Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DR. JATISH CHANDRA GHOSH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARI SADHAN MUKHERJEE AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/01/1961
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 613 1961 SCR (3) 486
ACT:
State Legislature-Member, Powers and Privileges of-
Publication of questions disallowed by Speaker-Prosecution
for defamation -Immunity-Constitution of India, Art. 194-
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (XLV of 1860), ss. 499, 500.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, who was an elected member of the West Bengal
Legislative Assembly, gave notice of his intention to put
certain questions in the Assembly and on those questions
being disallowed by the Speaker published them in a journal
called Janamat of Ghatal, his own constituency. The first
respondent who was then the Sub-Divisional Magistrate of
Ghatal and whose conduct was the subject-matter of some of
those questions, filed a complaint against the appellant and
two others, the editor and the printer and publisher of the
janamat, under ss. 500 and 501 of the Indian Penal Code.
The appellant pleaded privilege and immunity under Art. 194
of the Constitution as a bar-to criminal prosecution. The
trial Magistrate as also the High Court found against him.
On appeal by special leave it was claimed on his behalf that
he had an absolute privilege under Art. 194 of the
Constitution to publish the disallowed questions and could
not be prosecuted therefor.
Held, that the claim of immunity under Art. 194 of the
Constitution must be negatived.
Clause (1) of Art. 194 had no application since the matter
was clearly outside the scope of that clause. Clause (2) of
that Article was also inapplicable since it was not the case
of the appellant that the publication was under the
authority of the Legislative Assembly and it could not also
be said that it came within the expression " anything said
or any vote given " in that clause.
The publication of a disallowed question by a member of the
Assembly does not come within the powers, privileges and
immunities enjoyed by a member of the House of Commons and,
consequently, cl. (3) of Art. 194 also cannot be of any
help to the appellant. The immunity enjoyed by a member of
the House of Commons is clearly confined to speeches made in
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Parliament and does not extend to the publication of the
debate outside. If he publishes his speech, made in the
House, separately from the rest of the proceedings of the
House, he is liable for defamation, in case.it is
defamatory.
Abingdon’s case, Espinasse’s Reports, Nisi Prius 1793-1810,
228 and Creevey’s case, I Maule and Selwyn’s Reports, King’s
Bench, 1813-1817, 273, referred to.
487
There is no absolute privilege attaching to the publication
of extracts from the proceedings in the House of Commons and
a member, who has absolute privilege in respect of his
speech in) the House itself, can claim only a qualified
privilege in respect of it if he causes the same to be
published in the public press.
Quaere: Whether publication of parliamentary proceedings,
not authorised by the House, stands on the same footing as
the publication of proceedings in a court of law.
Wason v. Walter, (1868-69) L.R. 4 Q.B. 73, referred to.
M. S. M. Sharma v. Sri Krishna Sinha, [1959] SUPP. 1
S.C.R. 806, distinguished.
Dr. Suresh Chandra Banerjee v. Punit Goala, (1951) 55
C.W.N. 745, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 65 of
1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 11, 1956, of the Calcutta High Court in Criminal
Revision No. 1584 of 1955.
N. C. Chatterjee, Arun Kumar Dutta and D. N. Mukherjee,
for the appellant.
K.B. Bagchi and S.N. Mukherjee, for the respondents.
1961. January 16. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SINHA, C.J.-This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment and order of the High Court of Judicature at
Calcutta, dated April 11, 1956, whereby the appellant’s
claim of absolute privilege as a member of the Bengal
Legislative Assembly was rejected and the prosecution
launched against him under s. 500, Indian Penal Code, was
allowed to proceed.
The facts of this case are not in doubt or dispute and may
shortly be stated as follows. The appellant is a citizen of
India and an elected member of the West Bengal Legislative
Assembly. He is also a medical practitioner at Ghatal in
the Midnapore District of West Bengal. In January, 1954,
the appellant gave notice of his intention to ask certain
questions in the Assembly. Those questions were disallowed
in accordance with the rules of procedure for the conduct of
business of the Assembly. In February, 1954, the appellant
was informed that the questions proposed by him had been
disallowed. The appellant published
488
the questions that had been disallowed in a local journal
called Janamat, in its issue of February 28, 1955. In July,
1955, the first respondent, whose conduct formed the
subject-matter of the questions and who was then functioning
as a Sub-divisional Magistrate, filed a complaint against
the appellant and two others, the editor, and the printer
and publisher respectively of the journal aforesaid. The
petition of complaint alleged that the appellant had made
and published scandalous imputations against him intending
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them to be read by members of the public, that those
imputations were false and unfounded and had been made with
the definite intention of harming or with the knowledge or
having reason to believe that they would harm the reputation
of the complainant and that the complainant felt greatly
aggrieved and harmed in mind and reputation. He also
alleged that being a Government servant, the, complainant
had to obtain the necessary permission from the Government
for instituting legal proceedings for the vindication of his
character as a public servant and that accounted for the
delay in filing the petition of complaint. The petition of
complaint charged the appellant with an offence under s. 500
of the Indian Penal Code and the second and third accused,
who have been cited as respondents 2 and 3 in this Court,
under s. 501 of the Indian Penal Code. After several
adjournments, the petitioner raised, by way of preliminary
objection to the-.criminal prosecution, the question of his
absolute privilege and immunity from prosecution under the
provision of the Constitution. The learned Magistrate by
his order dated October II,, 1955, overruled the objection
and held that the privilege claimed by the accused was not
an unqualified one. He relied on a judgment of the Calcutta
High Court in the case of Dr. Suresh Chandra Banerjee v.
Punit Goala (1) in support of his conclusion that the first
accused before him, now appellant, was not entitled to the
privilege and immunity claimed by him. Thereafter, the
appellant moved the High Court under Art. 228 of the
Constitution for having the case withdrawn to the
(1) (1951) 55 C.W.N. 745.
High Court for determination of the constitutional question
raised by him by way of defence, but that, application was
dismissed by a Bench of the High’ Court on November 9, 1955,
presumably on the ground that the. case did not involve any
substantial question of law as; to the interpretation of the
Constitution. Not daunted by the adverse order aforesaid of
the Bench of the High Court, the petitioner again moved the
High Court and obtained a rule on several grounds including
the question of the proceedings being barred by the
provisions of Art. 194 of the Constitution. The learned
Single Judge, who dealt with the case on this occasion,
noticed the position that strictly speaking the
constitutional question could not be allowed to be
reagitated in view of the Bench decision aforesaid. But the
learned Judge all the same dealt with the points raised by
the appellant including the question arising under Art. 194
of the Cotistitution. The learned Judge dismissed the
application holding that a member of the Legislative
Assembly had no absolute privilege in respect of the
questions sought to be asked by him, which had been
disallowed but he had published them all the same. It was
also pointed out that the questions had never been asked in
the House and that, therefore, could not be said to form
part of the proceedings of the House. He further held that
the publication in the journal at the instance of the
appellant could by no means be said to have been under the
authority of the House. The appellant moved the learned
Judge for a certificate under Art. 132(1) of the
Constitution, but that application was also refused on the
ground that the case did not involve any substantial
question of law as respects the interpretation of the
Constitution. The appellant then moved this Court and
obtained special leave to appeal from the judgment of the
High Court refusing the claim of privilege. He also
obtained stay of fur. ther proceedings in the Court of the
Magistrate. The hearing of the appeal was ordered to be
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expedited That order was passed on October 1, 1956, but
notwithstanding the order of expedition, the case came to be
heard only four years later,
490
In this Court, it has been contended on behalf of the
appellant that the learned Judge below had erred in his
interpretation of the provisions of Art. 194 of the
Constitution and that on a proper construction’ of; those
provisions it should have been held (1) that questions
sought to be asked by a member of a Legislative Assembly,
even though disallowed by the Speaker, formed part of the
proceedings of the House, and, as such, their publication
would not attract the provisions of the Indian Penal Code;
(2) the provisions of Art. 194 should be liberally construed
in favour of persons like elected members of the Assembly
who are rendering public service not only by making speeches
and asking questions in the Assembly, but also by publishing
them in the public press with a view to apprising the
country and, particularly the constituency of what had been
happening in the House. In other words, it Was claimed that
there was an absolute privilege in favour of a member and
that, therefore, he could not be prosecuted for having
published the questions he sought to put, but had been
disallowed by the Speaker.
Do the provisions of Art. 194 of the Constitution lend any
support to the contentions aforesaid raised on behalf of the
appellant? The first clause of Art. 194 does not call for
any comment in, this case because no question as regards
freedom of speech in the Legislature of a State has been
raised. Clause (2) of the Article has, firstly, laid down a
bar against any proceedings, civil or criminal against any"
member of a Legislature of a State in respect of anything
said or any vote given by-him in the Legislature or any Com-
mittee thereof; and secondly, that no person shall be liable
in a civil or criminal proceeding in respect of the
publication of any report, paper, votes or proceedings under
the authority of a House of such a Legislature. It is not
contended that the publication complained against in this
case was under the authority of the Legislative Assembly of
West Bengal. So the second part of the second clause of;
Art. 194 cannot be pressed in aid of the appellants
contention. As regards the first part of the second clause,
can it be said that the publication, which forms the
subject-matter of the
491
prosecution in,, this case, can come within the purview of
’,-anything said or any vote given " by a member of. the
Legislative Assembly? The answer must be in the’ negative.
It is, therefore, manifest that el. (2) of Art. 194 is
equally of no assistance to the appellant. Naturally,
therefore, reliance was placed in the course of arguments in
this Court on the provisions of cl. (3) of Art. 194. Does
the publication of a disallowed question by a member of an
Assembly come within the powers, privileges and immunities
of the members of the House ? The answer to this question
depends upon finding out what are the powers, privileges.
and immunities of the members of the House of Commons of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom at the commencement of the
Constitution. This Court in the case of M. S. M. Sharma v.
Shri Sri Krishna Sinha (1) has considered in great detail
those immunities with respect to the publication of a
portion of a speech which was directed by the Speaker to be
expunged from the proceedings of the House. This Court has
held that the publication of such a portion of the
proceedings is not within the privilege attaching to the
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publication of a faithful report of the proceedings of a
House of the State Legislature. That case was not concerned
with the penal law of the country. In that case the Court
was concerned with ascertaining the powers of the Assembly
to punish for contempt of the House with reference to the
privileges and immunities of a House of the Legislature of a
State. Hence, that decision does not assist us in
determining the present controversy.
If we turn to the legal position in England with reference
to the House of Commons, it is clear that the immunity of a
member of the House of Commons is in respect of the speeches
made by him in Parliament, but it does not extend to the
publication of the debate outside Parliament. If a member
of a House of Commons’ _publishes his speech made in the
House separately from the rest of the proceedings in the
House, he will be liable for defamation if his speech
contains matters defamatory of any person. In the
celebrated case of R. v. Lord Abingdon (2),,Lord Kenyon had
decided that a speech which had been made in
(1) [1959] Suppl. 1 S.C.R. 806, (2) (1794) 1 ESP. 226; 170
E.R.337,
492
the House of Lords was not privileged if published
separately from the rest of the debate. In May
Parliamentary Practice, 16th Edition, by Lord Campion, occur
the following statements in respect of the two well-known
cases of Abingdon (1) and Creevey, Journal of the House of
Commons (1912-13) 704:-
"Abingdon’s case, (1).-An information was
filed against Lord Abingdon for a libel. He
had accused his attorney of improper
professional conduct,, in a: speech delivered
in the House of Lords, which he afterwards
published in several newspapers at his own
expense. Lord Abingdon pleaded his own case
in the Court of King’s Bench, and contended
that he had a right to print what he had, by
the Law of Parliament, a right to speak; but
Lord Kenyon said that a member of Parliament
had certainly a, right to publish his speech,
but that speech should not be made a vehicle
of slander against any individual; if it was,
it was a libel. The Court gave judgment that
his lordship should be imprisoned for three
months, pay a fine of pound 100, and find,
security for his good behaviour.
Creevey’s case (2), 1813.-Mr. Creevey, a
member of the House of Commons, had made a
charge against an individual in the House, and
incorrect reports of his speech having
appeared in several newspapers, Mr. Creevey
sent a correct report to the editor of a
newspaper, with a request that he would
publish it. Upon an information filed against
him, the jury found the defendant guilty of
libel, and the King’s Bench refused an
application for a new, trial (See Lord
Ellenborough’s judgment in Rex v. Creevey
(2)). Mr. Creevey, who had been fined pound
100, complained to the House of the
proceedings of the King’s Bench; but the House
refused to admit that they were a breach of
privilege."
It is clear on a reference to the law in England in respect
of the privileges and immunities of the House of Commons
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that there is no absolute privilege attaching to the
publication of extracts from proceedings in the House of
Commons. So far as a member of the House of Commons is
concerned, he has an absolute privilege
(1) (1794) Esp. 226; 170 E,R, 337(2).(1813)1 M, &S. 2 73;
195 E.R, T02.
493
in respect of what he has spoken within the four walls of
the House, but there is only a qualified privilege in his
favour even in respect of what he has himself said, in the
House, if he causes the same to be published in the public
press. The case of publication of proceedings of
Parliament, not under the authority of the House, stands on
the same footing as the publication of proceedings in courts
of justice. That was made clear by Cockburn, C.J. in the
case of Wason v. Walter (1). Explaining why the publication
of a single speech in the proceedings in the House would not
be absolutely privileged, the learned Chief Justice
observed:-
" It is to be observed that the analogy
between the case of reports of proceedings of
courts of justice and those of proceedings in
Parliament being complete, all the limitations
placed on the one to prevent injustice to
individuals will necessarily attach on the
other; a garbled or partial report, or of
detached parts of proceedings, published with
intent to injure individuals, will equally be
disentitled to protection.
So long as Parliament does not crystallise the legal
position by its own legislation, the privileges, powers and
immunities of a House of a State Legislature or Parliament
or of its members are the same as those of the House of
Commons, as stated above. In the present case the appellant
sought to put certain questions bearing upon the conduct of
the complainant, the first respondent, in this case.
According to r. 27 of the Assembly Procedural Rules, certain
conditions have to be fulfilled in order that a question may
be admissible. Amongst other requirements of the rule, one
of the conditions is that it must not contain any imputation
or imply a charge of a personal character. Rule 29 of those
rules authorises the Speaker to decide on the admissibility
of a question with reference to the provisions of the rules
and lays down that the Speaker " shall disallow any question
when, in his opinion, it is an abuse of the right of
questioning, or is in contravention of those provisions. "
In view of the conclusion we have already reached, namely,
that there is no absolute privilege, even in favour of a
member of the Legislature, in respect of a publication not
of the entire
63 (1) (1868) L.R. 4 Q.B. 73, 94.
proceedings, but of extracts from them, it is not necessary
for us to decide the question whether disallowed questions
can be said to form part of the proceedings of a House of
Legislature.
In this connection, it is also relevant to note that we are
concerned in this case with a criminal prosecution for
defamation. The law of defamation has been dealt with in
ss. 499 and 500 of the Indian Penal Code. Section 499
contains a number of exceptions. Those specified exceptions
lay down what is not defamation. The fourth exception says
that it is not defamation to publish a substantially true
report of the proceedings of a court of justice, but does
not make any such concession in respect of proceedings of a
House of Legislature or Parliament. The question naturally
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arises how far the rule in Wason’s case (1) can be applied
to criminal prosecutions in India, but as this aspect of the
controversy was not canvassed at the Bar, we need not say
anything about it, as it is not necessary for the decision
of this case.
The legal position is undisputed that unless the appellant
can make out an absolute privilege, in his own favour, in
respect of the publication which is the subject-matter of
the charge in this case, the prosecution against him cannot
be quashed. As we have held, that he has no such absolute
privilege, in agreement with the High Court, he must take
his trial and enter upon his defence, such as he may have.
As the evidence pro and con has not been recorded in full,
the arguments at the Bar had naturally to be confined to the
purely legal question of the absolute privilege claimed. It
need hardly be added that we do not express any opinion on
the merits of the controversy which will now be gone into by
the learned Magistrate before whom the case has been pending
all these years.
For the reasons given above, it must be held that there is
no merit in this appeal. It is accordingly dismissed. The
pending prosecution, which has been held up for so long, it
is expected,, will now be proceeded with without any
avoidable delay.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) (1868) L.R. 4 Q.B, 73.
495