Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5089 1998
Appeal (civil) 5090 1998
PETITIONER:
T. SUDHAKAR PRASAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOVT. OF A.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/12/2000
BENCH:
K.G.Balakrishnaa, R.C.Lahoti
JUDGMENT:
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J U D G M E N T
R.C. Lahoti, J.
Administrative Tribunals set up under the provisions
of Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985, do they or do they
not have power to punish for their contempt? Whether after
the decision of this court in L. Chandra Kumar Vs. Union
of India & Ors., (1997) 3 SCC 261, Section 17 of the
Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 (hereinafter, the Act
for short) does not survive and has been rendered
unconstitutional or otiose? These questions of far-reaching
implications to the administration of justice through
tribunals arise for consideration in these appeals.
A cursory view of factual backdrop. An application
(Contempt Application No.562/1996 in O.A. No.35574/1991)
invoking the contempt jurisdiction of Andhra Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal under Section 17 of the Act and
seeking initiation of proceedings against the Principal
Secretary, Irrigation and CAD Department was filed
complaining of willful disobedience by the latter of an
order passed by the Tribunal in favour of the applicant.
The Tribunal initiated the proceedings. The State of A.P.
and the Principal Secretary filed a writ petition (CWP
No.34841/1997) in the High Court of Andhra Pradesh laying
challenge to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal to take
cognizance of the contempt case. In another matter an
application (Contempt Case No. 1054/1998) invoking contempt
jurisdiction of the High Court, without approaching the
Tribunal under section 17 of the Act, and complaining of
willful disobedience of an order passed by the Andhra
Pradesh Administrative Tribunal was filed before the High
Court. In both the matters, question arose whether such
proceedings were appropriately maintainable before the High
Court or the Administrative Tribunal. The issue has been
disposed of by a Division Bench of Andhra Pradesh High Court
holding as under:- (1) that in view of the decision
rendered by the Supreme Court in L. CHANDRA KUMAR V. UNION@@
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OF INDIA & ORS. (supra), Section 17 of the Administrative
Tribunals Act, 1985, no more survives;
(2) that consequently, the Administrative Tribunals
set-up under the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 cannot
exercise the contempt jurisdiction under Section 17 of the
said Act, as the same had become non est under law;
(3) the contempt proceedings in Contempt Application
No. 562 of 1996 on the file of the Andhra Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal are set aside as being devoid of
jurisdiction. But, this will not prelude the respondents 1
to 6 in Writ Petition No. 34841 of 1997 from approaching
this Court for punishing the contempt of A.P.
Administrative Tribunal relating to the decision rendered in
O.A. No.35574 of 1991 by following the procedure as
applicable to the contempt of subordinate courts provided
under the provisions of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 and
the rules made thereunder by the Andhra Pradesh High Court;
and
(4) that similarly, the petitioner in CC No.1054 of
1998 has to approach this court only by following the
procedure as applicable to the contempt of subordinate
courts provided under the provisions of Contempt of Courts
Act, 1971 and the rules made thereunder by the Andhra
Pradesh High Court and not directly.
Accordingly, the High Court has directed the contempt
application pending before it to be dealt with by following
the procedure applicable to contempt of subordinate courts
and the contempt application filed in the Tribunal has been
directed to be dismissed as one before forum without
jurisdiction with liberty to the applicant to initiate the
proceedings afresh by following the procedure as stated by
the High Court. These appeals have been filed feeling
aggrieved by the judgment of the High Court taking the view
as aforesaid.
A perusal of the judgment of the High Court shows that
the Division Bench has traced the history of the
establishment of Administrative Tribunal by referring to the
relevant provisions of Constitution (Forty-second Amendment)
Act, 1976, the Administrative Tribunals Act, and exploring
the nature of contempt jurisdiction exercised by the
superior courts for punishing the contempt of the courts and
Tribunals subordinate to the High Courts. The High Court
has extracted and reproduced extensively from the
Constitution Bench judgment of this court in Supreme Court
Bar Association Vs. Union of India, (1998) 4 SCC 409 and
also analysed in its own way the decision of this court in
L. Chandra Kumar (supra) and therefrom drawn the following
deductions (vide para 14 of the impugned judgment), which
will be useful to reproduce so as to appreciate the
reasoning of the High Court :- 14. As such, it is clear
that in the State, the High Court is the only superior court
and the superior Court of Record. The High Court is the
custodian of the dignity and majesty of law in the State,
concerning not only itself but also all courts subordinate
to it. Subordinate courts/Tribunals have not been empowered
to punish contempt of themselves. They have to report to
the High Court in the prescribed form and then the High
Court will exercise the said power. It is well settled that
when a statute specifically provides for the exercise of a
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power by named authority, the ambit and location of that
power is to be sought only as prescribed by the said statute
and not otherwise. The submission of the learned Amicus
Curiae that without contempt power, the Administrative
Tribunals would become ineffective, cannot be considered, as
the power of court/Tribunal over a cause has no relevance to
and does not determine its power to deal with a contempt of
itself. A reading of Section 30 would make the things very
clear that what is independently conferred upon the Tribunal
is to deal with exfacie curiae contempt under Section 228 of
Indian Penal Code, which power also is vested in the other
subordinate courts/tribunals, to the exclusion of High Court
in view of provision to Section 10 of Contempt of Courts
Act, 1971. As such, the legislative intent is clear that
only against offences committed against the public servants
in discharge of their judicial functions, the Administrative
Tribunals Act makes an independent provision analogous to
that of the other subordinate courts/tribunals. That,
Administrative Tribunals are subordinate to High Court,
admits of no doubt, as such Tribunals exercise the judicial
power of the State and are amenable to the Jurisdiction of
judicial review and judicial superintendence of the High
Courts under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution. The
tribunal cannot be said to have the contempt power sui
generis. The status of the Administrative Tribunal is on
par with any other subordinate court like district Courts
and other Tribunals amenable to the jurisdiction of the High
Courts, with only exception that the Administrative
Tribunals are conferred with power of judicial review of
legislative action also, because of the verdict in CHANDRA
KUMARs case (supra). But, such conferment of power by the
Supreme Court in CHANDRA KUMARs case enabling the
Administrative Tribunal to exercise the power of judicial
review of legislative action cannot elevate the status of
the Administrative Tribunal to that of High Court. Further,
if the contempt power is exercised by the Administrative
Tribunal, them under Section 19 of the Contempt of Courts
Act, 1971, the matter is directly appealable to the Supreme
Court as of right and the decision on thereon by the apex
court becomes final. It is incomprehensible that when the
Supreme Court has ruled in CHANDRA KUMARs case that no
judgment rendered by the Administrative Tribunals in service
matter can be directly appealable the Supreme Court under
Article 136 of the Constitution, that the contempt
jurisdiction still vests in the Administrative Tribunals, as
in that event, the dicta laid down by the Supreme Court will
be violated, as against the exercise of contempt power by
the Administrative Tribunal, the matters have to go directly
to the Supreme Court by way of appeal and that too, as of
right. The contempt power cannot be exercised by the
Administrative Tribunal concurrently with the High Court, as
there is no such scheme either constitutional under Article
215 or statutory under Contempt of Court Act, 1971. We
cannot also accede to the contention that the contempt power
can be exercised by the Administrative Tribunal subject to
judicial review of the said exercise by the Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution, for the same reason that if
the contempt power is exercised by the Administrative
Tribunal, this courts jurisdiction is barred, as there is a
right of appeal to the Supreme Court under Section 19 of the
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 and the power which is intended
for exercise, as of right, by the Supreme Court of India can
never be usurped by the High Court under the guise of
exercising the jurisdiction under the Article 226/227 of the
Constitution of India.
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[emphasis supplied]
We will shortly revert back to testing the correctness
of the reasoning adopted and the conclusions drawn by the
High Court. We proceed to deal with the relevant
constitutional and statutory provisions. Constitution
(Forty-second Amendment) Act, 1976 introduced Part XIV-A -
Tribunals engrafting Articles 323A and 323B into the body
of the Constitution. We are not concerned with Article 323B
dealing with tribunals for other matters. We are concerned
with administrative tribunals dealt in Article 323A which is
reproduced as under :- 323A. Administrative Tribunals. -
(1) Parliament may, by law, provide for the adjudication or
trial by administrative tribunals of disputes and complaints
with respect of recruitment and conditions of service of
persons appointed to public services and posts in connection
with the affairs of the Union or of any State or of any
local or other authority within the territory of India or
under the control of the Government of India or of any
corporation owned or controlled by the Government.
(2) A law made under clause (1) may, -
(a) provide for the establishment of an administrative
tribunal for the Union and a separate administrative
tribunal for each State or for two or more States;
(b) specify the jurisdiction, powers (including the
power to punish for contempt) and authority which may be
exercised by each of the said tribunals;
(c) provide for the procedure (including provisions as
to limitation and rules of evidence) to be followed by the
said tribunals;
(d) exclude the jurisdiction of all courts, except the
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under article 136, with
respect to the disputes or complaints referred to in clause
(1);
(e) provide for the transfer to each such
administrative tribunal of any cases pending before any
court or other authority immediately before the
establishment of such tribunal as would have been within the
jurisdiction of such tribunal if the causes of action on
which such suits or proceedings are based had arisen after
such establishment.
(f) repeal or amend any order made by the President
under clause (3) of article 371D;
(g) contain such supplemental, incidental and
consequential provisions (including provisions as to fees)
as Parliament may deem necessary for the effective
functioning of, and for the speedy disposal of cases by, and
the enforcement of the orders of, such tribunals.
(3) The provisions of this article shall have effect
notwithstanding anything in any other provision of this
Constitution or in any other law for the time being in
force.
[emphasis supplied]
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In pursuance of Article 323A of the Constitution the
Parliament enacted the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 to
provide for the adjudication or trial by Administrative
Tribunals of disputes and complaints with respect to
recruitment and conditions of service of persons appointed
to public services and posts in connection with the affairs
of the Union or of any State or of any local or other
authority within the territory of India or under the control
of the Government of India or of any Corporation or society
owned or controlled by the Government. On coming into force
of the Act and constitution of the Central Administrative
Tribunal all the jurisdiction, powers and authority
exercisable immediately before that day by all courts, which
would include the High Courts (except the Supreme Court) in
relation to the matters specified in Section 14(1) of the
Act came to be conferred on the Tribunal. Section 17 gives
the Tribunal power to punish for contempt which reads as
under :
17. Power to punish for contempt. - A Tribunal
shall have, and exercise, the same jurisdiction, powers and
authority in respect of contempt of itself as a High Court
has and may exercise and, for this purpose, the provisions
of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (70 of 1971), shall have
effect subject to the modifications that :
(a) the references therein to a High Court shall be
construed as including a reference to such Tribunal;
(b) the references to the Advocate- General in Section
15 of the said Act shall be construed.
(i) in relation to the Central Administrative
Tribunal, as a reference to the Attorney- General or the
Solicitor-General or the Additional Solicitor- General; and
(ii) in relation to an Administrative Tribunal for a
State or a Joint Administrative Tribunal for two or more
States, as a reference to the Advocate-General of the State
or any of the States for which such Tribunal has been
established.
[emphasis supplied]
Section 22 provides that a Tribunal shall not be bound
by the procedure laid down in the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 but shall be guided by the principles of natural
justice and subject to the other provisions of the Act and
of any rules made by the Central Government, the Tribunal
shall have power to regulate its own procedure including the
fixiing of places and times of its enquiry and deciding
whether to sit in public or in private. Sub-section (2)
empowers the Tribunal to decide the application before it on
a perusal of documents and written representations and after
hearing such oral arguments as may be advanced. Sub-section
(3) confers on the Tribunal specified powers of a Civil
Court under the Code of Civil Procedure in respect of
specified matters. Section 27 provides that the order of a
Tribunal finally disposing of an application or an appeal
shall not be called in question in any court including a
High Court. On a Tribunal being functional, Section 28
excludes the jurisdiction of all courts, including High
Court, but not the Supreme Court, Industrial Tribunal,
Labour Court or other Authority constituted under the
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Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 or any other corresponding law
from exercising any jurisdiction, power or authority in
relation to matters falling within the jurisdiction of the
Tribunal.
Articles 129 and 215 of the Constitution of India
declare Supreme Court and every High Court to be a Court of
Record having all the powers of such a court including the
power to punish for contempt of itself. These articles do
not confer any new jurisdiction or status on the Supreme
Court and the High Courts. They merely recognise a
pre-existing situation that the Supreme Court and the High
Courts are courts of record and by virtue of being courts of
record have inherent jurisdiction to punish for contempt of
themselves. Such inherent power to punish for contempt is
summary. It is not governed or limited by any rules of
procedure excepting the principles of natural justice. The
jurisdiction contemplated by Articles 129 and 215 is
inalienable. It cannot be taken away or whittled down by
any legislative enactment subordinate to the Constitution.
The provisions of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 are in
addition to and not in derogation of Articles 129 and 215 of
the Constitution. The provisions of Contempt of Courts Act,
1971 cannot be used for limiting or regulating the exercise
of jurisdiction contemplated by the said two Articles.
In Supreme Court Bar Association Vs. Union of India &
Anr.- (1998) 4 SCC 409, the plenary power and contempt
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court came up for the
consideration of this Court and in that context Articles
129, 142, 144 and 215 of the Constitution were noticed.
This Court held that courts of record enjoy power to punish
for contempt as a part of their inherent jurisdiction; the
existence and availability of such power being essential to
enable the courts to administer justice according to law in
a regular, orderly and effective manner and to uphold the
majesty of law and prevent interference in the due
administration of justice (para 12). No act of Parliament
can take away that inherent jurisdiction of the Court of
Record to punish for contempt and Parliaments power of
legislation on the subject cannot be so exercised as to
stultify the status and dignity of the Supreme Court and/or
the High Courts though such a legislation may serve as a
guide for their determination of the nature of punishment
which a Court of Record may impose in the case of
established contempt. Power to investigate and punish for
contempt of itself vesting in Supreme Court flows from
Articles 129 and 142 (2) of the Constitution independent of
Section 15 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (para 21).
Section 12 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 provides for
the punishment which shall ordinarily be imposed by the High
Court in the case of an established contempt. This section
does not deal with the powers of the Supreme Court to try or
punish a contemnor in committing contempt of the Supreme
Court or the courts subordinate to it (paras 28, 29,37).
Though the inherent power of the High Court under Article
215 has not been impinged upon by the provisions of the
Contempt of Courts Act, the Act does provide for the nature
and types of punishments which the High Court may award.
The High Court cannot create or assume power to inflict a
new type of punishment other than the one recognised and
accepted by Section 12 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971.
In L. Chandra Kumar Vs. Union of India & Ors. -
(1997) 3 SCC 261 the matter had come up before the
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seven-Judges Bench of this Court consequent upon a reference
made by a Division Bench of this Court which doubted the
correctness of a five-Judges Constitution Bench of this
Court in S.P. Sampath Kumar Vs. Union of India - (1987) 1
SCC 124 and felt the need of the same being comprehensively
reconsidered. This Court framed three broad issues for its
consideration and proceeded to consider the constitutional
validity of Articles 323A, 323B and several provisions of
the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985. We need not
extensively reproduce several conclusions arrived at by the
Constitution Bench (excepting where necessary); it would
suffice to briefly summarise the conclusions of the
Constitution Bench insofar as necessary for our purpose.
The Constitution Bench held that the jurisdiction conferred
upon the High Courts and the Supreme Court under Articles
226 and 32 of the Constitution respectively is a part of the
inviolable basic structure of our Constitution. The power
of judicial review over legislative action vesting in the
High Courts under Article 226 and in the Supreme Court under
Article 32 of the Constitution are an integral and essential
feature of such basic structure and therefore their power to
test the constitutional validity of legislations can never
be ousted or excluded (paras 73, 78). The power vested in
the High Courts to exercise judicial superintendence over
the decisions of all courts and tribunals within their
respective jurisdictions is also part of the basic structure
of the Constitution and a situation where the High Courts
are divested of all other judicial functions apart from that
of constitutional interpretation is equally to be avoided
(para 79). Though the subordinate judiciary or tribunal
created under ordinary legislations cannot exercise the
power of judicial review of legislative action to the
exclusion of the High Courts and the Supreme Court, there is
no constitutional prohibition against their performing a
supplemental - as opposed to a substitutional - role in this
respect. Clause (3) of Article 32 itself contemplates that
Parliament may by law empower any other court to exercise
within the local limits of its jurisdiction all or any of
the powers exercisable by the Supreme Court under clause
(2), without prejudice to the powers conferred on the
Supreme Court by clauses (1) and (2).
The Constitution Bench further held that if the power
of the Supreme Court under Article 32 of the Constitution
described time and again as the heart and soul of the
Constitution, can be additionally conferred upon any other
Court, there is no reason why the same situation would not
subsist in respect of the jurisdiction conferred upon the
High Courts under Article 226 of the Constitution. So long
as the jurisdiction of the High Courts under Articles
226/227 and that of the Supreme Court under Article 32 is
retained, there is no reason why the power to test the
validity of the legislations against the provisions of the
Constitution cannot be conferred upon Administrative
Tribunals or Tribunals under Articles 323A and 323B (para
89). The basic structure theory of the Constitution
prohibits the jurisdiction of the High Courts under Articles
226 in respect of the power of judicial review being wholly
excluded but the same can certainly be additionally
conferred on courts and tribunals. The Constitution Bench
specifically overruled the plea that the Tribunals should
not be allowed to adjudicate upon matters where the vires of
legislations is questioned because that would defeat the
very purpose of constituting the tribunals. To allay the
fears sought to be projected before the Constitution Bench,
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this Court held that the decisions of the Tribunal will be
subject to the jurisdiction of the High Courts under
Articles 226/227 of the Constitution before a Division bench
of the High Court within whose territorial jurisdiction the
Tribunal concerned falls as this would serve dual purpose :
(i) the power of the High Courts under Articles 226/227 of
the Constitution to judicially review the legislative action
would be saved, and (ii) it will be ensured that frivolous
claims were filtered through the process of adjudication in
the Tribunal, and additionally the High Court will have the
benefit of a reasoned decision on merits which will be of
use to it in finally deciding the matter (para 91). The
Constitution Bench emphasised the necessity of ensuring that
the High Courts are able to exercise judicial
superintendence over the decisions of the Tribunals under
Article 227 of the Constitution and held (vide para 91) :-
Having regard to both the aforestated contentions, we hold
that all decisions of Tribunals, whether created pursuant to
Article 323- A or Article 323-B of the Constitution, will be
subject to the High Courts writ jurisdiction under Articles
226/227 of the Constitution, before a Division Bench of the
High Court within whose territorial jurisdiction the
particular Tribunal falls.
The power of Supreme Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution to hear appeals by special leave against the
orders of the Tribunals on matters specified in Section
14(1) of the Act having been specifically saved by Section
28 thereof, the Constitution Bench consistently with the
view taken by it laid down the methodology to be adopted.
No appeal from the decision of a Tribunal will directly lie
before the Supreme Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution; instead, the aggrieved party will be entitled
to move the High Court under Articles 226/227 of the
Constitution and from the Division Bench decision of the
High Court the aggrieved party can move the Supreme Court
under Article 136 of the Constitution. Thus, the
Constitution Bench succeeded in preserving intact the
inalienable jurisdiction of the High Courts under Articles
226/227 of the Constitution and also effectuating the
appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under Article
136 of the Constitution over the decisions of the Tribunal
subject to their being filtered through and in that process
being subject to test by the High Courts in their judicial
review jurisdiction.
The jurisdictional powers of the Tribunal were
summarised by the Constitution Bench as under (vide para@@
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93):-@@
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1. The Tribunals are competent to hear matters where
the vires of statutory provisions are questioned. However,
in discharging this duty, they cannot act as substitutes for
the High Courts and the Supreme Court which have, under our
constitutional set-up, been specifically entrusted with such
an obligation. Their function in this respect is only
supplementary and all such decisions of the Tribunals will
be subject to scrutiny before a Division Bench of the
respective High Courts. The Tribunals will consequently
also have the power to test the vires of subordinate
legislations and rules. However, this power of the
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Tribunals will be subject to one important exception. The
Tribunals shall not entertain any question regarding the
vires of their parent statutes following the settled
principle that a Tribunal which is a creature of an Act
cannot declare that very Act to be unconstitutional. In
such cases alone, the High Court concerned may be approached
directly.
2. All other decisions of these Tribunals, rendered
in cases that they are specifically empowered to adjudicate
upon by virtue of their parent statutes, will also be
subject to scrutiny before a Division Bench of their
respective High Courts. The Tribunals will, however,
continue to act as the only courts of first instance in
respect of the areas of law for which they have been
constituted; meaning thereby that it will not be open for
litigants to directly approach the High Courts even in cases
where they question the vires of statutory legislations
(except, as mentioned, where the legislation which creates
the particular Tribunal is challenged) by overlooking the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal concerned.
The Constitution Bench concluded as under :-
We hold that clause (2) (a)(d) of Article 323-A and
clause (3)(d) of Article 323-B, to the extent they exclude
the jurisdiction of the High Courts and the Supreme Court
under Articles 226/227 and 32 of the Constitution, are
unconstitutional. Section 28 of the Act and the exclusion
of jurisdiction clauses in all other legislations enacted
under the aegis of Articles 323- A and 323-B would, to the
same extent, be unconstitutional. The jurisdiction
conferred upon the High Courts under Articles 226/227 and
upon the Supreme Court under Article 32 of the Constituiton
is a part of the inviolable basic structure of our
Constitution. While this jurisdiction cannot be ousted,
other courts and Tribunals may perform a supplemental role
in discharging the powers conferred by Articles 226/227 and
32 of the Constitution. The Tribunals created under Article
323-A and Article 323-B of the Constitution are possessed of
the competence to test the constitutional validity of
statutory provisions and rules. All decisions of these
Tribunals will, however, be subject to scrutiny before a
Division Bench of the High Court within whose jurisdiction
the Tribunal concerned falls. The Tribunals will,
nevertheless, continue to act like courts of first instance
in respect of the areas of law for which they have been
constituted. It will not, therefore, be open for litigants
to directly approach the High Courts even in cases where
they question the vires of statutory legislations (except
where the legislation which creates the particular Tribunal
is challenged) by overlooking the jurisdiction of the
Tribunal concerned. Section 5(6) of the Act is valid and
constitutional and is to be interpreted in the manner we
have indicated.
The Constitution Bench invoked the doctrine of
prospective overruling and made its directions to come into
effect prospectively, i.e., from the date of its judgment.
It is thus clear that the Constitution Bench has not
declared the provisions of Article 323-A (2)(b) or Article
323-B(3)(d) or Section 17 of the Act ultra vires the
Constitution. The High Court has, in its judgment under
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appeal, noted with emphasis the Tribunal having been
compared to like courts of first instance and then
proceeded to hold that the status of Administrative
Tribunals having been held to be equivalent to court or
tribunals subordinate to High Court the jurisdiction to hear
their own contempt was lost by the Administrative Tribunals
and the only course available to them was either to make a
reference to High Court or to file a complaint under Section
193, 219 and 228 of IPC as provided by Section 30 of the
Act. The High Court has proceeded on the reasoning that the
Tribunal having been held to be subordinate to the High
Court for the purpose of Articles 226/227 of the
Constitution and its decisions having been subjected to
judicial review jurisdiction of the High Court under
Articles 226/227 of the Constitution the right to file an
appeal to the Supreme Court against an order passed by the
Tribunal punishing for contempt under Section 17 of the Act
was defeated and on these twin grounds Section 17 of the Act
became unworkable and unconstitutional. We do not find any
basis for such conclusion or inference being drawn from the
judgments of this Court in the cases of Supreme Court Bar
Association (supra) or L. Chandra Kumar (supra) or any
other decision of this Court. The Constitution Bench has in
so many words said that the jurisdiction conferred on the
High Courts under Articles 226/227 could not be taken away
by conferring the same on any court or Tribunal and
jurisdiction hitherto exercised by the High Court now
legislatively conferred on Tribunals to the exclusion of
High Court on specified matters, did not amount to assigning
tribunals a status of substitute for the High Court but such
jurisdiction was capable of being conferred additionally or
supplementally on any Court or Tribunal which is not a
concept strange to the scheme of the Constitution more so in
view of Articles 323-A and 323-B. Clause (2)(b) of Article
323-A specifically empowers the Parliament to enact a law
specifying the jurisdiction and powers, including the power
to punish for contempt, being conferred on administrative
tribunals constituted under Article 323-A. Section 17 of
the Act derives its legislative sanctity therefrom. The
power of the High Court to punish for contempt of itself
under Article 215 of the Constitution remains intact but the
jurisdiction power and authority to hear and decide the
matters covered by sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act
having been conferred on the administrative tribunals the
jurisdiction of the High Court to that extent has been taken
away and hence the same jurisdiction which vested in the
High Court to punish for contempt of itself in the matters
now falling within the jurisdiction of tribunals if those
matters would have continued to be heard by the High court
has now been conferred on the administrative tribunals under
Section 17 of the Act. The jurisdiction is the same as
vesting in the High Courts under Article 215 of the
Constitution read with the provisions of the Contempt of
Courts Act, 1971. The need for enacting Section 17 arose,
firstly, to avoid doubts, and secondly, because the
Tribunals are not courts of record. While holding the
proceedings under Section 17 of the Act the tribunal remains
a tribunal and so would be amenable to jurisdiction of High
Court under Article 226/227 of the Constitution subject to
the well-established rules of self- restraint governing the
discretion of the High Court to interfere with the pending
proceedings and upset the interim or interlocutory orders of
the tribunals. However any order or decision of tribunal
punishing for contempt shall be appealable only to the
Supreme Court within 60 days from the date of the order
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appealed against in view of the specific provision contained
in Section 19 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 read with
Section 17 of the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985.
Section 17 of Administrative Tribunals Act is a piece of
legislation by reference. The provisions of Contempt of
Courts Act are not as if lifted and incorporated in the text
of Administrative Tribunals Act (as is in the case of
legislation by incorporation); they remain there where they
are yet while reading the provisions of Contempt of Courts
Act in the context of Tribunals, the same will be so read as
to read the word Tribunal in place of the word High
Court wherever it occurs, subject to the modifications set
out in Section 17 of the Administrative Tribunals Act.
Section 19 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 provides for
appeals. In its text also by virtue of Section 17 of the
Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 the word High Court
shall be read as Tribunal. Here, by way of abundant
caution, we make it clear that the concept of intra-tribunal
appeals i.e. appeal from an order or decision of a member
of a Tribunal sitting singly to a bench of not less than two
members of the Tribunal is alien to the Administrative
Tribunals Act, 1985. The question of any order made under
the provisions of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 by a
member of the Tribunal sitting singly, if the rules of
business framed by the Tribunal or the appropriate
government permit such hearing, being subjected to an appeal
before a Bench of two or more members of Tribunal therefore
does not arise. Any order or decision of the Tribunal
punishing for contempt is appealable under Section 19 of the
Act to the Supreme Court only. The Supreme Court in the
case of L. Chandra Kumar has nowhere said that orders of
tribunal holding the contemnor guilty and punishing for
contempt shall also be subject to judicial scrutiny of High
Court under Article 226/227 of the Constitution in spite of
remedy of statutory appeal provided by Section 19 of the
Contempt of Courts Act being available. The distinction
between orders passed by Administrative Tribunal on matters
covered by Section 14 (1) of Administrative Tribunals Act
and orders punishing for contempt under section 19 of the
Contempt of Courts Act read with Section 17 of
Administrative Tribunals Act, is this : as against the
former there is no remedy of appeal statutorily provided,
but as against the later statutory remedy of appeal is
provided by Section 19 of Contempt of Courts Act itself.
Subordination of Tribunals and courts functioning
within the territorial jurisdiction of a High Court can be
either judicial or administrative or both. The power of
superintendence exercised by the High Court under Article
227 of the Constitution is judicial superintendence and not
administrative superintendence, such as one which vests in
the High Court under Article 235 of the Constitution over
subordinate courts. Vide para 96 of L. Chandra Kumars
case, the Constitution Bench did not agree with the
suggestion that the tribunals be made subject to the
supervisory jurisdiction of the High Courts within whose
territorial jurisdiction they fall, as our constitutional
scheme does not require that all adjudicatory bodies which
fall within the territorial jurisdiction of any High Court
should be subject to its supervisory jurisdiction.
Obviously, the supervisory jurisdiction referred to by the
Constitution Bench in para 96 of the judgment is the
supervision of the administrative functioning of the
tribunals as is spelt out by discussion made in paras 96 and
97 of the judgment.
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Jurisdiction should not be confused with status and
subordination. The Parliament was motivated to create new
adjudicatory fora to provide new, cheap and fast-track
adjudicatory systems and permitting them to function by
tearing of the conventional shackles of strict rule of
pleadings, strict rule of evidence, tardy trials,
three/four-tier appeals, endless revisions and reviews __
creating hurdles in fast flow of stream of justice. The
administrative tribunals as established under Article 323-A
and the Administrative Tribunal Act 1985 are an alternative
institutional mechanism or authority, designed to be not
less effective than the High Court, consistently with the
amended constitutional scheme but at the same time not to
negate judicial review jurisdiction of constitutional
courts. Transfer of jurisdiction in specified matters from
the High Court to the administrative tribunal equates the
tribunal with the High Court in so far as the exercise of
judicial authority over the specified matters is concerned.
That, however, does not assign the administrative tribunals
a status equivalent to that of the High Court nor does that
mean that for the purpose of judicial review or judicial
superintendence they cannot be subordinate to High Court.
It has to be remembered that what has been conferred on the
administrative tribunal is not only jurisdiction of the High
Court but also of the subordinate courts as to specified
matters. High Courts are creatures of Constitution and
their judges hold constitutional office having been
appointed under the Constitution. The Tribunals are
creatures of statute and their members are statutorily
appointed and hold statutory office. In State of Orissa Vs.
Bhagaban Sarangi, (1995) 1 SCC 399, it was held that
administrative tribunal is nonetheless a tribunal and so it
is bound by the decision of the High Court of the state and
cannot side-track or bypass it. Certain observations made
in the case of T.N. Seshan, Chief Election Commr. of India
Vs. Union of India, (1995) 4 SCC 611, may usefully be
referred to. It was held that merely because some of the
service conditions of the Chief Election Commissioner are
akin to those of the Supreme Court judges, that does not
confer the status of a Supreme Court judge on the C.E.C..
This court observed __ Of late it is found that even
personnel belonging to other fora claim equation as High
Court or Supreme Court Judges merely because certain
jurisdictions earlier exercised by those Courts are
transferred to them not realising the distinction between
constitutional and statutory functionaries. We are
therefore clearly of the opinion that there is no anathema
in the tribunal exercising jurisdiction of High Court and in
that sense being supplemental or additional to the High
Court but at the same time not enjoying status equivalent to
High Court and also being subject to judicial review and
judicial superintendence of the High Court.
Incidentally we may refer to a 3-judges bench decision
of this Court in Krishnan & Anr. Vs. Krishnaveni and Anr.
- (1997) 4 SCC 241. Section 397 of Code of Criminal
Procedure 1973 confers concurrent revisional jurisdiction on
High Court and Sessions Judge. The two fora are alternative
to each other. Once an order of subordinate Court is
subjected to revision before Sessions Judge, a second
revision before High Court does not lie. Still, this Court
held, the exercise of inherent power and power of
superintendence vesting in High Court under Sections 482 and
483 read with 401 of the Code was not excluded. The power
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of the High Court of continuous supervisory jurisdiction is
of paramount importance to examine the correctness, legality
or propriety of any finding, sentence or order, recorded or
passed as also regularity of proceedings of all inferior
criminal courts. Such jurisdiction shall however be
exercised in cases of grave miscarriage of justice, abuse of
the process of the courts, the required statutory procedure
not complied with, failure of justice or order passed or
sentence imposed by the Magistrate requiring correction lest
grave miscarriage of justice should ensue.
Section 30 of the Act was also referred to by the High
Court to support its conclusions. Section 30 is merely
declaratory of the proceedings before a tribunal being
judicial proceedings within the meaning of Sections 193, 219
and 228 of the Penal Code. By no stretch of reasoning,
Section 30 could have been held as impinging upon the power
conferred on the tribunal by Section 17 of the Act and to
hold further that in case of contempt of its lawful
authority the only remedy available to tribunal was to have
recourse to Section 30 to the exclusion of power to punish
for contempt conferred by Section 17.
Contempt jurisdiction is exercised for the purpose of
upholding the majesty of law and dignity of judicial system
as also of the courts and tribunals entrusted with the task
of administering delivery of justice. Power of contempt has
often been invoked, as a step in that direction, for
enforcing compliance of orders of courts and punishing for
lapses in the matter of compliance. The majesty of judicial
institution is to be ensured so that it may not be lowered
and the functional utility of the constitutional edifice is
preserved from being rendered ineffective. The proceedings
for contempt of court cannot be used merely for executing
the decree of the court. However, with a view to preserving
the flow of the stream of justice in its unsullied form and
in unstinted purity willful defiance with the mandate of the
court is treated to be contemptuous. Availability of
jurisdiction to punish for contempt provides efficacy to
functioning of the judicial forum and enables the
enforcement of the orders on account of its deterrent affect
on avoidance. Viewed from this angle the validity of
Section 17 of the Act is protected not only by sub-clause
(b) of Clause (2) of Article 323-A but also by sub-clause
(g) thereof.
For the foregoing reasons the appeals are allowed.
The judgment of the High Court is set aside. CWP No.34841
of 1998 filed in the High Court of Andhra Pradesh laying
challenge to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal to deal with
its own contempt is directed to be dismissed. The Tribunal
shall now proceed ahead with the proceedings pending before
it as per law. Contempt Case No.1054/1998 filed before the
High Court invoking its contempt jurisdiction is directed to
be transferred to the Tribunal for being dealt with under
Section 17 of the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985.
Complete record of the proceedings shall be transmitted by
the High Court to the Tribunal. The appeals stand disposed
of accordingly. No order as to the costs.
. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . CJI