Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PANDIT M. S. M. SHARMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DR. SHREE KRISHNA SINHA AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/08/1960
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1186
CITATOR INFO :
R 1961 SC1457 (12)
R 1964 SC1013 (16)
R 1965 SC1553 (5,52)
RF 1975 SC2299 (510)
ACT:
State Legislature--Breach of Privilege--Decision of Court,
if res-judicata between Parties--Constitution of India,
Arts. 194(3) 19(1)(a).
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner, the Editor of the Searchlight, an English
daily newspaper published from Patna, was called upon to
show cause before the Committee of Privileges of the Bihar
Legislative Assembly why he should not be proceeded against
for the breach of privilege of the Speaker and the Assembly
for publishing an inaccurate account of the proceedings of
the Legislative Assembly. He moved this Court under Art. 32
of the Constitution for quashing the said proceeding and the
question for decision in substance was whether the said
privilege conferred by Art. 194(3) of the Constitution was
subject to the fundamental
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rights of a citizen under Art. 19(1)(a) of the Constitution.
This Court by a majority found against the petitioner.
Thereafter the Assembly was prorogued several times, the
Committee of Privileges reconstituted and a fresh notice was
issued to the petitioner. By the present petition the
petitioner in substance sought to reopen the decision, raise
the same controversy once again and contend that the
majority decision was wrong. The question was whether he
could be allowed to do so.
Held, that the general principles of res judicata applied
and the judgment of this Court could not be allowed to be
reopened and must bind the petitioner and the Legislative
Assembly of Bihar and the reconstitution of the Committee of
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Privileges in the meantime could make no difference.
Raj Lakshmi Dasi v. Banamali Sen, [1953] S.C.R. 154,
applied.
Since this Court had held that the Legislature bad the power
to control the publication of its proceedings and punish any
breach of its privilege, there could be no doubt that it had
complete jurisdiction to carry on its proceedings in
accordance with its rules of business and a mere non-
compliance with rules of procedure could be no ground for
interference by this Court under Art. 32 of the
Constitution.
Janardan Reddy v. The State of Hyderabad, [1951] S.C.R. 344,
referred to.
Prorogation of the Assembly does not mean its dissolution
and the only effect it has is to interrupt its proceedings
which can be revived on a fresh motion to carry on or renew
them. It was, therefore, not correct to contend that since
the Assembly was prorogued several times since after the
alleged breach of privilege, the proceeding must be deemed
to be dead.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 176 of 1959.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
Basudeva Prasad, M. K. Ramamurthi, K. N. Keshwa and R.
Mahalingier, for the petitioner.
Lal Narain Sinha, B. K. P. Sinha, L. S. Sinha and S. P.
Varma, for the respondents.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, C. K.
Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, H. J. Umrigar and T.
M. Sen, for the Attorney-General of India.
1960. August 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SINHA C. J.-By this petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution the petitioner raises almost the same
13
98
controversy as had been done in Writ Petition No. 122 of
1958, which was heard and determined by this Court by its
judgment dated December 12, 1958, and by Writ Petition No.
106 of 1959, which was heard by this Court on November 10,
11 and 12, 1959, but which did not reach the stage of
judgment by this Court, inasmuch as the petitioner’s
Advocate requested the Court to permit him to withdraw the
petition and the Court allowed the prayer and permitted the
petitioner to withdraw the petition. In each of these
petitions the petitioner, who is a journalist by profession
and is functioning as the Editor of " the Searchlight ", an
English daily newspaper published from Patna in the State of
Bihar, impugned the validity of the proceedings before the
Committee of Privileges and prayed for restraining the
opposite party, namely, the Chief Minister of Bihar as
Chairman of the Committee of Privileges, Bihar Legislative
Assembly, Committee of Privileges and the Secretary of the
Bihar Legislative Assembly, from proceeding against the
petitioner for the publication in its issue dated May 31,
1957, of the Searchlight an account of the debate in the
Legislative Assembly, Bihar, on May 30, 1957.
The facts of the case have been stated in great detail in
the majority judgment of this Court delivered by S. R.
Das, C. J., in M. S. M. Sharma v. Sri Krishna Sinha (1). In
the opening paragraph of this Court’s judgment aforesaid,
the parties before the Court have been enumerated and the
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anomaly pointed out. This Court held in effect that under
Art. 194(3) of the Constitution a House of a Legislature of
a State has the same powers, privileges and immunities as
the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom
had at the commencement of the Constitution. The House of
Commons at the relevant date had the power or privilege of
prohibiting the publication of even a true and faithful
report of proceedings of the House and had a fortiori the
power or privilege of prohibiting the publication of an
inaccurate or garbled version of such debate or proceedings.
The powers or privileges of a House of State Legislature are
the same as
(1) [1959] SUPP.1 S.C.R. 806.
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those of the House of Commons in those matters until
Parliament or a State Legislature, as the case may be, may
by law define those powers or privileges. Until that event
has happened the powers, privileges and immunities of a
House of legislature of, a State or of its members and
committees are the same as those of the House of Commons at
the date of commencement of our Constitution. This Court
also expressed the view that Legislatures in this country
like the House of Commons will no doubt appreciate the
benefit of publicity and will not exercise those powers,
privileges and immunities, except in gross cases. The
minority judgment delivered by Subba Rao, J., on the other
hand, expressed the view that at the relevant date the House
of Commons, even as the Legislatures in this country, had no
privilege to prevent the publication of a correct and
faithful report of the proceedings of those legislatures,
except those of secret sessions, and bad only a limited
privilege to prevent mala fide publication of garbled,
unfaithful or expunged reports of the proceedings. He also
held that the petitioner had the fundamental right to
publish the report of the proceedings of the Legislature.
In the result, this Court, in view of the judgment of the
majority, dismissed the petition, but made no order as to
costs. This Court further held that the Assembly of Bihar
was entitled to take proceedings for breach of its
privileges and it was for the House itself to determine
whether there had in fact been any breach of any of its
privileges.
After Writ Petition No. 122 of 1958 had thus ended, the
petitioner again moved this Court under Art. 32 of the
Constitution. That case was registered as Writ Petition No.
106 of 1959. On January 5, 1959, the petitioner received a
notice that the case of breach of privilege against him
would be considered by the Committee of Privileges of the
Assembly on February 3, 1959. That hearing was postponed
from date to date, until in August, 1959, the petitioner
filed his petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution. He
contended in that petition that, as a citizen of India, the
petitioner had the fundamental right under Art. 19(1)(a) of
the
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Constitution to freedom of speech and expression which
included the freedom of publication and circulation and that
the Legislature of the State of Bihar could not claim any
privilege contrary to the right thus claimed. In effect,
it was contended that the privilege conferred on the
Legislature of a State by Art. 194(3) of the Constitution
was subject to the fundamental right of a citizen contained
in Art. 19(1)(a). It was also contended that the first
respondent, the Chief Minister of Bihar, who, it was
alleged, had control over the majority of the members of the
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Bihar Legislative Assembly and of the Committee of Privi-
leges, was proceeding mala fide in getting the proceedings
instituted against the petitioner for alleged breach of the
privilege of the House. Though not in terms, but in effect,
the points raised in this petition were a reiteration of
those already determined by this Court in its judgment
aforesaid of December 12, 1958. The prayer made in the
petition was that the proceedings of the Committee of
Privileges at its meeting held on August 10, 1958, might be
quashed and the respondents restrained by a writ in the
nature of a writ of prohibition from proceeding against the
petitioner in respect of publication aforesaid of the
proceedings of the Bihar Legislative Assembly of May 30,
1957. After the petitioner had made his writ application to
this Court as aforesaid, the Bihar Legislative Assembly
reconstituted the Committee of Privileges of the Assembly,
and on that very date a member of the Legislative Assembly
sought to move a motion in that Assembly for revival and re-
reference of the matter of the alleged breach of privilege
by the petitioner. Some members of the Bihar Legislative
Assembly objected to the motion being moved and the Speaker
of the Assembly deferred giving his ruling on that
objection. At the instance of some of the members of the
Assembly, the Speaker of the Assembly referred two questions
to the Advocate General of Bihar for his opinion on the
floor of the House on October 20, 1959, namely, (1) whether
it was open to the Assembly to debate on an issue which
might be sub judice in view of the writ petition aforesaid
filed by the
101
petitioner in the Supreme Court under Art. 32; and (2)
whether the matter which was dead by reason of prorogation
of the House several times could be, legally revived and
restored. On October 20, 1959, the Advocate General of
Bihar attended the House and gave his opinion, which it is
not relevant to’ state here. The Writ Petition, 106 of
1959, was heard in part and allowed to be withdrawn, as
indicated above, on November 12, 1959.
On November 24, 1959, the petitioner received a fresh notice
from the Secretary of the Legislative Assembly, opposite
party No. 3, calling upon the petitioner to show cause on or
before December 1, 1959, why appropriate action should not
be recommended against him for a breach of the privilege of
the Speaker and the Assembly. The petitioner again
instituted proceedings under Art. 32 of the Constitution
complaining that the motion adopted by the Committee of
Privileges of the Bihar Legislative Assembly at its meeting
held on November 23, 1959, amounted to an abridgement of his
fundamental right of speech and expression guaranteed under
Art. 19(1) (a) of the Constitution and was an " illegal and
mala fide threat to the petitioner’s personal liberty in
violation of Art. 21 of the Constitution of India and that
the Committee of Privileges, respondent No. 2 had no
jurisdiction or authority to proceed against the petitioner
as threatened by the notice aforesaid ".
The grounds of attack raise substantially the same questions
that were agitated on the previous occasions in this Court.
It was contended before us that the petitioner, as a citizen
of India, had the fundamental right of freedom of speech and
expression which included the freedom of obtaining the
earliest and most correct intelligence of the events of the
time including the proceedings of a Legislature and
publishing the same and that no Legislature of a State could
claim a privilege so as to curtail that right. It was,
therefore, contended that the majority decision of this
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Court in Pt. M. S. M. Sharma v. Shri Sri Krishna Sinha (1)
was wrong.. In this connection it was also contended that
(1) [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 806.
102
the rule of construction adopted by this Court in its pre-
vious decision had been wrongly applied. It was further
contended that even if the House of a State Legislature had
the same powers, privileges and immunities as those of the
House of Commons, those will be only such as were being
actually exercised at the date of the commencement of the
Constitution and the right to prevent publication of its
proceedings was not one of those powers, privileges or
immunities. An appeal was also made to Art. 21 of the
Constitution and it was contended that no citizen could be
deprived of his personal liberty, except in accordance with
the procedure established by law. Hence, it was further
contended that the malafide act of respondents 1 and 2
calling upon the petitioner to show cause was a threat to
his fundamental right, and, finally, it was contended that
after several prorogations, the previous proceedings for
breach of privilege were dead and the House of the Assembly
had, therefore, no power or jurisdiction to issue the fresh
notice in accordance with the motion of November 23, 1959,
reviving the proceedings.
It will thus appear that in the present proceedings also the
very same questions which were discussed and decided in Writ
Petition No. 122 of 1958 are sought to be raised once again.
In effect, it is sought to be argued that the previous
decision of this Court has proceeded on a wrong appreciation
of the legal position. In short, it is insisted that the
petitioner has the fundamental right of publishing the
proceedings of the Bihar Legislature and that the
Legislature has no power to restrict or control the
publication of its proceedings.
The Government Advocate of Bihar, on behalf of the opposite
party, has contended, in the first instance, that the
present writ petition against the parties, namely, the
Chairman and the Members of the Committee of Privileges,
respondents 1 and 2, is barred by the principle of res
judicata and, therefore, not maintainable. His contention
also is that the writ cannot issue either against an
individual member or against the House of the Legislature as
a whole in
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respect of what has been done by it in exercise of its
privilege of prohibiting or, at any rate, controlling the
publication of its proceedings.
On behalf of the petitioner it was contended by Mr. Basudeva
Prasad that respondent No. 2, the, Committee of Privileges,
has been reconstituted as aforesaid after the first decision
of this Court which is sought to be availed of as res
judicata and that therefore the rule of res judicata is
inapplicable. In this connection it may be pointed out that
in Writ Petition No. 122 of 1958, Sri Krishna Sinha, Chief
Minister of Bihar, was impleaded as opposite party No. 1 in
his capacity as the Chairman of the Committee of Privileges
of the Bihar Legislative Assembly and opposite party No. 2
was cited as Committee of Privileges, Bihar Legislative
Assembly, without any names being given. In the present
writ petition, opposite party No. 1 is the same. Opposite
party No. 2 is impleaded as the (New) Committee of Privi-
leges of Bihar Legislative Assembly and then a number of
names are given including that of Dr. Sri Krishna Sinha, the
Chief Minister, as Chairman. Would it make any difference
that though opposite party No. 2 is the Committee of
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Privileges, its personnel is different from that of the
Committee of Privileges constituted as it was in 1958 ? In
our opinion, it does not make any difference. So long as
the Assembly remains the same it is open to the Assembly to
reconstitute its Committees according to the exigencies of
the business of the Assembly. The Committee of Privileges
is one of the agencies through which the Assembly has to
transact its business. It is really the Assembly as a whole
which is proceeding against the petitioner in purported
exercise of its powers, privileges and immunities as held by
this Court in its judgment in Writ Petition No. 122 of 1958.
This Court has laid it down in the case of Raj Lakshmi Dasi
v. Banamali Sen (1) that the principle underlying res
judicata is applicable in respect of a question which has
been raised and decided after full contest, even though the
first Tribunal which decided
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 154.
104
the matter may have no jurisdiction to try the subsequent
suit and even though the subject-matter of the dispute was
not exactly the same in the two proceedings. In that case
the rule of res judicata was ,applied to litigation in land
acquisition proceedings. In that case the general
principles of law bearing on the rule of res judicata, and
not the provisions of s. 1 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
were applied to the case. The rule of res judicata is meant
to give finality to a decision arrived at after due contest
and after hearing the parties interested in the controversy.
There cannot be the least doubt that, though eo nomine
opposite party No. 2 were not the same, but there is no
escape from the conclusion that the Committee of Privileges
is the same Committee irrespective of its personnel at a
given time so long as it was a Committee constituted by the
same Legislative Assembly. The question decided by this
Court on the previous occasion was substantially a question
affecting the whole Legislature of the State of Bihar and
was of general importance and did not depend upon the
particular constitution of the Committee of Privileges. It
cannot, therefore, be said that the question decided by this
Court on the previous occasion had not been fully debated
and had not been decided after due deliberation. That there
was difference of opinion and one of the Judges constituting
the Court held another view only shows that there was room
for difference of opinion. It was a judgment of this Court
which binds the petitioner as also the Legislative Assembly
of Bihar. For the application of the general principles of
res judicata, it is not necessary to go into the question
whether the previous decision was right or wrong.
In our opinion, therefore, the questions determined by the
previous decision of this Court cannot be reopened in the
present case and must govern the rights and obligations of
the parties which, as indicated above, are substantially the
same. It is manifest, therefore, that the petitioner has no
fundamental right which is being threatened to be infringed
by the proceedings taken by the opposite party.
It now remains to consider the other subsidiary
105
questions raised on behalf of the petitioner. It was
contended that the procedure adopted inside the House of the
Legislature was not regular and not strictly in accordance
with law. There are two answers to this contention,
firstly, that according to the previous decision of this
Court, the petitioner has not the fundamental right claimed
by him. He is, therefore, out of Court. Secondly, the
validity of the proceedings inside the Legislature of a
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State cannot be called in question on the allegation that
the procedure laid down by the law had not been strictly
followed. Article 212 of the Constitution is a complete
answer to this part of the contention raised on behalf of
the petitioner. No Court can go into those questions which
are within the special jurisdiction of the Legislature
itself, which has the power to conduct its own business.
Possibly, a third answer to this part of the contention
raised on behalf of the petitioner is that it is yet
premature to consider the question of procedure as the
Committee is yet to conclude its proceedings. It must also
be observed that once it has been held that the Legislature
has the jurisdiction to control the publication of its pro-
ceedings and to go into the question whether there has been
any breach of its privileges, the Legislature is vested with
complete jurisdiction to carry on its proceedings in
accordance with its rules of business. Even though it may
not have strictly complied with the requirements of the
procedural law laid down for conducting its business, that
cannot be a ground for interference by this Court under Art.
32 of the Constitution. Courts have always recognised the
basic difference between complete want of jurisdiction and
improper or irregular exercise of jurisdiction. Mere non-
compliance with rules of procedure cannot be a ground for
issuing a writ under Art. 32 of the Constitution vide
Janardan Reddy v. The State of Hyderabad (1).
It was also sought to be argued that the subjectmatter of
the proceedings in contempt, whatever it was, took place
more than three years ago, and that, therefore, it has
become much too stale for proceeding
(3) [1951] S.C.R. 344.
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106
against the petitioner in contempt. In our opinion, this is
also a matter within the jurisdiction of the legislature
which must decide whether or not it was recent enough to be
taken serious notice of, or whether any punishment in the
event of the petitioner being found guilty is called for.
These are matters with which this Court is in no way
concerned. Mr. Lal Narain Sinha, the Government Advocate of
Bihar, who appeared on behalf of the respondents, informed
the Court that the Legislature was interested more in the
vindication of its constitutional rights than in inflicting
any punishment on the petitioner. Hence, no more need be
said on this aspect of the matter.
It remains to consider one other point sought to be made on
behalf of the petitioner that the Assembly had no power to
proceed against the petitioner for breach of privilege in
May, 1957 when we know as a fact that the Assembly was
prorogued several times between May 31, 1957 and November
23, 1959. In our opinion, there is no substance in this
contention, for the simple reason that the prorogation of
the Assembly does not mean its dissolution. The House
remains the same; only its sessions are interrupted by
prorogation of the House according to the exigencies of
public demands on the time and attention of the members of
the Assembly and the volume of business of the Assembly
itself. In this connection reliance was placed on the
following passage in May’s Parliamentary Practice, 16th
Edition, p. 279
" The effect of a prorogation is at once to suspend all
business until Parliament shall be summoned again. Not only
are the sittings of Parliament at an end, but all
proceedings pending at the time are quashed, except
impeachments by the Commons and appeals before the House of
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Lords. Every bill must therefore be renewed after a
prorogation, as if it were introduced
for the first time."
The observations quoted above do not support the extreme
contention raised on behalf of the petitioner that the
proceedings in contempt are dead for all time. The effect
of the prorogation only is to interrupt the proceedings
which are revived on a fresh motion to
107
carry on or renew the proceedings. In this case, it is not
necessary to pronounce upon the question whether dissolution
of the House necessarily has the effect, of 2 completely
wiping out the contempt or the proceedings relating thereto.
In our opinion, for the reasons given above, no grounds have
been made out for the exercise by this Court of its powers
under Art. 32 of the Constitution. The petition is
accordingly dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.
Petition dismissed.