impaired." Sub-clause (1) embodies
the above concept and takes in cases when by the publication
or the fact the
29 7
administration. of justice is held to ridicule and contempt.
This is regarded as an "obstruction" of public justice
whereby the authority of the court is undermined. Sub-
clause (1) refers to one species of contempt of which
"obstruction" is an important element. Sub-clause (ii)
speaks of, interference with due course of judicial
proceedings and is directly connected with administration of
justice in its common acceptance.
While clauses (i) and (ii) deal with obstruction and
interference respectively in the particular way described
therein, clause (iii) is a residuary Provision by which any
other type of obstruction or interference with the
administration of justice is regarded as a criminal
contempt.
In other words, all the three sub-clauses referred to above
define contempt in terms of obstruction of or interference
with administration of justice. Broadly speaking our
statute, accepts what was laid down by the Privy Council and
other English authorities that proceedings in contempt are
always with reference to the administration of justice. It
is enough for our purpose to refer to Debi Prasad Sharma-v.
The Kin.g-Emperor(1) in which Lord Atkin delivering the
judgment of the Judicial Committee observed at page 223 as
follows :
"In 1899 this Board pronounced proceedings for this species
of contempt (scandalization) to be obsolete in this country’
though surviving in other parts of the Empire, but they
added that it is a weapon to be used sparingly and always
with reference to the administration of Justice : McLeod v.
St. Aubyn (1) [1899] A.C. 549. In In,re a Special Referewe
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from the Bahama Islands-[1893] A.C. 1-38) the test applied
by the, ve strong Board which heard the reference was
whether the words complain of were in the circumstances
calculated to obstruct or interfere with the course of
justice and the due administration of. the law. In Oueen v.
GraY-[1900](2) Q. B. 36 it was show that the offence of
scandalizing the, court itself was not obsolete in this
country. A very scandal us attack had been made on a fudge
for his judicial utterances while sitting in a criminalase
on circuit and it was with the foregoing opinions on record
that lord Russell of Killowen, C.J., adopting the expression
of Wilmot, C.J. in his opinion in Rex. v. Almon-(1765
Wilmot’s Notes of Opinions, 243 97 E.R. 94) ,which is the
source of much of the present law on the subject, spoke of
the article complained of as calculated to lower the
authority of the judge.
It is, therefore, clear that scandalization within the
meaning of subclause (1) must be in respect of the court or
the Judge with reference to admims tration of justice.
The contention of Mr. Sen on behalf of the appellant is
that, in the first place’, it must be remembered that the
publication or acts complained of are in the course of the
appellant challenging his suspension and holding of
disciplinary proceedings in an appeal or representation to
the Governor from the orders passed by the High Court. In
Anexure-20 he was challenging the order of the High Court
before
(1) 70 Indian Appeals, 216.
298
the Supreme Court. The appellant in his submission, bona
fide believed that he had a right to appeal and, in
pursuance of the right he thus claimed he had given
expression to his grievance or had otherwise acted, not with
a view to malign the court or in defiance of it, but with
the sole object of obtaining the reversal of the orders
passed by the High Court against him. In the second place,
Mr. Sen contended, the passages about which the complaint
was made did not amount to contempt of court since they did
not purport to criticize any judicial’ acts of the judges
sitting in the seat of justice. It may be that in some
places disrespectful references have been made to the Judges
which Mr. Sen assures us, he should have, never done. At
the same time, in his submission, criticism of
administrative acts of the High Court even in vilification
terms did not amount to contempt of court.
So far as the first part of the argument is concerned, the
same must be dismissed as unsubstantial because if, in fact
the language used amounts to contempt. of court it will
become punishable as criminal contempt. The right of appeal
does not give the right to commit contempt of court, nor can
it be used as a cover to bring the authority of the High
Court into disrespect and disregard. It has been held by
this Court in Jugal Kishore v. Sitamarhi Central Co-op.
Bank() that allegations of mala fides in the grounds of
appeal to the Joint Registrar of Cooperative Societies from
the Order of the Assistant Registrar would constitute gross
contempt.
A point of some substance is in the second part of Mr. Sen’s
argument and it will be necessary to decide in the present
case whether contemptuous imputations made with reference to
"the administrative acts" of the High Court do not amount to
contempt of Court.
The answer to the point raised by Mr. Sen will depend upon
whether the amputations referred to above do or do not
affect administration of Justice. That is the basis on
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which contempt is punished and must afford the necessary
test.
We have not been referred to any comprehensive definition of
the expression "administration of justice". But
historically, and in the minds of the people, administration
of justice is exclusively associated with the Courts of
justice constitutionally established. Such courts have been
established throughout the land by several statutes. The
Presiding Judge of a court embodies in himself the court,
and when engaged in the task of administering justice is
assisted by a complement of clerks and ministerial officers(
Whose duty it is to protect and maintain the records,
prepare the writs, serve the processes etc. The acts in
which they are engaged are acts in aid of administration of
justice by the Presiding Judge. The power of appointment of
clerks and ministerial officers involves administrative
control by the Presiding Judge over them and though such
control is described as administrative to distinguish it
from the duties of a Judge sitting in the seat of justice
such control is exercised by the Judge as a Judge, in the
course of judicial administration. Judicial administration
is an integrated function of the judge and cannot suffer any
dissection so far as maintenance of high standards of
rectitude in judicial administration is con-
(1) A.I.R. 1967 S.C. 14-94
299
cerned. The whole set up of a court is for the purpose of
administration of justice, and the control which the Judge,
exercises over his assistants has also the object of
maintaining the purity of administration of justice. These
observations apply to all courts of justice in the land
whether they are regarded as superior or inferior courts of
justice.
Courts of justice have, in accordance with their
constitutions. to perform multifarious functions for due
administration of ’justice. Any lapse from the strict
standards of rectitude in performing these functions is
bound to affect administration of justice which is a term of
wider import than mere adjudication of causes from the seat
of justice.
In a country which has a hierarchy of courts one above the
other, it is usual to find that the one which is above is
entrusted with disciplinary control over the one below it.
Such control is devised with a view to ensure that the lower
court functions properly in its judicial administration. A
Judge can foul judicial administration by misdemeanors while
engaged in the exercise of the functions of a Judge. It is
therefore as important for the superior court to be vigilant
about the conduct and behavior of the Subordinate Judge as a
Judge, as it is to administer the law, because both
functions are essential for administration of justice. The
Judge of the superior court in whom this disciplinary
control is vested functions as much as a Judge in such
matters as when he hears and disposes of cases before him.
The procedures may be different. The place where he sits
may be different. But the powers are exercised in both
instances in due course of judicial administration. If
superior courts neglect to discipline subordinate courts,
they will fail in an essential function of judicial
administration and bring the whole administration of justice
into contempt and disrepute. The mere function of
adjudication between parties is not the whole of
administration of justice for any court. It is important to
remember that disciplinary control is vested in the court
and not in a Judge as a private individual. Control,
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therefore, is a function as conducive to proper
administration of justice as laying down the law or doing
justice between the parties.
What is commonly described as an administrative function has
been, when vested in the High Court, consistently regarded
by the statutes as a function in the administration’ of
justice. Take for example the Letters Patent for the High
Court of Calcutta. Bombay and Madras. Clause 8 thereof
authorises and empowers the Chief Justice from time to time
as occasion may require "to appoint so many and such clerks
and other ministerial officers it shall be found necessary
for the administration of justice End the due execution of
all the powers and authorities granted and committed to the
said High Court by these Letters Patent." It is obvious that
this authority of the Chief Justice to appoint clerks and
ministerial officers for the administration of justice
implies an authority to control them in the interest of
administration of justice. This Controlling function which
is commonly described as an administrative function-is
designed with the primary object of securing administration
of justice. Therefore,
300
when the Chief Justice appoints ministerial officers and
assumes disciplinary control over them, that is a function
which though described a administrative is really in the
course of administration of justice., Similarly section 9
of the High Courts Act, 1861 while conferring on the High
Courts several types of jurisdictions and powers says-
that all such jurisdiction and powers are "for and in
relation to the administration of justice in the Presidency
for which it is established."- Section 106 of the Government
of India Act, 1915 similarly shows that the, several
jurisdictions of the High Court and all their powers and
authority are "in relation to the administration of justice
including power to appoint clerks and other ministerial
officers of the court." Section 223 of the Government of
India Act, 1935 preserves the jurisdictions of the. existing
High Courts and, the respective powers of the Judges thereof
in relation to the administration of justice in the court.
Section 224 of that Act declares that the High Court shall
have superintendence over all courts in India for the time
being subject to its appellate jurisdiction and this
superintendence, it is now settled, extends both to
administrative and judicial functions of the subordinate
courts. When we come to our constitution we find that
whereas Articles 225 and 227 preserve and to some extent
extend these powers in relation to administration of
justice, Article 235 vests in the High Court the control
over District Courts and Courts Subordinate thereto. In the
State of west Bengal v. Nripendra Nath Bagchi(1) this Court
has pointed out that control under Article 235 is control
over the conduct and discipline of the Judges. That is a
function which, as we have already seen, is undoubtedly
connected with administration of justice. The disciplinary
control over the misdemeanours of the subordinate judiciary
in their judicial administration is a function which the
High Court must exercise in the interest of administration
of justice. It is a function which is essential for the
administration of justice in the wide connotation it has
received and, therefore, when the High Court functions in a
disciplinary capacity, it only does so in furtherance of
administration of justice.
We thus reach the conclusion that the courts of justice in a
State from the highest to the lowest are by their
constitution entrusted with functions directly connected
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with the administration of justice, and it is the
expectation and confidence of all those who have or likely
to have business therein that the courts perform all their
functions on a high level. of rectitude without fear or
favour, affection or ill-will.
And it is this traditional confidence in the courts that
justice will be administered in them which is sought to be,
protected by proceedings in contempt. The object, as
already stated, is not to vindicate the Judge personally but
to protect the public against any undermining of their
accustomed confidence in the Judges’ authority. Wilmot C.J.
in his opinoin in the case of Rex v. Almon alreadly referred
to says : "The arraignment of the justice of the Judges, is
arraigning the King’s justice, it is an impeachment of his
wisdom and goodness in the choice of his Judges, and excites
in the minds of the people a general dissatisfaction with
all judicial determination, and indisposes their minds to
obey them; and whenever men’s allegiance to the laws is so
fundamen-
(1) [1966] (1) S.C.R. 771.
301
tally shaken, it is the most fatal and most dangerous
obstruction of justice, and in my opinion, calls out for a
more rapid and immediate redress than any other obstructing
whatsover; not for the sake of. the Judges, as private
individuals, but because they are the channels by which the
King’s justice is conveyed to the people. To be, impartial,
and to be universally thought so, are both absolutely
necessary for the giving justice that free, open, and
uninterrupted current, which it has, for many ages,’ found
all over this kingdom......... Further explaining what be
meant by the words "authority of the court", he observed
"the word "authority" is frequently used to express both the
right of declaring the law, which is properly called
jurisdiction, and of enforcing obedience to it, in which
sense it is equivalent to the word power : but by the word
"authority", I do not mean that coercive power of the
Judges, but the deference and respect which is paid to them.
and their Acts, from an opinion of their justice and
integrity."
Scandalization of the court is a species of contempt and may
take several forms. A common form is the vilification of
the Judge. When proceedings in contempt are taken for such
vilification the question which the court has to ask is
whether the vilification is of the Judge, as a Judge. See
Queen v. Gray(1) or it is the vilification of the Judge as
an individual. If the latter, the Judge, is left to his
private remedies and the court has no power to commit for
contempt. If the former, the court will proceed to exercise
the jurisdiction with scrupulous care and in cases which are
clear and beyond reasonable doubt. Secondly, the court will
have also to consider the degree of harm caused as affecting
administration of justice and, if it is slight and beneath
notice, courts will not punish for contempt. This salutary
practice, is adopted by section 13 of the Contempt of Courts
Act, 1971. The jurisdiction is not intended to uphold the
personal dignity of the Judges. That must rest on surer
foundations. Judges rely on their conduct itself to be its
own vindication.
But if the attack on the Judge functioning as a Judge
substantially affects administration of justice it becomes a
public mischief punishable for contempt, and it matters not
whether such an attack is based on what a judge is alleged
to have, done in the exercise of his administrative
responsibilities. A Judge’s functions may be divisible, but
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his integrity and authority are not divisible in the context
of administration of justice. An unwarranted attack on him
for corrupt administration is as potent in doing public harm
as an attack on his adjudicatory function.
The Full Bench has considered a very large number of cases
and come to the conclusion that there is no foundation. for
the view that an attack on the court in its exercise of
administrative functions does not amount to contempt. In
Brahma prakash Sharma and others v. The State of Uttar
pradesh(2) it is pointed out that the object of contempt
proceedings is not to afford protection to judges personally
from nations to which they may be exposed as individuals but
intended,as protection to the public those interest would be
very much affected,
(1) [1900] (2) Queen’s 13 36 at page 40.
(2 ) [1953] S.C.R. 1169.
302
if by the act or by the conduct of any party the authority
of the court is lowered and thee sense of confidence which
the people have in the administration of justice by it is
weakened. The case is no authority to the proposition put
forward by Mr. Sen. In Gobind Ram v.’State of Maharashtra(1)
some observations of Jagannadhadas, C.J. (as he then was)
in the State v. The Editors and Publishers of Eastern Times
and Prajatantra(2) were quoted by this Court with approval.
These observations are : "’A review of the cases in which a
contempt committed by way of scandalization of the court has
been taken notice of for punishment shows clearly that the
exercise of the punitive jurisdiction is confined to cases
of very grave and scurrilous attack on the court or on the
Judges in their judicial capacity. the ignoring of which
could only result encouraging a repetition of the same with
the sense of in unity which would thereby result in lowering
the prestige and authority of the court." Mr. Sen has
particularly emphasised the words "judicial capacity" and
argued that this only refers to the Judge functioning in the
seat of justice. It does not appear from the report of the
Orissa case that the High Court was in any way, concerned
with the alleged dichotomy between the Judge’s
administration functions and his ad judicatory functions.
"Judicial capacity" is an ambivalent term which means "
capacity of or proper to a Judge" and is capable of taking
in all functional capacities of a Judge whether
administrative, adjudicatory or any other, necessary for the
administration of justice. There is no sufficient warrant
to hold that the Orissa High Court used the words "judicial
capacity" with a view to exclude all other capacities of the
Judges except the capacity to adjudicate, nor for holding
that this Court approved the use of the expression as
limited to the. Judges’ adjudicatory function.
On the other hand, there is high. authority for the
proposition that vilificatory criticism of a Judge
functioning as a Judge even in purely administrative or non-
adjudicatory matters amounts to criminal contempt. The case
of Rex v. Almon already referred to is a case of this kind.
Almon published a pamphlet in which the Chief Justice and,
impliedly, all the Judges of the court of King’s Bench Were
accused of deliberately delaying or defeating the issue of
the process of Habeas corpus by introducing a new rule that
a petition praying for the issue of that process should be
accompanied by an affidavit. It was held that this
constituted contempt of court. The Chief Justice and the
Judges were not criticized for what they were doing in a
judicial proceeding from the "seat of justice" but for
making a rule which, ’in the opinion of the writer was
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deliberately designed to delay or defeat the process of
habeas corpus. Apparently. the rule had been made by the
court under its power to regulate proceedings in court and
not in any judicial proceeding between parties to a cause.
The rule Was Made Under the rule making function of the
court and not in exercise of any adjudicatory function as
narrowly interpreted now, and still it was held that the
court was scandalized and its authority lowered. In Mott
Lal Ghose and others(3) a strong special bench of five
Judges held that an imputation made against the Chief
Justice of the Calcutta High Court suggesting that he was
improperly motivated in constituting a packed bench
(1) [1971] 1.S.C.C. 740.
(2) A-I.R. 1952 orissa, 318.
(3) XLV-Calcutta 169.
303
to hear a particular class of appeals was held to amount to
contempt. Sanderson, C. J. observed at page 180 : "I have
no doubt that this article, read by itself, constitutes a
very serious reflection upon the administration of the
court, which everyone knows is in the hands of the Chief
Justice." Woodroffe, J. at page 199 observed : "The Court,
however, in such cases does not seek to vindicate any,
personal interests of the Judges, but the general
administration of justice, which is a public concern."
Mookerjee, J at page, 231 observed : "it seems to me
indisputably plain that the implication of the second
article, whether taken along with or independently of the
first, is that, at the instance of person$ interested in the
Calcutta Improvement Trust, the Chief Justice has
constituted a Special Bench to ensure a decision favorable
to the Trust in the appeals against the judgment of Mr.
Justice Greece." Proceeding further he held "an imputation
of this character constitutes a contempt of court." It was
the function of the Chief Justice as Chief Justice of the
Court to administratively form, front time to time, benches
for the disposal of the business of the court. To attribute
improper motives to him in the exercise of this function was
held to be a contempt because that was bound to undermine
the confidence of the people in the High Court and its
Judges in relation to administration of justice. Similarly,
in The state of Bombay v. Mr. P.(1)" "a scurrilous attack
on. the court receiver for alleged misbehavior in his
official duties and a charge against the Chief Justice and
the administrative judges for deliberately conniving at it
were held to constitute contempt. The same argument as is
now put forward was made in that case. (See para 14 of the
report), but was rejected in these words : "By making these
foul attacks upon the Judges, the respondent has tried to
create an apprehension in the mind of the public regarding
the integrity of these Judges and has done a wrong to the
public. He has attempted to shake the confidence of the
public in the Judges of this Court and in the justice that
is being administered by these judges of this Court." There
is no such thing as a denigration of a Judge function-wise.
This is brought out clearly in the judgment of the Judicial
Committee in Debi Prasad Sharma v. The King Emperor(2)
referred to earlier. In that case the appellant had
suggested falsely that the Chief Justice of the Allahabad
High Court had in his administrative capacity, issued a
circular to the Judicial Officers under his jurisdiction
enjoining on them to raise contributions to the warfares
which, it was said, would lower the prestige of the court in
the eyes of the people. In holding that the imputation did
not constitute contempt of court but at the most, a personal
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defamation of the Chief Justice in his individual capacity,
Lord Atkins said at page 224, "When the comment in question
in the present case is examined it is found that there is no
criticism of any judiciaries of the Chief Justice, or any
imputation on him for anything done or omitted to be done by
him in the- administration of justice. it can hardly be said
that there is any criticism of him in his administrative
capacity, for, as far as their Lordships have been informed,
the administrative control of the subordinate courts of the.
Province, whatever it is, is exercised, not by the Chief
Justice, but by the. court over, which he presides."
(1) A.I.R. 1959 Bombay 182.
(2) 70 Indian Appeals 216.
304
The words underlined above are important. In holding that
only ordinary remedies for defamation were open to the Chief
Justice, their Lordships had to ask the substantial
question, as suggested by Lord Watson during the course of
the arguments in Re : Special Reference from the Bahama
Islands(1) "whether the letter complained of referred to him
in his official capacity." With that case obviously in mind-
and the case was referred to earlier in the judgment-lord
Atkin showed in the words quoted above that the criticism
did not refer (i) to any judicial act, meaning thereby any
adjudicatory act and (ii) to any administrative act, because
the Chief Justice alone had no administrative control over
the subordinate courts but only the High Court as a whole.
The plain implication is that if the circular had been
alleged to have been issued by the Chief Justice under the
authority of the High- Court, then the imputation having the
effect of lowering the prestige and authority of the High
Court could conceivably have been regarded as contempt.
Their Lordships of the Privy Council are not known to waste
their words over matters not relevant to the issue. It was
absolutely necessary for their Lordships to eliminate the
possibility of the alleged action of the Chief Justice being
connected in any manner with any adjudicatory or
administrative function of the High Court by pointing out
that it did not refer to any official act in the
administration of justice or, as stated in Queen v. Gray
already refer-, red to, "the act of a Judge as a Judge", in
which case alone the imputation would have amounted to
scandalization of the court. The above authorities are
sufficient to show that there is no warrant for the narrow
view that the offence of scandalization of the court takes
place only when the imputation has reference to the
adjudicatory functions, of a Judge in the seat of justice.
We are unable, therefore, to accept the submission of Mr.
Sen on this aspect of the case.
We have already shown that the, imputations in Annexures 8,
16 and 20 have grossly, vilified the Hugh Court tending to
affect substantially administration of justice and,
therefore, the appellant was rightly convicted of the
offence of criminal contempt.
As regards the sentence, it is enough to say that the Full
Bench has considered the question at great length. There
were six contempt proceedings against the appellant and the
court had treated him generously. In two proceedings he was
let off with a fine. Even in the present case the Full
Bench was of the opinion that the maximum sentence under the
law was deserved by the appellant but imposed on him only a
sentence of simple imprisonment for two months. The
appellant, throughout, took a defiant attitude and did not
even think it necessary to offer an apology. Ordinarily we
would be most reluctant to interfere with the sentence-
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imposed by the High Court, but for the fact that we notice
that he has almost come to the end of his judicial career
and during the last few years has been gripped by a sort of
mania against the High Court which clouded his reason. We
think the object of punishment will be served by directing
him to pay
(1) [1893] A. C. 138 at 14.
30 5
a fine of Rs. 1,000/- or in default to suffer simple
imprisonment for 3. months in substitution of the sentence
inflicted by the High Court.
It remains now to point out that when dealing principally
with the contempt of the appellant, the court also thought
it fit to hear the: parties including the Advocate-General
on some subsidiary but important questions on the relative
position of the Government of Orissa and the High Court in
the matter of disciplinary control over Subordinate Judges.
It appears that the State Government. framed what are known
as the Orissa Civil Services (Classification and Control)
Rules, 1962 and they appear to apply to all Government
servants under the State. The Full Bench held that some of
the rules, in their application to the Subordinate judiciary
of the State, contravened Articles 235 which vested control
over, the Subordinate Judiciary in, the High Court. From
these findings the State of Orissa has come in appeal and
that appeal is numbered Criminal Appeal No. 77/1973 In our
opinion, the principal matter before the Full Bench was in,
relation to the contempt committed by the appellant. The
constitutional issue between the State Government and the
High Court came in only by way of a side-wind. In fact it
would appear from the judgment that the learned Advocate-
General had requested the court not to. express any opinion
on these constitutional matters, and the court also seems to
have thought that the constitutionality of the rules had’ no
relation to the commission of the contempt. However, the
court thought that the issue became relevant, especially, on
the question of sentence and hence applied its mind to the
Constitutionality of some of the rules. It has struck down
those rules which, in the opinion of the court, contravened
Article 235 in their application to the Subordinate
Judiciary. We have considered whether it is necessary for
us to dear with those questions here, but are inclined to
think that we should express no opinion on the
constitutionality of the impugned rules.
Accordingly, appeal No. 41 is dismissed with the
modification in, the sentence as suggested above and
criminal appeal No. 77 of 1973 is permitted to be withdrawn
without prejudice to the contentions raised by the State in
regard to the constitutionality of the rules struck down by
the High Court.
KRISHNA IYER, J. We have had the advantage of reading the
leading opinion of our learned brother, Palekar, J., and,
concurring as we do in the ultimate conclusion, to depart
from the’ option of silenceneeds a word of explanation.
Graver issues bearing on free speech raised in these
proceedings and the correct approach to be made to what in
substance is a criminal charge, bring to the fore our diver-
gence in legal reasoning and constitutional perspective
which we proceed to set out in a separate opinion.
The facts of the present case, fully laid bare in the
judgment of Palekar, J., are in a sense peculiar. The
contest is himself a senior district judge. The alleged
multiple contempt relates partly to (i) an administrative
act of the High Court preliminary to disciplinary
proceedings and is stated to be contained in a
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representation filed
306
by him before the Governor, under a rule which apparently
authorizes such appeals, against the suspension order of the
High Court, and (ii) averments in a special leave petition
filed by him in this Court, aggrieved by the refusal of the
High Court to decide a preliminary objection in these very
contempt proceedings on the judicial side. A: full Bench of
the High Court convicted the appellant for contempt, the
action itself having been initiated by an administrative
full court. The questions we are called upon to decide are
(a) whether criticism of an administrative act of the High
Court or of any court could at all amount to contempt of
court; (b) whether pejorative imputations about a court or
judge, however offensive, true or honestly held even if
contained in. an appeal to a higher court or in a remedial
representation to a correctional authority, constitute
contempt. The legal touchstone adopted by the High Court is
that any statement which in some manner may shake the
confidence of the community in a judge or in the judicial
system, is straightaway contempt, regardless of context or
purpose or degree of publication or absence of any clear
land present danger of disaffection or its being a bona fide
plea for orderly change in the judicature and its, process.
On the facts, we agree that the spirit of defiance,
extenuated partly by a sense of despair, is writ large in
the writings of the appellant but wish to warn ourselves
that his reported past violations should not prejudice a
judicial appraisal of his alleged present criminal
contempt. And the benefit of doubt, if any, belongs to the
condemner in this jurisdiction.
The dilemma of the law of contempt arises because of the
constitutional need to balance two great but occasionally
conflicting principles freedom of expression and fair and
fearless justice remembering the brooding presence of arts.
19(1) (a), 19(2), 129 and 215 of the Constitution.
In a sense, the Indian approach is a little different from
the English and its orientating on is more akin to American
jurisprudence, although there is much,that is common to all
the three. The pronouncement of Wilmot, C.J., posthumously
published, has influenced the law of contempt in the Unite d
States and the Commonwealth countries, but it is a moot
point whether we should still be bound to the regal moorings of th
e law in Rex v. Almon(1)
". . by our constitution the King is the
fountain of justice and .... he delegates the
power to the judges .... arraignment of the
justice of the judges is arraigning the King’s
justice. It is an impeachment of his wisdom
in the choice of his judges.... it excites
dissatisfaction with judicial determination
and indisposes the minds of people to obey
them". . . .
Maybe we are nearer the republican justification suggested
in the American system(2)
(1) Wilmot’s notes 243 (Wilmot ed. 1802 =97 ER 94. as
cited in Fox,Contempt of Court (1927).
(2) 18 U.S.C.A. 3691 (formerly 28 U. S. C, 386, 389.
30 7
"In this country, all courts derive their
authority from the people, and hold it in
trust for their security and benefit. In this
state, all judges are elected by the people,
and hold their authority, in a double, sense,
directly from them; the power they exercise is
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but the authority of the people themselves,
exercised through courts as their agents. It
is the authority and laws emanating from the
people, which the judges sit to exercise and
enforce. Contempt against these courts, the
administration of their laws, are insults
offered to the authority of the people
themselves, and not to the humble agents of
the law, whom they employ in the conduct of
their government."
This shift in legal philosophy will broaden the base of the
citizen’s right to criticize and render the judicial power
more socially valid. We are not subjects of a king but
citizens of a republic and a blanket ban through the
contempt power, stifling namely, Administration of justice,
thus criticism of a strategic institution, forbidding the
right to argue for reform of the judicial process and to
comment on the performance of the judicial personnel through
outspoken or marginally excessive criticism of the
instrumentalities of law. and justice, may be a tall order.
For, change through free speech is basic to our democracy,
and to prevent change through criticism is to petrify the
organs of democratic government. The judicial instrument is
no exception. To cite vintage rulings of English courts and
to bow to decisions of British Indian days as absolutes is
to ignore the law of all laws that the rule of law must keep
pace with the rule of life. To make our point, we cannot
resist quoting McWhinney(1),who wrote
"The dominant theme in American philosophy
of law today must be the concept of change-or
revolution-in law. In Mr. Justice Oliver
Wendell Hoimes’ own aphorism, it is revolting
to have no better reason for a rule of law
than that it was laid down in the time of
Henry IV. The prestige argument, from age
alone, that because a claimed legal rule has
lasted a certain length of time it must
automatically be valid and binding at the
present day, regardless of changes in basic
societal conditions and expectations, is no
longer very persuasive. According to the
basic teachings of the Legal Realist and
policy schools of law, society itself is in
continuing state of flux at the present day’;
and the positive law, therefore, if it is to
continue to be useful in the resolution of
contemporary major social conflicts and social
problems, must change in measure with the
society. What we have, therefore,
concomitantly with our conception of society
in revolution is a conception of law itself,
as being in a condition of flux, of movement.
On this view, law is not a frozen, static body
of rules but rules in a continuous process of
change and adaptation and the judge, at the
final appellate level anyway, is a part-
determinant part-of this dynamic process of
legal evolution."
Canadian Bar Review (Vol. 45) 1967, 582-583.
308
This approach must inform Indian law, including contempt
law.
It is very necessary to remember the legal transformation in
our Devalue system on the inauguration of the Constitution,
and the dogmas of the quiet past must change with the
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challenges of the stormy present. The great words of
Justice Homles uttered in a different context bear
repetition in this context :
"But when men have realized that time has
upset many fighting faiths, they may come to
believe even more than they believe the, very
foundations of their own conduct that the
ultimate good desired is better reached by
free trade in ideas-that the best test of
truth is the power of the thought to get
itself accepted in the competition of the
market, and that truth is the only ground upon
which their wishes safely can be carried out.
That, at any rate, is the theory of our
Constitution. It is an experiment, as all
life is an experiment. Every year, if not
every day, we have to wager our salvation upon
some prophecy based upon imperfect knowledge.
While that experiment is part of our system I
think that we should be eternally vigilant it
against attempts to check the expression of
opinions that we loathe and believe to be
fraught with death, unless they so imminently
threaten immediate interference with the
lawful and pressing purposes of the law that
an immediate check is required to save the
country."(1)
Before, stating the principles of law bearing on the facets
of contempt of court raised in this case we would like to
underscore the need to ,draw the lines clear enough to
create confidence in the people that this ancient and
inherent power, intended to preserve the faith of the public
in public justice, will not be so used as to provoke public
hostility as overtook the Star Chamber. A vague and
wandering jurisdiction with uncertain frontiers, a sensitive
and suspect power to punish vested in the prosecutor, a law
which makes it a crime to publish regardless of truth and
public good and permits a process of brevity conviction, may
unwittingly trendiness upon civil liberties and so the
special jurisdiction and jurisprudence bearing on contempt
power must be delineated with deliberation and operated with
serious circus section by the higher judicial echelons. So
it is that as the palladium ,of our freedoms, the Supreme
Court and the High Courts, must vigilantly protect free
speech even against judicial umbrage-a delicate but sacred
duty whose discharge demands tolerance and detachment of a
high order.
The present proceedings challenge, the projection of the
power to punish for contempt into administrative domains of
the Court and its extension to statements in remedial
proceedings. One recalls the observations of the American
Supreme Court:(2)
"Contempt of Court is the Proteus of the Legal World,.
assuming an almost infinite diversity of forms.
(1) The Suprem- Court and Civil Liberties by 03m 3nd K.
Fracknel-Published for the American Civil Liberties Union in
its 40th anniversaries year-Pornea Publications, Inc. New
York (1960)page 40,
(2) Moskovitz, Contempt of Injunctions, Criminal and Civil,
43 Colum. L. Rev. 780 (1943).
309
Considerations such as we have silhouetted led to the
enactment of the Contempt of Court Act, 1971, which makes
some restrictive departures from the traditional law and
implies some wholesome principles which serve as unspoken
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guidelines in this branch of law. Section 5 protects fair
comment on the merits of, cases finally decided, and s. 13
absolves from sentence all contempt which do not substan-
tially interfere or tend substantially to interfere with the
due course of justice. Statements which disparage a
subordinate judicial officer presiding over a court are not
contempt if made in good faith to the High Court or any
other lower Court to which the offended judge is
subordinate. The emphasis in s. 2(o), s. 3 and s. 13 to the
interference with the course of justice or obstruction of
the administration of justice or scandalising or lowering
the authority of the Court-not the judge-- highlights the
judicial area as entitled to inviolability. and suggests a
functional rather than a personal or ’institutional’
’immunity. The unique power to punish for contempt of
itself inheres in a Court qua Court in its essential role of
dispenser of public justice. The phraseological image
projected by the catenate of expressions like court, course
of justice administration of justice, civil and criminal
proceedings, judicial proceedings, merits of any case,
presiding officer of the Court, judicial proceeding before
a court sitting in chamber or in camera undertaking given to
a court, substantial interference with the due course of
justice, etc., occurring in the various sections of the
Act, the very conspirator of the statutory provisions and
the ethos and raison d’etre of the jurisdiction persuade us
to the conclusion that the text of the Act must take its
colour from the general context and confine the, contempt
power to the judicial-cum-para-judicial areas including
those administrative functions as are intimately associated
with the exercise of judicial power.
What then is a Court ? It is
"an agency of the sovereign created by it
directly or indirectly under its authority,
consisting of. one or more officers,
established and maintained for the purposes of
hearing and determining issues of law and fact
regarding legal rights and alleged violations
thereof, and of applying the sanctions of the
law, authorised to exercise its powers in due
course of law at times and places previously
determined by lawful authority. Isbill v..
Stovall, Rex. Civ. App. 92 S.W. 2d 1057,
1070."
"... An organised body with defined powers,
meeting at certain times and places for the,
hearing and decision of causes and other
matters brought before it, and aided in this,
its proper business, by its proper officers,
viz., attorneys and counsel to present and
manage the business, clerks to record and
attest its acts and decisions, and ministerial
officers to execute its commands, and secure
due order in its proceedings. Ex parte
Gardner,, 22 Nev. 280, 39 p. 570: Hertman v.
Hertman 104 Cr. 423, 208 P. 580, 582."(1).
In short the accent is on the functional personality which
is pivotal to securing justice to the people. Purely
administrative acts,
Black’s Law Dictionary, Fourth Edu. 425.
310
like recruitments, transfers and postings, routine
disciplinary action against subordinate staff, executive
acts in running the establishment and ministerial business
ancillary to office-keeping these are common to all
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departments in the public sector and merely because they
relate to the judicial wing of government cannot enjoy a
higher immunity from criticism. The quintessence of the
contempt power is protection of the public, not judicial
personnel. Excerpts from a few Anglo American authorities
will attest our standpoint
"The object of the discipline enforced by the
Court in, case of contempt of Court is not to
vindicate the dignity of the Court or the
person of the Judge, but to prevent undue
interference with the administration of
justice." [Bowen, L.J.Helmore v. Smith (1887)
35 Ch. D. 449, 455]
"The law of contempt is not made for the
protection of judges who may be sensitive to
the winds of public opinion. Judges are
supposed to be men of fortitude, able to
thrive in a hardy climate. "[Douglas, J.
Craig v. Harney [331 U.S. 367, 376 (1947)].
Judges as persons, or courts as institutions,
are entitled to no greater immunity from-
criticism than other persons or institutions.
Just because the holders of judicial office
are identified with the interests of justice
they may forget their common human frailties
and fallibilities. There have sometimes been
martinets upon the bench as there have also
been pompous wielders of authority who have
used the paraphernalia of power in support of
what they called their dignity. Therefore,
judges must I be kept mindful of their
limitations and their ultimate public
responsibility by a vigorous stream of
criticism expressed_with candor however
blunt., [Frankfurter, J., Bridges v.
California (314 U.S. 252, 289 (1941)]
If we accept this slant on judicialisation as a functional
limitation on the contempt jurisdiction we mutt exclude from
its ambit interference with purely administrative acts of
courts and non-judicial functions of judges. This dichotomy
is implicit in the decided cases although the twilight of
the law blurs the dividing lines now and then. To cast the
net wider is unreasonable and unwarranted by precedent. To
treat, as the High Court has done, "the image and
personality of the High Court as an integrated one and to
hold that every shadow that darkness it is contempt is to
forget life, reason and political progress. For, if a judge
has an integrated personality and his *He openly accuses him
of neglect or worse, she would certainly reduce the
confidence of the public in him as judge Will her
accusation be personalised contempt? If a judge expresses
on a platform crude views on moral lapses and is severely
criticized in public for it, it will undoubtedly debunk him
as a judge. Will such censure be branded contempt?
311
As early as 1892, the Privy Council in The matter of a
Special Reference from the Bahama Islands() bad to upset a
sentence of indefinite imprisonment imposed by the Chief
Justice of Bahmas on one Mr. Moseley for two ’letters to the
editor’ fun of snub and sarcasm about Yelverton, Esq., Chief
Justice. In these there was cynical reference to the Chief
Justice’s incompetence and imprudence, couched in stinging
satire. The Judicial Committee held :
"(a) That the letter signed "Colonist" in The
Nassau Guardian though it might have been made
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the subject of proceedings for libel was not,
in the circumstances, calculated to obstruct
or interfere with the course of justice or the
due administration of the law, and therefore
did not constitute a contempt of Court."
The Attorney-General struck a sound note when
in the course of the arguments he summed up
the law thus
"A libel upon a judge, holding him up to
contempt and ridicule in his character as a
judge, so as to lower him in the estimation of
the public amongst whom be exercises office is
a contempt of court." (emphasis supplied)
Lord Atkin, in the celebrated case of Debi Prasad Sharma v.
The King-Emperor(2) where the printer, publisher and editor
of the: Hindustan Times were found guilty of contempt by the
Allahabad High Court for criticising the Chief Justice by
falsely imputing to him a circular communication to the
subordinate judiciary to raise collections for the war fund,
set asida the conviction holding that the proceedings in
contempt were misconceived, The learned Law Lord observed
"When the comment in question in the present
case is examined it is found that there is no
criticism of any judicial act of the Chief
Justice, or any imptitation on him for any-
thing done or omitted to be done by him in the
administration of justice. It can hardly be
said that there is any criticism of him in his
administrative capacity, for, as far as their
Lordships have been informed, the
administrative control of the subordinate
courts of’ the Province, whatever is, is
exercised, not by the Chief Justice, but by
the court over which he presides. The
appellants are not charged with saying
anything in contempt of the subordinate courts
or the administration of justice by them. In
truth, the, Chief Justice is alleged, unruly,
as Is now admitted, to have committed an ill-
advised act in writing to his subordinate,
judges asking (as the news item says),
enjoining (as the comment says) them to
collect fog the War Fund. If the facts were
as alleged they admitted, of criticism. No
doubt it is galling for any judicial personato
be criticised publicly as having done
something outsidethis judicial
proceedings which was ill-advised or
indiscreet.But judicial personages can
afford not to be too sensitive.simple
denial in public
(1) [1893] A.C. 139,.149.
(2) (1942) 70 I.A. 216.
8-522SCI)74
31 2
of the alleged request would at once have
allayed the trouble. If a judge is defamed in
such a way as not to affect the administration
of justice he has the ordinary remedies for
defamation if he should feel impelled to use
them."
The whole emphasis and ratio of the decision consists in the
impugned editorial not being an attack on the administration
of justice and, therefore, not amounting to contempt of
court. The learned Additional Solicitor General, however,
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stressed the significance of the passing observation made in
the judgment that the administrative control of the
subordinate judiciary vested in the whole court and not only
in the Chief Justice, and argued that by implication their
Lordships must be deemed to have regarded animadversion on
even acts of administrative control as potential prey to the
contempt law. An obscure reference to the Chief Justice not
being even the exclusive administrative authority over the
lower judiciary, meant perhaps to bring into bold relief the
irrelevance of the criticism as reflecting even on the
executive functions of the Chief Justice, cannot be
considered to reach a reverse result, ignoring the setting
and the thrust of the whole dictum.
A Division Bench of the Kerala High Court, in Kaviath
Damodaran v. Induchoodan(1), has relied on this Privy
Council ruling for the proposition that administrative acts
of the court-in that case the transfer of a Magistrate
criticised as promoted by extraneous pressure-was not a fit
subject for punitive action. (In that case, of course, the
contemnor was convicted for another publication). The deep
concern of the law of contempt is to inhibit sullying essays
on the administration of justice in which the public have a
vital interest and not to warn off or victimise criticisms,
just or unjust, of judges as citizens, administrators, non-
judicial authorities, etc.
K.L. Gauba’S(2) case was naturally pressed into service
at the Bar against the contemnor but such an extreme case of
wild and vicious attacks on the Chief Justice rarely serves
in the search for any abiding principle in an excited
setting. That ruling reminds us that, whatever the
provocation, a Judge by reason of his office, has to halt at
the gates of controversy but as enlightenment spreads and
public opinion ripens this judicial self-abbegation will’ be
appreciated better. and not "embolden the licentious to
trample upon everything sacred in society and to overthrow
those institutions which ’have hitherto been deemed the best
guardians of civil liberty." Again, while Young, C.J., in
that case rules out the tenability of truth as a valid
defence against contempt, action, we observe, not without
pertinence in the constitutional context of restrictions on
free expression having to be reasonable, that in most of the
reported cases courts have hastened to hold the imputations
false before proceeding to punish. Contempt is no cover for
a guilty judge to get away with it but a shield against
attacks on public. justice. Gauba’s case, on the facts, was
a mud-slinging episode on the judicial target as such-and
the conviction accords with the policy of the law we have
set out.
(1) A.I.R. 1961 Kerala 321.
(2) I.L.R. [1942] Lah. 411, 419.
313
A Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court, in Rex. v. D.
S. Nayyar,(1) had to deal with a representation by a
litigant against a magistrate with reference to a case
adversely decided, and Kidwai, J. cleared the confused
ground right in the beginning by observing :
"The first thing to be remembered is that
Courts are not concerned with contempt of any
authority except Courts of law in the exercise
of their judicial functions. Thus, any
speech, writing or act which does not have
the, effect of interfering with the exercise
of their judicial functions by the Courts
cannot be the subject of proceedings in
contempt. In India very often the same-
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officers exercise executive. as well as
judicial functions. Sometimes it becomes
difficult to draw a distinction between their
two capacities but nevertheless a distinction
must be drawn and it is only if the criticism
is of judicial acts that action by way
of proceedings in contempt may be taken."-
A letter to the President of the Congress party complaining
about the appointment of. a judicial officer who was the
brothirin law of the, Private Secretary of a ’Minister
(belonging to that party) and of the transfer of cases to
his Court where in Congressmen were involved, was sought to
be punished as contempt of court. Kidwai, J, made the
following useful remarks exonerating the contemnor :
"In this passage also the attack is on the
appointment of the judicial officer and the
transfer of, cases to him but there is no
attack upon the officer himself. Both these
attacks are upon the system and not upon any
Magistrate in respect of the performance by
him of his judicial functions. They wish to
see, laid down a salutary principle by which
Justice should not only be done but should
also-appear to be done. There is no contempt
of Court in this-rather it is an endeavor to
free Courts from all extraneous shackles and
proceedings to contempt are wholly unc
alled for
’
The Judicial Committee in In re. S. B. Sarbadhicary (2)
considered the misconduct of a barrister for publishing an
article where he cast reflections upon judges of the
Allahabad, High Court. The merits of the case apart, the
Judicial Committee emphasized the judicial capacity of the
judges which attracted the contempt jurisdiction. Sir
Andrew Seoble observed :
"There is no doubt that the article in
question was a libel reflecting not only upon
Richards J.. but other judges of the High
Court in their judicial capacity and in
reference to their conduct in the discharge of
their public duties." (emphasis added)
"The public duty" in their "judicial capacity" was obviously
in contradistinction to merely personal activities or
administrative function It is not as if a judge doing some
non-judicial public duty is protected from criticism in
which case, any action by him as of Law or Vice-chancellor
in a University or as Acting Governor or President
(1)A.I.R.1950 All. 549 ,551,555.
(2) (1906) 34 XX I A. 14.
314
or Member of the Law or Finance Commission would also be
punishable, as contempt. The basic public duty of a judge
in his judicial capacity is to dispense public justice in
court and anyone who obstructs or interferes in this area
does so at his peril. Likewise, personal behaviour of
judicial personnel, if criticized severely or even
sinisterly, cannot be countered by the weapon of contempt of
court, for to use the language of Mukherjee, J. in Brahma
Prakash Sharma v. State of Uttar Pradesh,(1) "the object of
contempt proceedings is not to afford protection to Judges
personally from imputations to which they may be exposed as
individuals" (emphasis added). Otherwise, a grocer who sues
a judge for price of goods with an imputation that the
defendant has falsely and maliciously refused to honour the
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claim, or a servant of a judge who makes personal
allegations of misconduct against his master may be hauled
up for contempt. This is no amulet worn by judges for all
purposes. "The punishment is inflicted not for the, purpose
of protecting either the Court as a whole or the individual
judges of the Court from a repetition of the attack, but of
protecting the public, and especially those who either
voluntarily or by compulsion are subject to the jurisdiction
of the Court, from the mischief they will incur if the
authority of the Tribunal is undermined or impaired." (Vide
para 9, Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd Edn. Vol. VIII).
Indeed, if we peer through the mists of English Judicial
history, Courts of record were not qua such courts, acting
in any administrative capacities. How then could contempt
action, going by genesis, be warranted purely administrative
matters of courts.
Of course, there have ’been cases sounding a different note.
In State v.H. Nagamani, (2) one Mr. Nagamani, an impetuous
I.A.S. officer, wrote a letter making critical I remarks
couched in disrespectful and improper language about the
inspection report of his court by a Judge of the High Court
of Patna. However, Mr. Nagamani tendered an unqualified
apology and the court discharged the rule for contempt since
in their view the contempt was purged by the apology. Of
course, there was no need to consider in detail whether the
letter reflecting upon the Judge who held the inspection was
contempt; it Was treated as such and the apology accepted.
And the High Court’s inspection of the judicial work of the
sub-ordinate judiciary is a judicial function or is at least
para-judicial. The Allahabad High Court punished the late
Shri C. Y. Chintamani and, Shri K D. Malaviya for publishing
a criticism to- the effect that comparatively undeserving
lawyers were being frequently raised to the Bench. The
Court held them guilty of contempt holding the criticism of
the judges as a vicious reflection and a case of Contempt.
[sea In the matter of an Advocate of Allahabad(3),
Borderline cases draw up to the pneumbra of law and cannot
light up dark comers.
The learned Additional Solicitor General, in an endeavour to
expand the meaning of "administration of justice" so to rope
in criticisms of executive acts of judges, drew out
attention to arts. ’225, 227 and 235, and the provisions of
earlier Government of India Acts (c.f. sec. 224(1) 1935 Act)
which vest the Power to appoint the staff and do
(1) [1953] S.C.R, 1169.
(2) A.I.R. 1959 Pat. 373
(3) A.I.R. 1935 AU. 1.
315
other incidental management functions, in the High Court as
part of the administration of justice. Several High Court
Acts clothe Chief Justices with administrative powers and
Civil Courts Acts and Letters Patents charge judges with
administrative duties the,, goal being effective
administration of justice. If the appointment of clerks is
part of the administration of justice, denunciation of the
judges in these acts interferes with the administration of
justice, liable to be visited with punishment. This means
that if a judge in charge of appointments chooses relations
or unqualified men or takes other consideration, the public
must hold its tongue on pain of contempt. The paramount but
restrictive jurisdiction to protect the public against
substantial interference with the stream of justice cannot
be polluted or diffused into an intimidator power for the
judges to strike at adverse comments on administrative,
legislative (as under arts. 225, 226 and 227) and extra-
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judicial acts. Commonsense and principle can certainly
accept a valid administrative area so closely integrated
with court work as to be stamped with judicial character
such as constitution of benches, transfer of cases, issue of
administrative directions regarding submission of findings
or disposal of cases by subordinate courts, supervision of
judicial work- of subordinate courts and the like. Not
everything covered by art. 225, 227 and 235 will be of this
texture. To overkill is to undermine-in the long run.
We may now sum up. Judges and Courts have diverse duties.
But functionally, historically and jurisprudentially, the
value which is dear to the community and the function which
deserves to be cordoned off from public molestation, is
judicial. Vicious criticism of ’personal and administrative
acts of judges may indirectly mar their image and weaken the
confidence of the public in the judiciary but the
countervailing good, not merely of free speech but also of
greater faith generated by exposure to the acting light of
bona fide, even if marginally overzealous, criticism cannot
be overlooked. Justice is no cloistered virtue.
The first part of the present case directly raises the
question whether statements made in an appeal to the
Governor against an order of the High Court on the
administrative side attracts the contempt law. To our mind
the answer arises from another question. Is the suspension
of the District Judge so woven into and integrally connected
with the administration of justice that it can be regarded
as not purely an administrative act but a para-judicial
function ? The answer must, on the facts here, be in the
affirmative. "he appeal was against the suspension which
was a preliminary to contemplated disciplinary action. What
was that action about ? Against the appellant in his
judicial capacity, for acts of judicial misconduct. The
control was. therefore, judicial and. hence the unbridled
attack on the High Court for the step was punishable as
contempt. A large margin must be allowed for allegations in
remedial representations but extravagance forfeits’ the
protection of good faith. In this case reckless excess has
vitiated what otherwise could have been legitimate grievance
at least in one flagrant instance, the others being less
clear. One of the
316
grounds for taking disciplinary action’ was based on the
disposal of a civil appeal by the contemnor as Additional
District Judge. lie heard it, delivered judgment dismissing
the appeal signed the order sheet and judgment and sealed
the judgment. Later in the day, the contemnor scored off
his signatures in the order sheet and judgment, and returned
the record to the principal District Judge for disposal
falsely stating that the judgment had not been delivered.
The High took the view that this action was without
jurisdiction and revealed utter disregard of truth and
procedure deserving disciplinary action. Obviously, the
impugned conduct of the contemnor was qua judge and the evil
criticism was of a supervisory act of the High Court and the
critic would-and should-necessarily ’court contempt action.
And in his memorandum of appeal the contemnor used
expressions like ’mala-fides’ and ’subterfuge’ without good
faith, and in such a case no shelter can be sought in the
alibi of ’administrative act.’
The second part of the charge relates to objectionable
statements in the special leave petition to this Court.
Ordinarily they must be out of bounds for, the contempt
power; for, fearless seeking of justice will otherwise be
stifled.
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In State’ of Uttar Pradesh v. Shyam Sunder Lal (1) a
complaint about the conduct of a judicial officer in a
petition to the Prime Minister was held not to constitute
contempt. The representation was forwarded by the Prime
Minister’s office to the Chief Secretary from whom it
reached the District Magistrate. Certainly there was there-
fore sufficient, publication in the law of libel but the
Court held
"A letter sent to the Prime Minister and not
intended to be broadcast to the public or any
section of the public cannot create an
apprehension in the mind of public ....
regarding the integrity, ability or fairness
of the judge-"
Similarly, in Rex.. v. R. S. Nayyar, "(2) the court
considered a representation made to the Premier of the State
about a judicial officer and also to the President of the
All India Congress Committee. The Court took the view that
such complaints may be addressed to the Premier about
judicial officers since Government had to consider under the
then rules the conduct of judicial personnel. "If these
complaints are genuine and are made in a proper manner with
the object of obtaining redress, and are not made mala fide
with a view either to exert pressure upon the Court in the
exercise of its judicial functions or to diminish the
authority of the Court by lvilifying it, it would not be in
furtherance of justice to stifle them by means of summary
action for contempt, but rather the reverse" _(emphasis
added). A pregnant observation made by the Court deserves
mention
"It would indeed be extraordinary if the law
should provide a remedy-the conduct of eve’ a
member of the highest Judicial Tribunal in the
exercise of his judicial office may be the
subject of enquiry with a view to see whether
he is fit to continue to hold that office-and
yet no one should be able to initiate
proceedings for an enquiry by a complaint
(1) A.I.R. 1954 All 308.
(2) A.I.R. 1950 All. 549: 554.
317
to the appropriate authority by reason of a
fear of being punished for contempt, and I can
find no justification for this view."
At this stage it must be noticed that in the State of Madhya
Pradesh v. Ravi Shanker(1) this Court ruled that aspersions
of a serious nature made against a Magistrate in a transfer
petition could be punishable as a contempt if made without
good faith. However, in Govind Ram v. State of
Maharashtra,(2) this Court reviewed the decisions on the
point and ruled that if in the garb of a transfer
application scurrilous attacks were made on a court imputing
improper motives to the Judge there may still be contempt of
court, although the court referred with approval to the
ruling in Swarnamayi Panigrahi v. B. Nayak(3) that a
latitudinarian approach was permissible in transfer
applications. The core of the pronouncement is that
permission remedial process like a transfer application
cannot be a mask to malign a judge, a certain generosity or
indulgence is justified in evaluating the allegations
against the judge. Eventually, Grover J., held that the
allegations made in the proceeding in question were not
sufficiently serious to constitute contempt. A liberal
margin is permissible in such cases but batting within the
crease and observing the rules of the game are still
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necessary. Irrelevant or unvarnished imputations under the
pretext of grounds of appeal amount to foul play and
perversion of legal process. Here, the author, a senior
judicial officer who professionally weighs his thoughts and
words, has no justification for the immoderate abuse he has
resorted to. In this sector even truth is no defence, as in
the case of criminal insult-in the latter because it May
Produce violent breaches and is forbidden in the name of
public peace, and in the former because it may demoralise,
the community about courts and is forbidden in the interests
of public justice as contempt of court.
Even so, if judges have frailities- after all they are
human-they need to be corrected by independent criticism.
If the judicature has serious shortcomings which demand
systemic correction through socially-oriented reforms
initiated through constructive criticism, the contempt power
should not be an interdict. AR this, far from undermining
the confidence of the public in courts, enhances it and, in
the last analysis, cannot be recessed by indiscriminate
resort to contempt power. Even bodies like the Law
Commission or the’ Law Institute and researchers, legal and
sociological may run risks because their professional work
sometimes involves unpastoral criticism of judges, judicial
processes and the system itself and thus hover perilously
around the periphery of the law it widely construed.
Creative legal journalism and activist statesmanship for
judicial reform cannot be jeopardised by an undefined
apprehension of contempt action.
Even in England a refreshingly pro-free-speech approach has
been latterly adopted. Any episode in the
administration of justice may be publicly or privately criti
cised, provided that the criticism is fair- and
(1) (1959) S.C.R. 1367.
(2) [1972] 1 S.C.C. 740,
(3) A.I.R. 1959 Orissa 89.
318
temperate and made in good faith. Lord Denning, in the
famous Quintin Hogg case() laid down remarkable guidelines
in the matter of, actions for contempt. The learned Law
Lord said :
"It is a jurisdiction which undoubtedly
belongs to us but which we will most sparingly
exercise; more particularly as we ourselves
have an interest in the matter.
Let me say at once that we will never use this
jurisdiction as a means to uphold our own
dignity. That must rest on surer foundations.
Nor will we use it to suppress those who speak
against us. We do not fear criticism, nor do
we resent it. For there is something far more
important at stake. It is no less than
freedom of speech itself. It is the right of
every man, in Parliament or out of it, in the
Press or over the broadcast, to make fair
comment, even outspoken comment, on matters of
public interest. Those who comment can deal
faithfully with all that is, done in a court
of justice. They can say that we are
mistaken, and our decisions erroneous, whether
they are subject to appeal or not. All we
would ask is that those who criticise us will
remember that, from the nature of our office,
we cannot reply to their criticisms We cannot
enter into public controversy. Still less
into political controversy. We must rely on
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our conduct itself to be its own vindication.
Exposed as we are to the winds of criticism,
nothing which is said by this person or that,
nothing which is written by this person or
that, nothing which is written by this pen or
that will deter us from doing what we believe
is right; nor, I would add, from saying what
the occasion requires, provided that it is
pertinent to the matter in hand. Silence is
not an option when things are ill done."
This Court has held that the law of contempt is valid
notwithstanding art. 19(1). The Contention was persisted in
C. K. Daphtay v. O. P. Gupta. (2) This Court came to the
conclusion that the existing law of contempt imposes
reasonable restrictions within the meaning or art. 19(2).
"Apart from this, the ’Constitution makes this Court a
gudian of fundamental rights conferred by the Constitution
and it would not desire to enforce any law which imposes
unreasonable restrictions on the precious right of freedom
of speech and expression guaranteed by the Constitution."
(Sikri C.J.)
The Court being the guardian of people’s rights, it has been
held repeatedly that the contempt jurisdiction should be
exercised "with, scrupulous care and only when the cage is
clear and beyond reasonable doubt. (vide R. v. Gray) (s)
(1) (1968) 2 W.L.R. 1204 :1206-07.
(2) All.R. 1971 S.C. 1132-1141, Para 52.
(3) [1900] 2 O.B. 36.
319
The policy directive can be gleaned from the ruling in
Special Reference No. 1 of 1964(1) where Gajendragadkar,
C.J., speaking for the Court, observed :
"We ought never to forget that the power to
punish for contempt large as it is, must
always be exercised cautiously wisely, and
with circumspection. Frequent or
indiscriminate use of this power in anger or
irritation would not help to sustain the
dignity or status of the court, but may
sometimes affect it adversely. Wise Judges
never forget that the best way to sustain the
dignity and status of their office is to
deserve respect from the public at large by
the quality of their judgments, the
fearlessness, fairness and objectivity of
their approach, and by the restraint, dignity
and decorum which they observe in their
judicial conduct."
If judges decay the contempt power will not save them and so
the other side of the coin is that judges, like Caesar’s
wife, must be above suspicion.
To wind up, the key word is "justice", not "judge"; the key-
note thought is unobstructed public justice, not the self-
defence of a judge; the corner-stone of the contempt law is
the-accommodation of two constitutional values-the right of
free speech and the right to independent justice. The
ignition of contempt action should be substantial land mala
fide interference with fearless judicial action, not fair
comment or trivial reflections on the judicial process and
personnel.
We have sought to set our legal sights in line with the now
constitutional order and endeavoured so to draw the grey
contours of the contempt law that it fulfils its high
purpose but the more. We have tried to avoid subjectivism
in the law, recognising by a re-statement, the truth that
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"the great tides and currents which engulf the rest of men
do not turn aside in their course and pass the judges by.
(2) "
The facts of the present case disclose that an incorrigible
contemnor, who had made it almost his latter-,day
professional occupation to cross the High Courts path, has
come to this Court in appeal. He has been reckless,
persistent and guilty of undermining the High Court’s
authority in his intemperate averments in both petitions.
But having regard to the fact that he is a senior judicial
officer who has at some stage in his career displayed zeal
and industry and is now in the
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 413 ; 501.
(2) Benjamin N. Cardozo-The Nature of the Judicial Process-
New Haven : Yale University Press-Page 163.
320
sombre evening of an official career, a punishment short of
imprisonment would have met the ends of justice and inspired
in the public mind confidence in the justice administration
by showing that even delinquent judges will be punished if
they play with or pervert the due course of justice, as the
contemnor here has done. A heavy hand is wasted severity
where a lighter sentence may serve as well. A fine of Rs.
1000/- with three months’ imprisonment in default of payment
will meet the ends of justice and we impose this sentence in
substitution of the infliction of imprisonment by the High
Court. With. this modification Civil Appeal No.. 41 of 1973
is dismissed. On the appeal by the State the course adopted
in the leading judgment of Palekar J. has our concurrence.
Appeal No. 41 dismissed.
P.B.R. Appeal No. 77 allowed to be withdrawn.
3 2 1