Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BARADAKANTA MISHRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MR. JUSTICE GATIKRUSHNA MISHRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/06/1974
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
PALEKAR, D.G.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 2255 1975 SCR (1) 524
1975 SCC (3) 535
CITATOR INFO :
D 1978 SC1014 (5)
ACT:
Contempt of Court Act, 1971--Sec. 19(1) where the Court
rejects a motion or a reference and declines to initiate a
proceeding for contempt, can such a decision be regarded as
"a decision in the exercise of its jurisdiction to punish
for contempt.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a member of the Judicial service of Orissa
was promoted as Addl. District and Sessions Judge on 31st
July, 1968. but on 30th March. 1972 he was suspended by the
High Court as a disciplinary enquiry was decided to be
started against him.
On 29th April, 1972 the appellant was charge-sheeted and was
called upon to show cause why disciplinary action should not
be taken against him. In the meantime the appellant
appealed to the Governor, complaining against the order of
suspension and requesting him to cancel the order of
suspension on the ground that it was outside the authority
of the High Court. The High Court withheld the appeal of
the appellant and refused to forward it to the Governor
since in its opinion, no appeal lay to the Governor against
an order of suspension passed by the High Court.
The appellant, thereafter. forwarded directly a
representation to the Governor with a copy to the High Court
and by this representation he moved the Governor to transfer
the disciplinary enquiry against him to the Administrative
Tribunal. There were several submissions made in this
representation which scandalised the High Court and tended
to lower its prestige etc. The High Court therefore, suo
motu, issued a notice dated 3rd July, 1972 calling upon the
appellant to show cause :why he should not be punished for
contempt of Court. The notice set out the passages from the
representation made by the appellant and the proceeding for
contempt initiated by this notice was Criminal Misc. case
No. 8 of 1972.
The appellant appeared in answer to the notice and raised
several contentions. One of the contentions was that
whatever he had said in regard to the Judges of the High
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Court in the representation was in regard to their conduct
in the discharge of administrative functions and not
judicial functions and therefore, it did not amount to
contempt of Court. The appellant pleaded before the Full
Bench that this Contention should be tried as preliminary
issue, but the Full Bench rejected the plea of the
appellant. The appellant thereupon, preferred a petition
for special leave to appeal to this Court and in this
petition the appellant once again made submissions which
prima facie appeared to be criminal contempt of court. The
petition was rejected by this Hon’ble Court, but the High
Court, taking note of the objectionable submissions con-
tained in the petition, issued a supplementary notice dated
5th January. 1973 to the appellant to show cause why he
should not be punished for having committed contempt of
Court by publishing such statements.
The Full Bench, thereafter heard the proceedings for
contempt on the charges contained in both the notices and
held the appellant guilty of con-, tempt of Court and
sentenced him to two months’ simple imprisonment.
In the mean while, the displinary enquiry instituted against
the appellant was entrusted to a single judge and he learned
Judge submitted his report finding the appellant guilty of
all the charges, except charge No. 4(a). The High Court
considered the report at a full Court meeting and thereafter
issued show cause notice calling upon the appellant to show
cause why he should not be reduced to the rank of Addl.
District Magistrate. Judicial. The appellant was granted
personal hearing and after considering the explanation given
by him the High Court found the appellant guilty of the
charges except charge 4(a) and reduced him to the rank of
A.D.M., Judicial.
525
The appellant took the view that some of the issues arising
in the disciplinary enquiry were the same as those arising
in the proceeding for contempt which was pending against him
and the decision of those issues by the High Court on the
administrative side in the course of the disciplinary
enquiry, amounted to prejudging these issues in the
proceeding for contempt which was a judicial proceeding and
the Chief Justice and other Judges of the High Court who
decided the disciplinary enquiry were, therefore, guilty of
criminal contempt of their own High Court. The appellant,
therefore. as soon as the proceeding for contempt was
decided by the High Court moved the Full Bench for
initiating a proceeding for contempt against the Chief
Justice and other Judges in their personal capacity. The
motion of the appellant was heard by a Full Bench and the
bench held that in its opinion there was no contempt of
Court committed by the Chief Justice and other Judges and in
any event by reason of Section 15, (1). the appellant was
not entitled to move the High Court for taking action
against the Chief justice and other Judges since he had not
obtained the consent in writing of the Advocate General and
the Bench accordingly declined to take any action on the
motion of the appellant. The appellant, thereupon,
purporting to appeal under Section 19(1) preferred the
present appeal to this Hon’ble Court.
Before this Hon’ble Court a preliminary objection against
the maintainability of the appeal was raised by the
respondent. According to the respondent, no appeal lay
under Section 19,(1) against the refusal of the High Court
to take action on the motion made by the appellant. The
appellant, on the other hand, contended by relying on the
words "Any order or decision.... in the exercise of its
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jurisdiction to punish or contempt" and urged that even if
the decision was taken by the High Court not to take any
action on the motion made by the Advocate-General or any
other person with the consent in writing of the Advocate-
General, it would still be a decision in the exercise of its
jurisdiction to punish for contempt and therefore be
appealable on the plain terms of section 19(1).
Dismissing the appeal.
HELD (1) it is clear that under the law as it stood prior to
the enactment f the contempt of Court Act, 1971 even a
person punished for criminal contempt had no right of
appeal. This unsatisfactory position was, however, made
right by Parliament by enacting the Contempt of Courts Act
1971, which introduced Section 19(1) by which an appeal as
of right was introduced "from any order or decision of a
High Court in the exercise of its jurisdiction to punish for
contempt." [531 D]
(2) From the provision of the Act. of 1971 it is clear that
the scheme adopted by the Legislature is that the Court may
initiate a proceeding for contempt suo motu or On a motion
made by the Advocate General or on a reference made by a
subordinate Court. Where the Court initiates a proceeding
for contempt suo motu, it assumes jurisdiction for punishing
for contempt and takes the first step in exercise of it; but
when a motion is made by the Advocate-General or any other
person with the consent in writing of the Advocate-General
or when a reference is made by a Subordinate Court, the
Court, on a consideration of such motion or reference would
decide, in exercise of its jurisdiction, whether to initiate
proceedings for contempt. The Court may decline to take
cognizance and to initiate a proceeding for contempt. The
exercise of contempt jurisdiction being a matter entirely
between the court and the, condemner the Court though moved
by motion or reference, may in its discretion decline to
exercise its jurisdiction for contempt. It is only when the
Court decides to take action and initiates a proceedings for
contempt that it assumes jurisdiction to punish for
contempt. The exercise of the jurisdiction to punish for
contempt commences with the initiation of a proceeding for
contempt. whether suo motu or on a motion or a, reference.
That is why the terminus a quo for The period of limitation
provided in Section 20 is the date when the proceeding for
contempt is initiated by the Court. Where the court rejects
a motion or reference and declines to initiate a proceeding
for contempt, it refuses to assume or exercise jurisdiction
lo punish for contempt. and such a decision cannot be
regarded as a decision in the exercise of its jurisdiction
to punish for contempt. Such a decision
526
would not, therefore fall within the opening words of
Section 19(1) and no appeal would lie against it as of right
Linder that provision. [532 A-F]
(3) It does not.. however mean that there is no remedy
available where the High Court, on an erroneous view
disallows or unreasonably refuses to take action on a motion
or a reference. Though no appeal lies Linder Section 19(1 )
as of right, the Advocate-General or any other person with
the consent in writing of the Advocate-General who has moved
the High Court, can always come to this Court by a petition
for special leave to appeal and the power of this Court to
interfere with such order or decision in the exercise of its
extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 136 is unfettered.
This Court can always in Suitable cases set right any order
or decision of the High Court refusing to take action for
contempt against the alleged condemner, if the interests of
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the administration of justice so require. [532 F-H]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 84 of
1973.
(Appeal under Section 19 of the Contempt of Court Act, 1971
from the Judgment and Order dated the 13th February, 1973 of
the Orissa High Court at Cuttack in original Criminal Misc.
Case No. 3 of 1973).
Baradakanta Mishra, in person.
F. S. Nariman, Addition-,it’ Solicitor-General of India,
and Vinoo Bhagat, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J., Since we are disposing of this appeal on a
preliminary point, it is not necessary to state the facts in
detail. It would be sufficient if we state only so much of
the facts as bear on the preliminary point.
The appellant was at all material times a member of the
Judicial Service of the State of Orissa. He was promoted as
an Additional District and Sessions Judge on 31st July, 1968
but by an order dated 30th March, 1972 made by the High
Court of Orissa, he was suspended as a disciplinary inquiry
was decided to be instituted against him. On 29th April,
1972, a charge-sheet containing eight charges was served on
him and he was called upon to show cause why disciplinary
action should not be taken against him. In the meantime, on
10th April, 1972, the appellant addressed an appeal to the
Government complaining against the order of suspension
passed by the High Court and requesting the Governor to
cancel the order of suspension on the ground that it was
outside the authority of the High Court. The High Court
withheld the appeal of the appellant and refused to forward
it to the Governor since in its opinion no appeal lay to the
Governor, against an order of suspension passed by the High
Court. The appellant thereupon forwarded directly to the
Governor a representation dated 14th May, 1972 with a copy
to the Registrar of the High Court and by this
representation the appellant moved the Governor to transfer
the disciplinary inquiry against him to the Administrative
Tribunal. There were several statements made in this
representation which scandalized the High Court and tended
to lower its prestige, dignity and authority and thus
constituted criminal contempt of court within the meaning of
the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971. The High Court,
527
therefore, suo motu issued a notice dated 3rd July, 1972
calling upon the appellant to show cause why he should not
be punished for contempt of court. The notice set out the
passages from the representation made by the appellant to
the Governor which, in the prima facie opinion of the High
Court, amounted to contempt of court. The proceeding for
contempt initiated by this notice was numbered as Criminal
Miscellaneous Case No. 8 of 1972. The appellant appeared in
answer to the notice and raised several contentions with a
view to exonerating himself from the charge of contempt.
One of the contentions was that whatever he had said in
regard to the judges of the High Court in the representation
made by him to the Governor was in regard to their conduct
in the discharge, of administrative functions and not
judicial functions, and therefore, it did not amount to
contempt of court. The appellant pleaded before the Full
Bench of five judges, which was constituted to hear the pro-
ceeding for contempt, that this contention should be tried
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as a preliminary issue, but the Full Bench rejected the plea
of the appellant. The appellant thereupon preferred a
petition for special leave to appeal to this Court and in
this petition, the appellant once again made statements
which prima facie appeared to constitute criminal contempt
of court. The petition was rejected by this Court but the
High Court taking note of the objectionable statements
contained in the petition issued a supplementary notice
dated 5th January, 1973 to the appellant to show cause why
he should not be punished for having committed contempt of
court by publishing such statements. The Full Bench there-
after heard the proceeding for contempt on the charges
contained in both the notices and by an order dated 5th
February, 1973 held the appellant guilty of contempt of
court and sentenced him to simple imprisonment for two
months.
Meanwhile the disciplinary inquiry instituted under the
charge-sheet dated 29th April, 1972 was entrusted to K. B.
Panda, J., and the learned Judge, after holding a proper
inquiry in accordance with the principles of natural
justice, submitted a report dated 2nd August 1972 finding
the appellant guilty of all the eight charges set out in the
charge-sheet, except charge No. 4(a). The High Court
considered the report at a Full Court meeting of all the
judges and finding itself in agreement with the report, the
High Court issued a show cause notice calling upon the
appellant to show cause why he should not be reduced to the
rank of Additional District Magistrate (Judicial). The
appellant was granted personal hearing and after considering
the explanation given by him, the High Court again at a Full
Court meeting of all the’ judges held on 8th December, 1972,
found the appellant guilty of the charges levelled against
him except charge No. 4(a) and reduced him to the rank of
Additional District Magistrate (Judicial). The appellant
took the view that same of the issues arising in the
disciplinary inquiry were the same as those arising in the
proceeding for contempt which was pending against him and
the decision of those issues by the High Court on the
Administrative side in the course of the disciplinary
inquiry amounted to pre-judging those issues in the
proceeding for contempt which was a judicial proceeding and
the Chief Justice and other judges
528
of the High Court, who decided the disciplinary inquiry
were, therefore, guilty of criminal contempt of their own
High Court. The appellant, therefore, as soon as the
proceeding for contempt was decided by the Full Bench on 5th
February, 1973, moved the Full Bench for initiating
proceeding for contempt against the Chief Justice and other
judges in their personal capacity. The motion of the
appellant was heard by a Full Bench of three judges and by
an order dated 13th February, 1973, the Bench held that in
its opinion there was no contempt of court committed by the
Chief Justice and the other judges and in any event, by
reason of section 15, sub-section (4), the appellant was not
entitled to move the High Court for taking action against
the Chief Justice and other judges since he had not obtained
the consent in writing of the Advocate General and the Bench
accordingly declined to take any action on the motion of the
appellant. The appellant thereupon, purporting to avail of
the right of appeal granted under section 19, subsection
(1), preferred the present appeal to this Court.
When the appeal reached hearing before us, the learned
Additional Solicitor General, appearing on behalf of the
respondent, raised a preliminary objection against the
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maintainability of the appeal. The learned Additional
Solicitor General contended that not appeal lay under
section 19, sub-section (1) against the refusal of the High
Court to take action on the motion made by the appellant.
It is, only if the High Court suo motu or on a motion made
by the Advocate General or any other person with the consent
in writing of the Advocate General takes action and
initiates proceeding for contempt against the alleged
contemner and on arising at a finding of guilt, punishes him
for contempt that the alleged contemner has a right of
appeal under section 19, sub-section (1). Even if a
proceeding for contempt is initiated against the alleged
contemner but the alleged contemner is found not guilty and
is exonerated, there is no right of appeal, contended the
learned Additional Solicitor General, and neither the
Advocate General nor the person who has, with the consent in
writing of the Advocate General, moved the High Court, can
appeal as of right. The appellant, who appeared in person,
combated this contention by relying on the, words "any order
or decision-in the exercise of its jurisdiction to punish
for contempt" and urged that even if a decision was taken by
the High Court not to take action can the motion made by the
Advocate General or any other person with the consent in
writing of the Advocate General, it would still be a
decision in the exercise of its jurisdiction to punish for
contempt and would, therefore, be appealable on the plain
terms of section 19, sub-section (1). It is difficult to
imagine, contended the appellant, that the legislature
should have conferred a right on the Advocate General,or any
other person with the consent in writing of the Advocate
General to move the High Court for taking action for
contempt, but should have refused to grant a right of appeal
to the Advocate General or such other person even if his
motion was wrongly rejected by the High Court. These rival
contentions raise an interesting question of law depending
for its determination on the true interpretation of the
language of section 19, sub-section (1).
529
Now, while considering this question, we must bear in mind
the true nature of the contempt jurisdiction exercised by
the High Court and the law in regard to right of appeal
which obtained immediately prior to the enactment of the
contempt of Courts Act, 1971. It has always been regarded
as well settled law that so far as criminal contempt is
concerned, it is a matter entirely :between the Court and
the alleged condemner. No one has a statutory or common law
right to say that he is entitled as a matter of course to an
order for committal because the alleged condemner is guilty
of contempt. All that he can do is to move the Court and
draw its attention to the contempt alleged to have been
committed and it will then be for the Court, if it so thinks
fit, to take action to vindicate its authority and commit
the alleged contemner for contempt. It is for the Court in
the exercise of its discretion to decide whether or not to
initiate a proceeding for contempt. Even if the Court is
prima facie satisfied that a contempt has been committed,
the Court may yet choose to ignore it and decline to take
action. There is no right in any one to compel the Court to
initiate a proceeding for contempt even where a prima facie
case appears to have been made out. The same position
obtains even after a proceeding for contempt is initiated by
the Court on a motion made to it for the purpose. The Court
may in the exercise of its discretion accept an
unconditional apology from the alleged contemner and drop
the proceeding for contempt. Or, even after the alleged
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contemner is found guilty, the Court may, having regard to
the circumstances, decline to punish him. So far as the
contempt jurisdiction is concerned, the only actors in the
drama are the Court and the alleged contemner. An outside
party comes in only by way of drawing the attention of the
Court to the contempt which has been committed : he does not
become a party to the proceeding for contempt which may be
initiated by the Court. It was for this reason that a
Division Bench of the Bombay High Court held in Narendrabhai
Sarabhai Hatheesing v. Chinubhai Manibhai, Seth(1) that an
order made by the High Court refusing to commit a man for
breach of an undertaking given to the Court is not a
judgment within the meaning of clause 15 of the Letters
Patent as it does not affect the merits of any question
between the parties to the suit. Beaumont, C.J., pointed
out : "the undertaking is given to the Court; if it is
broken, and that fact is brought to the Court’s notice, the
Court may take such action as it thinks fit. If it comes to
the conclusion that the order has been deliberately broken,
it will probably commit the defaulter to jail, but the Court
is free to adopt such course as it thinks fit." Rangnekar,
J., also spoke in the same strain when he said :
"Proceedings for contempt are matters entirely between the
Court and the person alleged to have been guilty of
contempt. No party has any statutory right to say that he
is entitled as a matter of course to an order for committal
because his opponent is guilty of contempt. All that he can
do is to come to the Court and complain that the authority
of the Court has been flouted, and if the Court thinks that
it was so, then the Court ill its discretion takes action to
vindicate its authority. It is, therefore, difficult to see
how an application ?or contempt raises any question between
the parties, so that any order made
(1) I.L.R. 60 Bom. 894.
530
on such an application by which the Court in its discretion
refuses to take any action against the party alleged to be
in the wrong can be said to raise any question between the
parties." It is, therefore, clear that under the law as it
stood prior to the enactment of the Contempt of Courts Act,
1971 no appeal lay at he instance of a party moving the High
Court for taking action for contempt, if the High Court in
the exercise of its discretion refused to take action on the
motion of such party. Even if the High Court took action
and initiated a proceeding for contempt and in such
proceeding, the alleged contemner, being found guilty, was
punished for contempt, the order being one made by the High
Court in the exercise of its criminal jurisdiction was not
appealable under clause 15 of the Letters Patent, and
therefore, no appeal lay against it from a Single Judge to a
Division Bench and equally, there was no appeal as of right
from a Division Bench to this Court. The result was that in
cases of criminal contempt, even a person punished for
contempt had no right of appeal and he could impugn the
order committing him for contempt only if the High Court
granted the appropriate certificate under Art. 134 in fit
cases or on the refusal of the High Court to do so, this
Court intervened by granting special leave under article
136.
This was a highly unsatisfactory state of affairs and it was
largely responsible for the criticism against the large
powers of the Court to punish for contempt. This
unsatisfactory feature of the law of contempt was adversely
commented upon by Sanyal Committee in its Report dated 28th
February, 1963 submitted to the Government of India. The
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Sanyal Committee, pointed out in Paragraph 2.1 in Chapter XI
of its Report :
"The present state of the law relating to
appeal in cases of criminal contempt appears
to be more, the result of accidents of legal
history than a matter of policy. That this is
so is clearly evident from the fact that in
those cases of contempt for which specific.
provision is made in the Indian Penal Code and
the Code- of Criminal Procedure a right of
appeal is provided for under section 486 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure. In the case
of contempt falling within the purview of
inherent powers of the High Courts, no
specific provision has been made in the
Letters Patent of the High Courts and the only
explanation for this seems to be that no such
provision was made in England in regard to the
English superior courts. Further, under the
provisions of the Letters Patent, no appeal is
ordinarily permissible where the order of the
court is made in the exercise of the criminal
jurisdiction. It has also been held that
section 411A of the Code of Criminal Procedure
does not afford any remedy by way of appeal in
contempt cases. The result has been that
before the Constitution came into force, an
appeal in contempt cases from the decision of
a High Court could lie only in special cases
to the Judicial Committee. The Constitution
did not alter this position very much for the
effect of articles 134 and 136 of the
Constitution is merely to substitute the
531
Supreme Court for the Privy Council. In
short, there is only a discretionary right of
appeal available at present in cases of
criminal contempt."
Then in Paragraph 3.1 in Chapter XI of its
Report the Sanyal Committee proceeded to state
:
"we accordingly recommend that against ’an
order of a single Judge, punishing for
contempt, the appeal should lie, in the High
Court, to a Bench of Judges and against a
similar order of a Bench of Judges of a High
Court, the appeal should lie as of right to
the Supreme Court."
Chapter XII of the Report contained the
recommendations of the Sanyal Committee and
clause, 25 of the recommendations was in the
following terms :
"Provision may be made for an appeal as of
right from any order or decision of a High
Court in the exercise of its. .jurisdiction to
punish for contempt. The appeal should lie to
a Bench of Judges of the High Court where the
order or decision is of a single Judge. Where
the order or decision is of a Bench the appeal
should lie to the Supreme Court."
It was in pursuance of this recommendation made by the
Sanyal Committee that the Parliament, while enacting the
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, introduced section 19, sub-
section(1) in that Act conferring an appeal as of right
"from any order or decision of a High Court in the exercise
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of its jurisdiction to punish for contempt".
Before we examine the language of section 19, sub-section
(1) in order to arrive at its true interpretation, we may
first look at sections 15, 17 and 20. Sub-section (1) of
section 15 provides that in a case of criminal contempt
other than contempt in the face of the Court, the Supreme
Court or the High Court may take action ’on its own motion
or on a motion made by the Advocate General or any other
person with the consent in writing of the Advocate General
and subsection (2) of that section-says that in case of
criminal contempt of any subordinate court, the High Court
may take action on a reference made to it by the subordinate
court or on a motion made by the Advocate General or in
relation to Union Territories, by such law officer as the
Central Government may specify in this behalf. Section 17
lays down the procedure to be followed by the, Court when it
decides to take action and initiates a proceeding for
contempt under section 15. Sub-section (1) of that section
provides that notice of every proceeding under section 15
shall be served personally on the person charged and
according to subsection (2), such notice shall be
accompanied, in case of a proceeding commenced, on a motion,
by a copy of the motion as also copies of the affidavits, if
any, on which such motion is founded, and in case of a
proceeding commenced on a reference by a subordinate court,
by a copy of the reference. Section 20 prescribes a period
of limitation by saying that no court shall initiate any
proceeding for contempt either on its own motion or other
wise after the expiry of a period of one year from the date
on which the contempt is alleged to have been committed. It
will be seen from these provisions that the scheme adopted
by the legislature is that the
532
Court may initiate a proceeding for Contempt suo motu or on
a motion made by the Advocate General or any other person
with the consent in writing of the Advocate General or on a
reference made by a subordinate court. Where the Court
initiates a proceeding for contempt suo motu, it assumes
jurisdiction to punish for contempt and takes the first step
in exercise of it. But whit happens when a motion is made
by the Advocate General or any other person with the consent
in writing of the Advocate General or a reference is made by
a subordinate court. Does the Court enter upon the
jurisdiction to punish for contempt and act in exercise of
it when it considers such motion or reference for the
purpose of deciding whether it should initiate a proceeding
for contempt ? We do not think so. The motion or reference
is only for the purpose of drawing the attention of the
Court to the contempt alleged to have been committed and it
is for the Court’. on a consideration of such motion or
reference, to decide, in exercise of its discretion, whether
or not to initiate a proceeding for contempt. The Court may
decline to take cognizance and to initiate a proceeding for
contempt either because in its opinion no contempt Prima
facie appears to have been committed or because, even if
there is prima facie contempt, it is not a fit case in which
action should be taken against the alleged contemner. The
exercise of contempt jurisdiction being a matter entirely
between the Court and the alleged contemner, the Court,
though moved by motion or reference, may in its discretion,
decline to exercise its jurisdiction for contempt. It is
only when the Court decides to take action and initiates a
proceeding for contempt that it assumes jurisdiction to
punish for contempt. The exercise of the jurisdiction to
punish for contempt commence; with the initiation of a
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proceeding for contempt, whether suo motu or on a motion or
a reference. That is why the terminus a quo for the period
of limitation provided in section 20 is the date when a
proceeding for contempt is initiated by the Court. Where
the Court rejects a motion or a reference and declines to
initiate a proceeding for contempt, it refuses to assume or
exercise jurisdiction to punish for contempt and such a
decision cannot be regarded as a decision in the exercise of
its jurisdiction to punish for contempt. Such a decision
would not, therefore, fall within the opening words of
section 19, sub-section (1) and no appeal would lie against
it as of right under that provision. This of course does
not mean that there is no remedy available where the High
Court on an erroneous view of the law or unreasonably and
perversely refuses to take action for contempt on a motion
or a reference. Though no appeal lies under section 19,
sub-section (1) as of right against such order or decisions
of the High Court, the Advocate General or any other person
who has with the, consent in writing of the Advocate General
moved the High Court can always come to this Court by a
petition for special leave to appeal and the power of this
Court to interfere with such order or decision in the
exercise of its extraordinary jurisdiction under article 136
is unfettered. This Court can always in suitable cases set
right any order or decision of the High Court refusing to
take action for contempt against the alleged contemner, if
the larger interests of administration of justice so
require.
It is, therefore. clear that the order made by the Full
Bench of the Orissa High Court in the present case rejecting
the motion made by
533
the appellant and refusing to initiate a proceeding for
contempt against the Chief Justice and other judges was not
appealable under section 19, sub-section (1). We may point
out that ’in the present case it is unnecessary to consider
whether an appeal under section 19, subsection (1) is
confined only to a case where the High Court after
initiating a proceeding for contempt finds the alleged
contemner guilty and punishes him for contempt as contended
by the learned Additional Solicitor General or it extends
also to a case where after initiating a proceeding for
contempt, the High Court finds that the alleged contemner is
not guilty of contempt and exonerates him, or even if he is
found guilty of contempt, declines to punish him. A
question may well arise whether in the latter case the
Advocate General or any other person who has, with the
consent in writing of the Advocate General, moved the High
Court can appeal as of right against the order or decision
of the High Court. That question does not arise in the
present case and we need not, therefore, express, any
opinion upon it, though we may point out that in England a
right of appeal is given to a disappointed applicant under
section 13, subsections (1) and (2) of the Administration
of Justice Act, 1960.
We are, therefore, of the view that the preliminary
objection raised by the respondent is well founded and the
appellant is not entitled to maintain the present appeal
under section-19, sub-section (1). ’no appeal, therefore,
fails and is dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.
S.C.
Appeal dismissed.
2-M185SUP.CI./75
534
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