Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BRAHMA PRAKASH SHARMA AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/05/1953
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1954 AIR 10 1954 SCR 1169
CITATOR INFO :
C 1954 SC 743 (4)
E&F 1959 SC 102 (3)
R 1962 SC1172 (29)
R 1971 SC 221 (17)
RF 1971 SC1132 (53,58)
R 1972 SC 989 (8)
D 1974 SC 710 (51)
R 1978 SC 727 (42,44)
F 1978 SC 921 (12,16)
R 1992 SC 904 (23,54)
ACT:
Contempt of Courts Act, 1926, s. 3 Reflection on condition
character of Judicial Officers When amounts to contempt of
court Contempt proceedings--Guiding principles Matters to be
considered-Relevancy of surronuding circumstances-
Jurisdiction to be sparing exeercised.
HEADNOTE:
(1) Vide Vaghoji v. Camaji, I.I..R. 29 Bom. 249.
117O
The object of contempt proceedings is not to afford
protection to judges personally from imputations to which
they maybe exposed as individuals, but is intended to be a
protection to the public whose interest would be very much
affected if, by the act or conduct of any party, the
authority of the court is lowered and the sense of
confidence which the people have in the administration of
justice by it is weakened.
When the court itself is attacked, the summary
jurisdiction by way of contempt ’proceedings must be
exercised with scrupulous care and only when the case is
clear and beyond reasonable doubt.
There are two primary considerations which should weigh
with the court in such cases, viz., first whether the
reflection on the conduct or character of the judge is
within the limits of fair and reasonable criticism, and
secondly, whether it is a mere libel or defamation of the
judge or amounts to a contempt of the court. If it is a
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mere defamatory attack on the judge and is not calculated to
interfere with the due course of justice or the proper
administration of the law by such court, it is not proper to
proceed by way of contempt.
Where the question arises whether a defamatory statement
directed against a judge is calculated to undermine the
confidence of the public in the competency or integrity of
the judge or is likely to deflect the court itself from a
strict and unhesitant performance of its duties, all the
surrounding facts and circumstances under which the
statement was made and the degree of publicity that was
given to it would be relevant circumstances. The question
is not to be determined solely with reference to the
language or contents of the statement made.
The Executive Committee of a District Bar Association
received several complaints against the way in which the
Judicial Magistrate and the Revenue Officer of the District
disposed of cases and behaved towards litigants and lawyers,
and passed a resolution which stated that " it was their
considered opinion that the two officers are thoroughly
incompetent in law, do not inspire confidence in their
judicial work, are given to stating wrong facts when passing
orders and are overbearing and discourteous to the litigant
public and lawyers alike " and gave a list of various
complaints against the officers. This resolution was passed
in camera, typed out by the President himself and forwarded
confidentially to the District Magistrate, Commissioner of
the Division, and the Chief Secretary and Premier of the
State. The District Magistrate moved the High Court of
Allahabad to take action against the appellants, who had
passed the resolution, for contempt of court. The High
Court held that the appellants were guilty of contempt but
accepted their apology. On appeal:
Held, that in the light of all the circumstances of the
case, the contempt, if any, was only of a technical
character and that after the affidavits bad been filed on
behalf of the appellants before the High Court, the
proceedings against them should have been dropped.
1171
JUDGMENT:
CRMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 24 of
1951.
Appeal by special leave granted by the Supreme Court on the
2nd April, 1951, from the Judgment and Order dated the 5th
May, 1950, of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad in
Criminal Miscellaneous Case No. 34 of 1949.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, K. S.
Krishnaswamy Aiyangar and S. P.Sinha (V. N. Sethi, K. B.
Asthana, N. C. Sen, K. N. Aggarwala, Shaukat Hussain, K. P.
Gupta, M. D. Upadhyaya and G. C. Mathur, with them) for the
appellants.
Gopalji Mehrotra and Jagdish Chandra for the respondent.
1953. May 8. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MUKHERJEA, J.This appeal which has come before us, on
special leave, is directed against a judgment of a Full
Bench of the Allahabad High Court, dated 5th May, 1950, by
which the learned judges held the appellants guilty of
contempt of court; and although the apology tendered by the
appellants was accepted, they were directed to pay the costs
of the respondent State.
The appellants, six in number, are members of the Executive
Committee of the District Bar Association at Muzaffarnagar
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within the State of Uttar Pradesh, and the contempt
proceedings were started against them, because of certain
resolutions passed by the Committee on 20th April, 1949,
copies of which were forwarded to the District Magistrate
and other officers by a covering letter signed by appellant
No.1 as President of the Bar Association.
To appreciate the contentions that have been raised in this
appeal, it would be necessary to state a few relevant facts.
The resolutions which form the basis of the contempt
proceedings relate to the conduct of two judicial officers,
both of whom functioned At
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Muzafarnagarn at the relevant time. One of them named
Kanhaya Lal Mehra was a Judicial Magistrate while the other
named Lalta Prasad was a Revenue Officer. It is said that
the first appellant as President of the Bar Association
received numerous complaints regarding the way in which
these officers diposed of cases in their courts and behaved
towards the lawyers and the litigant public. The Executive
Committee of the Association took the matter in hand and,
after satisfying themselves that the complaints were legiti-
mate and well-founded, they held a meeting on 20th April,
1949, in which the following resolutions were passed:-
Rsolved that ----
"Whereas the members of the Association have had ample
opportunity of forming an opinion of the judicial work of
Sri Kanhaya Lal, Judicial Magistrate, and Shri Lalta Prasad,
Revenue Officer,
It is now their considered opinion that the two officers
are thoroughly incompetent in law, do not inspire confidence
in their judicial work, are given to stating wrong facts
when passing orders and are overbearing and discourteous to
the litigant public and the lawyers alike. Besides the
above-mentioned defects common to both of them, other
defects are separately catalogued as hereunder:-
(The complaints against each of the officers separately
were then set out under specific heads).
Resolved further that copies of the resolution be sent to
the Honourable Premier, the Chief Secretary of the Uttar
Pradesh Government, the Commissioner and the District
Magistrate for suitable action;
Resolved that the District Magistrate and Collector be
requested to meet a deputation of the following in this
connection at an early date;"
(The names of 5 members who were to form the deputation
were then mentioned.)
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It is not disputed that this meeting of the Executive
Committee of the Bar Association was held in camera and no
non-member was allowed to be present’ at it. The
resolutions were typed out by the President himself and the
proceedings were not recorded in the Minute Book of the
Association at all. On the following day, that is, on 21st
April, 1949, the President sent a copy of the resolutions
with a covering letter marked " confidential" to the
District Magistrate, Muzaffarnagar. Copies of the
resolutions were similarly despatched to the Commissioner of
the Division, the Chief Secretary and the Premier of Uttar
Pradesh. It is not disputed that the District Magistrate
was the immediate superior of the officers concerned, and
the other three were the higher executive authorities in the
official hierarchy. One paragraph of this covering letter
contained the following statement:-
"Complaints against these officers had been mounting and a
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stage was reached when the matter had to be taken up
formally. The resolution is not only well-considered and
unanimous but represents a consensus of opinion of all
practitioners in the Criminal and Revenue side."
The post-script of the letter addressed to the District
Magistrate contained a prayer that he might find it
convenient to fix an early date to meet the deputation of 5
members as indicated in the third resolution.
The Divisional Commissioner, by his letter dated 27th
April, 1949, addressed to appellant No. 1, acknowledged
receipt of the copy of the resolutions and requested the
addressee to supply specific details of cases tried by these
officers in support of the allegations contained in the
resolution. Without waiting for this information, however,
the Commissioner on the day following wrote a letter to the
Chief Secretary of the U.P. Government suggesting that the
matter should be brought to the notice of the High Court
inasmuch as instances were not rare where influential
members of the Bar got resolutions like these passed by
their associations with a view to put
152
1174
extra-judicial pressure upon the judicial officers so ,as to
make them amenable to their wishes which often were
questionable. On 10th May, 1949, a deputation of 5 members
waited upon the District Magistrate and discussed with the
latter the entire situation. The Magistrate also told the
deputation that the details of complaints as required by the
Commissioner should be furnished at an early date. These
details were sent to the District Magistrate by the
appellant No. I on 20th June, 1949, and specific instances
were cited, the accuracy of which was vouched by a number of
senior lawyers who actually conducted those cases. On 20th
July, 1949, the District Magistrate through the Divisional
Commissioner wrote a letter to the Registrar of the High
Court of Allahabad requesting the latter to draw the
attention of the High Court to the resolutions passed on
20th April, 1949, and other remarks made by the members of
the Committee and suggesting that suitable action might be
taken against them under section 3 of the Contempt of Courts
Act of 1926. On 16th November, 1949, the High Court
directed the issue of notices on 8 members of the Committee
to show cause why they should not be dealt with for contempt
of court in respect of certain portions of the resolution
which were set out in the notice. In answer to these
notices, the opposite parties appeared and filed affidavits.
The case was heard by a Bench of three Judges who, by their
judgment dated 5th May, 1950, came to the conclusion that
with the exception of two of the opposite parties who were
not members of the Executive Committee at the relevant date,
the remaining six were guilty of contempt of’ court. It was
held that the opposite parties were not actuated by any
personal or improper motives; the statement made on their
behalf that their object was not to interfere with but to
improve the administration of justice was accepted by the
court, but nevertheless it was observed that the terms used
in the resolution were little removed from personal abuse
and whatever might have been the motive, they clearly were
likely to bring the Magistrate into contempt and
1175
lower their authority. The concluding portion of the
judgment stands as follows:-
"We think that the opposite parties acted under a
misapprehension as to the position, but they have expressed
their regrets and tendered an unqualified apology. In the
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circumstances, we accept their apology, but we direct that
they pay the costs of the Government Advocate which we
assess at Rs. 300."
It is the propriety of this judgment that has been
assailed before us in this appeal.
According to the learned judges of the High Court,, the
allegations made against the judicial officers in the
present case come within the category of contempt which is
comniitted by "scandalising the court". The learned judges
observed on authority of the pronouncement of Lord Russell
in Reg. v. Gray(1), that this class of contempt is subject
to one important qualification. The judges and courts are
alike open to criticism and if reasonable argument or
expostulation is offered against any judicial act as
contrary to law or the public good, no court could treat
that as contempt of court. In the opinion of the learned
judges, the complaint lodged by the appellants exceeded the
bounds of fair and legitimate criticism and in this respect
the members of the Bar Association could not claim any
higher privilege than ordinary citizens. No distinction,
the High Court held, could also be made by reason of the
fact that the charges against the judicial officers in the
present case were embodied in a representation made to
authorities who were the official superiors of the officers
concerned and under whose administrative control the latter
acted.
The learned Attorney-General who appeared in sup. port of
the appeal, characterised this way of approach of the High
Court as entirely wrong. His contention is that any act or
publication which is calculated to lower the authority or
dignity of a judge does not per se amount to contempt of
court. The test is whether the allegations are of such
character or are made in
(1) [1900] 2 Q.B 36.
1176
such circumstances as would tend to obstruct or interfere
with the course of justice or the due administration of law.
Reliance was placed by him in this connection upon certain
pronouncements of the Judicial Committee which held
definitely that an imputation affecting the character or
conduct of a judge, even I though it could be the subject-
matter of a libel proceeding, would not necessarily amount
to a contempt of court. The Attorney-General laid very
great stress on the fact that the resolutions passed and the
representations made by the appellants in the present case
were not for the purpose of exposing before the public the
alleged shortcomings of the officers concerned ; the whole
object was to have the grievances of the lawyers and the
litigating public which were genuinely felt, removed by an
appeal to the authorities who alone were competent to remove
them. Such conduct, it is argued, cannot in any way be
calculated to interfere with the due administration of law
and cannot be held to be contempt of court. The points
raised are undoubtedly important and require to be examined
carefully.
It admits of no dispute that the summary jurisdiction
exercised by superior courts in punishing contempt of their
authority exists for the purpose of preventing interference
with the course of justice and for maintaining the authority
of law as is administered in the courts. It would be only
repeating what has been said so often by various judges that
the object of contempt proceedings is not to afford
protection to judges, personally from imputations to which
they may be exposed as individuals; it is intended to be a
protection to the public whose interests would be very much
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affected if by the act or conduct of any party, the
authority of the court is lowered and the sense of
confidence which people have in the administration of
justice by it is weakened.
There are indeed innumerable ways by which attempts can be
made to hinder obstruct the due administration of justice in
courts. One type of such
1177
interference is found in cases where there is an act or,
publication which "amounts to scandalising the court itself"
an expression which is familiar to English lawyers since the
days of Lord Hardwick(1). This scandalising might manifest
itself in various ways but, in substance, it is an attack on
individual judges or the court as a whole with or without
reference to particular cases, casting unwarranted and
defamatory aspersions upon the character or ability of the
judges. Such conduct, is punished as contempt for this
reason that it tends to create distrust in the popular mind
and impair the confidence of the people in the courts which
are of prime importance to the litigants in the protection
of their rights and liberties.
There are decisions of English courts from early times
where the courts assumed jurisdiction in taking committal
proceedings against persons who were guilty of publishing
any scandalous matter in respect of the court itself. In
the year 1899, Lord Morris in delivering the judgment of the
Judicial Committee in MacLeod v. St. Aubin(2) observed that
"committals for contempt by scandalising the court itself
have become obsolete in this country. Courts are satisfied
to leave to public opinion attacks or comments derogatory or
scandalous to them." His Lordship said further: "The power
summarily to commit for contempt is considered necessary for
the proper administration of justice. It is not to be used
for the vindication of a judge as a person. He must resort
to action for libel or criminal information."
The observation of Lord Morris that contempt proceedings
for scandalising the courts have become obsolete in England
is not, strictly speaking, correct; for, in the very next
year, such proceedings were taken in Reg. v. Gray(1). In
that case, there was a scandalous attack of a rather
atrocious type on Darling J. who was sitting at that time in
Birmingham Assizes and was trying a man named Wells who was
indicted intter alia for selling and publishing obscene
literature.
(1) Vide In re Read and Huggonoson (1742) 2 Atk 469, 471.
(2) [1899] A. C. 549.
(3) (1900] 2 Q.B. 36.
1178
The judge, in the course of the trial, gave a warning ,to
the newspaper press that in reporting the proceedings of the
court, it was not proper for them to give publicity to
indecent matters that were revealed during trial. Upon
this, the defendant published an article ’in the Birmingham
Daily Argus, under the heading "An advocate of Decency",
where Darling J. was abused in scurrilous language. The
case of Wells was then over but the Assizes were still
sitting. There can be no doubt that the publication
amounted to contempt of court and such attack was calculated
to interfere directly with proper administration of justice.
Lord Russell in the course of his judgment, however, took
care to observe that the summary jurisdiction by way of
contempt proceedings in such cases where the court itself
was attacked has to be exercised with scrupulous care and
only ’when the case is clear and beyond reasonable doubt.
"Because", as his Lordship said, "if it is not a case beyond
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reasonable doubt, the court should and ought to leave the
Attorney-General to proceed by criminal information". In
1943, Lord Atkin, while delivering the judgment of the Privy
Council in Devi Prashad v. King Emperor(1), observed that
cases of contempt, which consist of scandalising the court
itself, are fortunately rare and require to be treated with
much discretion. Proceedings for this species of contempt
should be used sparingly and always with reference to the
administration of justice. "If a judge is defamed in such a
way as not to affect the administration of justice, he has
the ordinary remedies for defamation if he should feel
impelled to use them."
It seems, therefore, that there are two primary con-
siderations which should weigh with the court when it is
called upon to exercise the summary powers in cases of
contempt committed by "scandalising" the court itself. In
the first place, the rejection on the conduct or character
of a judge in reference to the discharge of his judicial
duties would not be contempt if such reflection is made in
the exercise of the right of fair and reasonable criticism
which every citizen possesses in
(1) 70 1, A. 216.
1179
respect of public acts done in the seat of justice. It is
not by stifling criticism that confidence in courts can be
created. "The path of criticism", said Lord Atkin(1), "is a
public way. The wrong-headed are permitted to err therein;
provided that members of the public abstain, from imputing
motives to those taking part in the administration of
justice and are genuinely exercising a right of criticism
and not acting in malice, or attempt to impair the
administration of justice, they are immune."
In the second place, when attacks or comments are made
on a judge or judges, disparaging in character and
derogatory to their dignity, care should be taken to
distinguish between what is a libel on the judge and what
amounts really to contempt of court. The fact that a
statement is defamatory so far as the judge is concerned
does not necessarily make it a contempt. The distinction
between a libel and a contempt was pointed out by a
Committee of the Privy Council, to which a reference was
made by the Secretary of State in 1892 (2). A man in the
Bahama Islands, in a letter published in a colonial
newspaper criticized the Chief Justice of the Colony in an
extremely ill-chosen language which was sarcastic and
pungent. There was a veiled insinuation that he was an
incompetent judge and a shirker of work and the writer
suggested in a way that it would be a providential thing if
he were to die. A strong Board constituting of 11 members
reported that the letter complained of. though it might have
been made the subject of proceedings for libel, was not, in
the circumstances. calculated to obstruct or interfere with
the course of justice or the due administration of the law
and therefore did not constitute a contempt of court. The
same principle was reiterated by Lord Atkin in the case of
Devi Prashad v. King Emperor(,’) referred to above. It was
followed and approved of by the High Court of Australia in
King v. Nicholls(1), and has been accepted as sound by this
(1) Ambard v. Attney-General for Trinidad and Tobago,
[1936] A.C 322 at P. 335.
(2) In the matter of a special referencefrom the Bahama
Islands [1893] A. C. 138.
(3) 70 I.A. 216. (4) 12 Com. L. R. 280
1180
Court in Reddy v. The State of Madras (1). The position
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therefore is that a defamatory attack on a judge may be a
libel so far as the judge is concerned and it would be open
to him to proceed against the libellor in a proper action if
he so chooses. If, however, the publication of the
disparaging statement is calculated to interfere with the
due course of justice or proper administration of law by
such court, it can be punished summarily as contempt. One
is a wrong done to the judge personally while the other is a
wrong done to the public. It will be an injury to the
public if it tends to create an apprehension in the minds of
the people regarding the integrity, ability or fairness of
the judge or to deter actual and prospective litigants from
placing complete reliance upon the court’s administration of
justice, or if it is likely to cause embarrassment in the
mind of the judge himself in the discharge of his judicial
duties. It is well established that it is not necessary to
prove affirmatively that there has been an actual
interference with the administration of justice by reason of
such defamatory statement; it is enough if it is likely, or
tends in any way, to interfere with the proper admi-
nistration of law (2).
It is in the light of these principles that we will proceed
to examine the facts of the present case.
It cannot be disputed that in regard to matters of contempt,
the members of a Bar Association do not occupy any
privileged or higher position than ordinary citizens. The
form in which the disparaging statement is made is also not
material, but one very important thing has to be noticed in
the case before us, viz., that even assuming that the
statement was derogatory to the dignity of the judicial
officers, very little publicity was given to this statement,
and in fact, the appellants made their best endeavours to
keep the thing out of the knowledge of the public. The
representation was made to 4 specified persons who were the
official superiors of the officers concerned; and it has
been found as a fact by the High Court that the appellants
(1) (1952] S. C. R. 452.
(2) Mr. Mookerjea J. in In re Motilal Ghosh and Othera,
I.L.R. 45 Cal. 269 at 283.
1181
acted bona fide with no intention to interfere with the
administration of justice though they might have been under
a misapprehension regarding the precise legal position. No
copies of the resolution were even sent to the officers
concerned. Apart from the contents of the representation by
the appellants and the language use therein, this fact would
have a bearing on the questio as to whether the conduct of
the appellants brought them within the purview of the law of
contempt.
The first question that requires consideration is whether in
making the allegations which they did against the two
judicial officers, the appellants exceeded the limits of
fair and legitimate criticism. There were three resolutions
passed at the meeting; the second, and third were of a mere
formal character and do not require any consideration. The
offending statement is to be found in the first resolution
which again is in two parts. In the first part, there are
allegations of a general nature against both the officers,
but the second part enumerates under specific heads the
complaints which the Committee had against each of them
separately.
With regard to Kanhaya Lal, the a legations are that he
does not record the evidence in cases tried by him properly,
that in all criminal matters transferred to his court, where
the accused are already on bail, he does not give them time
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to furnish fresh sureties with the result that they are sent
to jail, and lastly, that he is not accommodating to lawyers
at all. So far as the other officer is concerned, one
serious allegation made is, that he follows the highly
illegal procedure of hearing two cases at one and the same
time, and while he records the evidence in one case himself,
he allows the Court Reader to do the thing in the other. It
is said also that he is short-tempered and frequently
threatens lawyers with proceedings for contempt. Some of
these complaints are not at all serious and no judge, unless
he is hypersensitive, would at all feel aggrieved by them.
It is undoubtedly a grave charge that the Revenue Officer
hears two cases simultaneously and allows the Court Reader
to do the work for him. If true
153
1182
it is a patent illegality and is precisely a matter which
should be brought to the notice of the District Magistrate
who is the administrative head of these officers.
As regards the first part of the resolution, the alle-
gations are made in general terms that’ these officers do
not state facts correctly when they pass orders and that
they are discourteous to the litigant public. These do not
by any moans amount to scandalising the court. Such
complaints are frequently heard in respect of many
subordinate courts and if the appellants had a genuine
grievance,it cannot be said that, in ventilating their
grievances they exceeded the limits affair criticism.
The only portion of the resolution to which ’prima facie
objection can be taken is that which describes these
officers as thoroughly incompetent in law and whose judicial
work does not inspire confidence. Those remarks are
certainly of a sweeping nature and can scarcely be
justified. Assuming, however, that this portion of the
resolution is defamatory, the question arises whether it can
be held to amount to contempt of court. To answer this
question, we have to see whether it is in any way calculated
to interfere with the due administration of justice in these
courts, or, in other words, whether such statement is likely
to give rise to an apprehension in the minds of litigants as
to the ability. of the two judicial officers to deal
properly with cases-coming before them, or even to embarrass
the officers themselves in the discharge of their duties.
We are unable to agree with the learned counsel for the
respondent that whether or not the representation made by
the appellants in the present case is calculated produce
these results is to be determined solely and exclusively
with reference to the language or con tents of the
resolutions themselves; and that-no other fact or
circumstance can be looked into for this purpose, except
perhaps as matters which vate or mitigate the offence of
content: offence is found to have been committed that pleas
of justification or privilege are speaking available to the
defendant in contempt
1183
proceedings. The question of publication also in the
technical sense in which it is relevant in, a libel action
may be inappropriate to the law of contempt. But, leaving
out cases of ex facie contempt, where the question arises as
to whether a defamatory statement directed against a judge
is calculated to undermine the confidence of the public in
the capacity or integrity. of the judge or is likely to
deflect the court itself from a strict and unhesitant
performance of its duties, all the surroundung facts and
circumstances under which the statement was made and the
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degree of publicity a was givine to it would undoubtedly be
relevant’ circumstances. It is true as the learned counsel
for the respondent suggests that the matter was discussed in
the present case among the members of the Bar, and it might
have been the subject-matter of discussion amongst the
officers also to whom copies of the resolutions were sent.
No doubt, there was publication as, is required by the law
of libel, but in contempt proceedings, that is not by any
means conclusive. What is material is the nature. and
extent of the publication and whether or not it was likely
to have an injurious effect on the minds of the public or of
the judiciary itself and therefore to interference with the
administration of justice. On the materials before us,, it
is difficult to say that the circumstances under which the
representation was made by the appellants was calculated to
have such effect. There might have been some remote
possibility but that cannot be taken note of. We are clearly
of the opinion that the contempt, if any, was only of a
technical character, and that after the affidavits were
filed on behalf of the appellants before the High Court, the
proceedings against them should have been dropped. The
result, therefore, is that the appeal is allowed and the
judgment of the High Court is set aside. There will be no
order for costs either here or in the court below in favour
of either party.
Appeal allowed..
Agent for the appellants: S. S. Shukla.
Agent for the respondents: C. P. Lal.
1184