Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M. Y. SHAREEF AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE HON’BLE JUDGES OF THE HIGH COURTOF NAGPUR AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/10/1954
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
CITATION:
1955 AIR 19 1955 SCR (1) 757
CITATOR INFO :
F 1962 SC1089 (9)
RF 1991 SC1834 (12)
ACT:
Contempt of Court-Advocate signing application or
pleading which scandalizes the Court-Advocate’s obligations
to the Court and duty to the client-Plea of justification or
in the alternative apology -When permissible.
HEADNOTE:
A section of the Bar seems to be labouring under an
erroneous impression that when an advocate is acting in the
interests of his client or in accordance with his
instructions he is discharging his legitimate duty towards
him even when he signs an application or a pleading which
contains matter scandalizing the Court and that when there
is conflict between his obligations to the Court and his
duty to the client, the later prevails.
It should be widely made known that an advocate who
signs an application or pleading containing matter
scandalizing the Court which tends to prevent or delay the
course of justice is himself guilty of contempt of Court
unless he reasonably satisfies himself about the prima facie
existence of adequate grounds there for and that it is no
duty of an advocate to his client to take any interest in
such applications ; on the other hand, his duty is to advise
his client for refraining from making allegations of this
nature in such applications.
It is well-settled that in a matter relating to the
contempt of Court there cannot be both justification and an
apology. The two things are incompatible. An apology is
not a weapon of defence to purge the guilty of their
offence, nor is it intended to operate as a universal
panacea but it is intended to be evidence of real contri-
teness.
In border line cases where a question of principle
about the rights of an advocate and his duties has to be
settled an alternative plea merits consideration, for it is
possible for a judge who hears the case to hold that there
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is no contempt in which case a defence of unqualified
apology is meaningless, because that would amount to the
admission of the commission of an offence.
Every form of defence in a contempt case cannot be
regarded as an act of contumacy. It depends on the
circumstances of each case and on the general impression
about a particular rule of ethics amongst the members of the
profession.
97
758
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 72 of
1952.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 30th November, 1950, of the High Court of
Judicature at Nagpur (Dev and Rao JJ.) in Contempt of Court
Proceedings Miscellaneous Petition No. 16 of 1950.
Dr. Bakshi Tek Chand, (Hardyal, Hardy, B. R. Mandlekar,
B. D. Kathalay, Ganpat Rai and K. L. Arora, with him) for
the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (T. P.
Naik and I. N. Shroff, with him) for respondent No. 1.
T. L. Shevde, Advocate-General for the State of
Madhya Pradesh, (T. P. Naik and I. N. Shroff, with him) for
respondent No. 2.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff for respondent No. 3. 1954.
October 15. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MEHR CHAND MAHAJAN C.J.-This appeal by special leave
arises out of contempt proceedings taken against two very
senior members of the Nagpur Bar and one of their clients.
Shri Shareef, one of the appellants, at one time was
Minister for Law and Justice in the State. Dr. Kathalay,
the second appellant, is a Doctor of Laws and an author of
legal works. The matter which resulted in the issue of the
show cause notices for contempt took a protracted course and
has to a certain extent resulted in embittered feelings.
What happened
was this:
Shri Zikar who was charged along with the two appellants
for contempt made an application under article 226(1) of the
Constitution for enforcement of his fundamental right,
alleging that he was a citizen Of Bharat and that the
Custodian of Evacuee Property and the police were taking
wrongful action against him and treating him as a national
of Pakistan which he never was. He prayed for an interim
order of prohibition against the State from deporting him
after the expiry of the permit. The High Court granted the
interim order of prohibition against the action complained.
At the hearing of the case on 11th August,
759
1950, a preliminary objection was raised on behalf of the
State that Zikar had suppressed material facts in the
petition filed by him and that the petition was therefore
liable to be dismissed without going into the merits. Shri
Shareef, who was counsel for Zikar, combated this contention
and further submitted that the preliminary objection could
not be adequately dealt with without going into the merits
of the case. On behalf of the State another affidavit was
filed on 17th August, 1950, stating certain facts, and Zikar
was also directed to file an affidavit in reply by the 21st
August, 1950, and this be did by that date. The relevant
proceedings of that date are recorded in these terms:-
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" Shri Shareef for the petitioner. Shri Naik for the
respondent. He files an affidavit and copies of
applications dated 25th February, 1949 and 19th January,
1950. Shri Shareef files a statement and an affidavit. His
attention was drawn to paragraph 4 of the affidavit and he
was asked whether his client has really understood the
contents which are in English adding that he might change in
the Supreme Court and say that he had not understood them.
Shri Shareef then said that he has explained the contents to
his clients.
Paragraph 6 of the statement and the affidavit is
uncalled for as the appellant only desired to file an
affidavit with reference to paragraph 10 of the affidavit of
the non-applicant: Vide order sheet dated 17th August, 1950.
A remark was made by one of us " Whether paragraph 6 was
inserted for founding an argument before the Supreme-Court."
Shri Shareef replied he has stated facts...............
Thereafter Shri Naik continued his arguments on the
preliminary point till we rose for lunch.
When we reassembled Shri Shareef informed us that he
wants time to apply for transfer of this case to another
Bench because of the observations made by us regarding
paragraphs 4 and 6 of his affidavit. Case is therefore
adjourned to 25th August, 1950 to enable Shri Shareef to
make an application in the meanwhile."
On the 23rd August, 1950, an application for the
transfer of the case from the Bench hearing it to
760
another Bench of the High Court was made on the following
grounds:
1 "The observations and references to the Supreme
Court by Rao and Deo JJ. created a bona fide belief in the
applicant’s mind that they were prejudiced against him and
had made up their minds and indicated that he shall have to
go in appeal to the Supreme Court.
2. The observations and references to the Supreme
Court were absolutely unnecessary and left no doubt in the
applicant’s mind that he would not receive justice at the
hands of the Hon’ble Judges.
Prayer: In the interest of dispensation of impartial
justice, the case be transferred to another Civil Division
Bench for disposal."
This application was not only signed by Zikar but also
by the two appellants as counsel for the applicant and was
rejected in due course and with that matter we are no longer
concerned. The preliminary objection raised by the State
was upheld and the petition under article 226 was dismissed.
The learned Judges then ordered notices to issue to the
applicant and his two counsel to show cause why they should
not all be committed for contempt for scandalizing the
Court, with a view to perverting the due course of justice
by making statements in the transfer application impeaching
the impartiality of the Judges.
Dr. Kathalay filed his written statement in reply to
the show cause notice, on the 4th October, 1950. He averred
that he could not honestly admit that he scandalized the
Court and committed contempt either in fact or in law and
contended that in his whole career at the Bar for forty
years he observed the highest traditions of this learned
profession, upholding always the dignity of the Courts and
that he had no animus against the Judges of the Division
Bench. He asserted that by signing the application he did
not scandalize or intend to scandalize the Court and that he
bona fide thought that an application could be made for
transferring a case in the High Court from one Bench to
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another and that the question did not concern him alone but
761
the Bench and Bar generally and a question of great
principle emerged, viz., whether a counsel was guilty of
contempt in signing such an application, or whether it was
his professional duty to do so if his client was under that
bona fide impression. In the last paragraph of the reply it
was stated-
" Whatever the circumstances, I do see how much this
application for transfer dated the 23rd August, 1950, has
hurt the feelings of the Hon’ble Judges and I very much
regret that all this should have happened."
Shri Shareef also put in a similar written statement. He
asserted that when the transfer application was made he did
not know or believe the law to be that it could not be made,
and rightly or wrongly he was always under the impression
that an application could be made for transferring a case in
the High Court from one Bench to another. He also expressed
similar regret for what had happened. Further written
statement was filed by Shri Shareef on 16th October, 1950.
In paragraph 7 of that statement he said as follows:-’
"I was grieved to know that the accusation against me in
these proceedings should be of malice and mala fides for my
taking up Zikar’s brief in connection with his application
for transfer, dated the 23rd August, 1950. If I am thus
defending the proceedings, I am doing so for vindicating my
professional honour and personal self-respect, and it would
be a misfortune if this was all going to be construed as
aggravating the contempt, as hinted by the Hon’ble Court
during my counsel’s arguments, though remotely. But even as
I am making my defence, it is, I admit, quite likely that I
committed an error of judgment in acting as I did, causing
pain to the Hon’ble Judges, which I deeply regret, as I have
already done before and so has my counsel on my behalf in
the course of his arguments." (The Judges in the Judgment
under appeal have taken exception to the last sentence of
this paragraph.)
Dr. Kathalay also put in a similar reply.
The High Court in a very lengthy judgment in which very
large number of authorities were considered and
762
discussed, held that the application for transfer
constituted contempt because the Judges were scandalized
with a view to diverting the due course of justice. The two
advocates who signed and prosecuted the application were
found guilty of contempt. As regards the plea of error of
judgment, this is what the learned
Judges said:-
" The attitude of defiant justification adopted by
them in spite of our pointing out at a very early stage in
these proceedings that we would be prepared to consider any
mistake on their part renders it difficult for the court to
accept the belated plea of an error of judgment. Even the
expression ’error of judgment’ was not so much mentioned in
the argument until the last day of the argument. We have
already shown in para. 100 how it was introduced in the two
statements on 16th October, 1950, quite contrary to fact.
If the two advocates felt that there was an error of
judgment on their part, it would have been more appropriate
to make a candid and clear admission of that and make
reparation for the injury done by an adequate apology. We
cannot treat the expression ’I very much regret that all
this should have happened’ as an apology at all. Nor were
we ever asked to treat it as such. What is it that the two
advocates regret ? -So man things have happened since 21st
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August, 1950. Any expression of regret to merit
consideration must be genuine contriteness for what the
contemners
have done."
In the result the learned Judges passed the following
order : -
" We accordingly sentence Shri M. Y. Shareef to pay -a
fine of Rs. 500 or in default to undergo simple imprisonment
for two weeks and we Sentence Dr. D.W. Kathalay to pay a
fine of -Rs. 1000 or in default to undergo simple
imprisonment for one month. We are not sure if the
sentences we have awarded are adequate to the gravity of the
offence, but on this occasion we refrain from being stern
and bringing the full power of the court into play
considering the misconceptions about the advocate8’
responsibility that seem to have so far prevailed at any
rate in a section of the Bar."
763
Leave to appeal to this Court was refused but was granted
here.
On the 12th May, 1954, when the appeal was heard by this
Court, we recorded the following order:-
"The appellants have tendered an unqualified apology to
this court and to the High Court, and they are prepared to
purge the contempt for which they have been convicted. In
our opinion, the apology is a sincere expression of their
regret for what happened in court at the time the transfer
application was made and for the allegations made therein.
We therefore adjourn this appeal for two months and direct
that the apology tendered here be tendered to the Division
Bench before which the contempt is said to have been
committed. We are sending it to the High Court with the
full confidence that the learned Judges will consider the
apology in the spirit in which it has been tendered and they
will pass appropriate orders and send an intimation to this
court as to what orders they pass."
When the case went back to the High Court, it again took
an unfortunate turn. The learned Judges posed the question
that they had to consider in this form
" The question is whether remission of the punishment
awarded is called for in view of the statement now filed by
the contemners," and it was answered thus:
" We are constrained to observe that the spirit in which
the apology was tendered here is not much different from
that originally shown. The idea of the contemners is that
because they have filed the apology as directed, they have a
right to expect the acceptance of it by the court. How else
can the absence of any prayer or what the contemners desire
be explained ? We record that there was hardly anything
apologetic the way the apology was
tendered.....................
We neither gave the extreme penalty which we might well
have given, nor did we give the maximum of the lesser
penalty. But for the manner of justification and the
contumacy, there might not have been a sentence of fine at
all."
764
Having approached the matter thus, the learned Judges
referred to a large number of cases for the admitted
proposition of law that a " sincere apology does not entitle
a contemner as of right to a remission of the sentence." It
was further thought that acceptance of apology would lead to
an invidious distinction being made in the case of two
advocates and Zikar. In the result the apology was not
accepted and the report concluded with the following
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observations :-
" If in the circumstances of this case the apology were
to be accepted, we would be encouraging the notion that it
is the contemners’s right to get his apology accepted when
he chooses and in whatever manner he tenders even in a case
where he has aggravated the original offence. We will be
unsettling established principles, and setting a bad
precedent. Above all, we would be dealing a blow to the
authority of the court, the consequence of which cannot be
viewed with equanimity."
When the appeal came back to us, we asked Dr. Tek Chand
who appeared for the two advocates whether his clients were
even now genuinely sorry for signing the transfer
application and whether the expression of regret made in
this Court was a genuine expression of their feelings, Dr.
Tek Chand replied in the affirmative and emphatically said "
Absolutely".
In this situation, the question for consideration in the
appeal now is whether the two appellants have purged the
contempt by tendering an unqualified apology in this Court
as well as to the High Court, the genuineness of which has
been again emphasized by their counsel before us, or whether
the sentence of fine awarded to them by the High Court
should necessarily be maintained for upholding the authority
and dignity of the Court
The proposition is well settled and self-evident that
there cannot be both justification and an apology. The two
things are incompatible. Again an apology is not a weapon
of defence to purge the guilty of their offence; nor is it
intended to operate as a universal panacea, but it is
intended to be evidence of real contriteness. The
appellants having tendered an
765
unqualified apology, no exception can be taken to the
decision of the High Court that the application for transfer
did constitute contempt because the judges were scandalized
with a view to diverting the due course of justice, and that
in signing this application the two advocates were guilty of
contempt. That decision therefore stands.
The fact however remains, as found by the High Court,
that there was at the time these events happened
considerable misconception amongst a section of the Nagpur
Bar about advocates’ responsibilities in matters of signing
transfer applications containing allegations of this
character. It cannot be denied that a section of the Bar is
under an erroneous impression that when a counsel is acting
in the interests of his client, or in accordance with his
instructions he is discharging his legitimate duty to his
client even when he signs an application or a pleading which
contains matter scandalizing the Court. They think that
when there is conflict between their obligations to the
Court and their duty to the client, the latter prevails.
This misconception has to be rooted out by a clear and
emphatic pronouncement, and we think it should be widely
made known that counsel who sign applications or pleadings
containing matter scandalizing the Court without reasonably
satisfying themselves about the prima facie existence of
adequate grounds there for, with a view to prevent or delay
the course of justice, are themselves guilty of contempt of
Court, and that it is no duty of a counsel to his client to
take any interest-in such applications; on the other hand,
his duty is to advise his client for refraining from making
allegations of this nature in such applications. Once the
fact is recognized as was done by the High Court here, that
the members of the Bar have not fully realized the
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implications of their signing such applications and are
firmly under the belief that their conduct in doing so is in
accordance with professional ethics, it has to be held that
the act of the two appellants in this case was done under a
mistaken view of their rights and duties, and in such cases
even a qualified apology may well be considered by a Court.
In border
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766
line cases where a question of principle about the rights of
counsel and their duties has to be settled, an alternative
plea of apology merits consideration; for it is possible for
a judge who hears the case to hold that there is no contempt
in which case a defence of unqualified apology is
meaningless, because that would amount to the admission of
the commission of an offence. In this case the learned
judges themselves had to wade through a large volume of
English and Indian case-law before they could hold that the
act of the appellants constituted contempt and thus it could
not be said that the matter was so patent that on the face
of it their act amounted to contempt. Moreover, it appears
from the proceedings that the counsel were genuinely under
the belief that their professional duties demanded that,
when their client was under a bonafide belief that the Court
was prejudiced against him and decided to apply for
transfer, the were bound to take his brief and sign the
application. We cannot help observing that the admitted
reference by the judges to the Supreme Court in their
remarks during the course of the hearing was unfortunate and
seems to indicate an unnecessary and indecorous
sensitiveness which may well have been misunderstood by the
party and the advocates. The counsel seem to have genuinely
believed that they were right in what they did, though as a
matter of fact if they had studied the law more deeply, they
would not have done so. In these circumstances it cannot be
said that what they did was wailful and their conduct in
getting the law settled in this matter by raising the
defence that they did was contumacious. The authorities
relied upon by the High Court have no application to cases
of this character. How else is the validity of a defence of
this kind to be settled, except by an argument that the
counsel was entitled in the interests of his client to
advise a transfer and give grounds for that transfer which
were bona fide believed by the client. Every form of
defence in a contempt case cannot be regarded as an act of
contumacy. It depends on the circumstances of each case and
on the general impression about a particular rule of ethics
amongst the members
767
of the profession. The learned Judges, as already said, have
themselves said that such an impression was prevalent since
along time amongst a section of the Bar in Nagpur. It was
thus necessary to have that question settled and any effort
on the part of these two learned counsel to have that point
settled cannot be regarded as contumacy or a circumstance
which aggravates the contempt. We think that the expression
of regret in the alternative in this case should not have
been ignored but should have been given due consideration.
It was made in the earliest written statement submitted by
the counsel and cited above. Once however the High Court
found that they were guilty of contempt, they would have
been well advised to tender an unqualified apology to that
Court forthwith. But perhaps they were still under the
delusion that they were right and the Court was in error,
and that by coming to this Court they might be able to have
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the q uestion of principle settled as they contended. As
soon as we indicated to the learned counsel that they were
in error, they and their counsel immediately tendered an
unqualified apology which, as already indicated, was
repeated again in absolute terms at the second hearing. We
have not been able to appreciate why the learned Judges of
the High Court should have doubted the genuineness of this
apology. It certainly was not the object and could not be
the object of the learned Judges of the High Court to
humiliate senior counsel and to expect something more from
them than what they had already done in this Court. While
unhesitatingly deprecating very strongly the conduct of the
appellants in scandalising the Court by becoming parties to
an unnecessary and untenable transfer application, we still
feel that in the matter of measure of punishment the High
Court should have after an unqualified apology was tendered
taken a different view. We have no doubt that whatever the
learned Judges of the High Court did in this case, they did
in the firm belief that the dignity of the Court had to be
maintained and the members of the Bar, howsoever big or
learned, cannot be allowed to scandalize the judges or to
divert the course of justice
768
by attempting to take a case out from one Bench to another
Bench of the Court when they find that the Bench is
expressing opinions seemingly adverse to their clients. We
have firm hope that this kind of conduct will not be
repeated by counsel in any High Court in this country, and
no more test cases of this kind would have to be fought out.
In the peculiar circumstances of this case and in view of
the circumstance that the learned Judges themselves were of
the opinion that there would not have been a sentence of
fine at all if there was no plea of justification and there
was no contumacy, we are of the opinion that the unqualified
apology was sufficient to purge the contempt committed by
the two appellants as we have reached the conclusion
contrary to that arrived at by the High Court that the plea
of justification in this case did not amount to contumacy.
It has also to be kept in view that condemnation for
contempt by a High Court of senior members of the Bar is
itself a heavy punishment to them, as it affects them in
their professional career and is a great blot on them.
There has been nothing said in the lengthy judgment of the
High Court that these counsel in their long career at the
Bar have ever been disrespectful or discourteous to the
Court in the past. This one act of indiscretion on their
part in signing the application should not have been viewed
in the very stringent manner in which the High Court viewed
it in the first instance and viewed it again after we had
sent the case back to it. It is not the practice of this
Court in special leave cases and in exercise of our over-
riding powers to interfere with a matter which rests in the
discretion of the High Court except in very exceptional
cases. After a careful consideration of the situation that
arises in this case we have reached the decision that the
dignity of the High Court would be sufficiently upheld if
the unqualified apology tendered in this Court in the first
instance and reiterated in absolute terms by Dr. Tek Chand
again at the next hearing is accepted and that apology is
regarded as sufficient to purge the contempt. The matter
has become very stale and the ends of justice do not call
for maintaining the punishment of fine on two senior
769
counsel for acting wrongly under an erroneous impression of
their rights and privileges.
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For the reasons given above we allow this appeal to the
extent that the sentence of fine passed on both the
appellants is set aside, -and the unqualified apology given
by them to this Court and the High Court is accepted. We
also desire to issue a strong admonition and warning to the
two counsel for their conduct. There will be no order as to
costs in these proceedings throughout.
Appeal allowed.