Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
IN RE: SHRI S. MULGAOKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/02/1978
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
KAILASAM, P.S.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 727 1978 SCR (3) 162
1978 SCC (3) 339
ACT:
Contempt of Court--Newspaper article criticising the judges
of Supreme Court--If contempt--Tests for determining
contempt of Court.
HEADNOTE:
In its issue dated December 13, 1977, Indian Express
published a news item that the High Courts had reacted very
strongly to the suggestion of introducing: a code of
judicial ethics and propriety and that "so adverse has been
the criticism that the Supreme Court Judges, some of whom
had prepared the draft code, have disowned it." In its issue
dated December 21, 1977 an article entitled "Behaving like a
Judge" was published which inter alia stated that the,
Supreme Court of India was "packed" by Mrs. Gandhi "with
pliant and submissive judges except for a few". It was
further stated that the suggestion that a code of ethics
should be formulated by Judges themselves was "so utterly
inimical to the independence of the judiciary, violative of
the Constitutional safeguards in that respect, and offensive
to the self-respect of the Judges as to make one wonder how
it was conceived in the first place." A show cause notice
had been issued to the Editor-in-Chief of the Newspaper why
proceedings for contempt under Art. 129 of the Constitution
should not be initiated against him in respect of the above
two news items.
Dropping the contempt proceedings
HELD: Per Beg, C.J.,
Proceedings before the Court should be dropped without any
finding against any individual. [171 H]
1. National interest requires that all criticisms of the
judiciary must bestrictly rational and sober and proceed
from the highest motives without being coloured by any
partisan spirit or tactics. This should be a part of
national ethics. [169 G-H]
2. The comments about Judges of the Supreme Court
suggesting that they lack moral courage to the extent of
having "disowned" what they had done or in other words, to
the extent of uttering what was untrue, at least verge on
con-tempt. None could say that such suggestions would not
make Judges of this Court look ridiculous or even unworthy,
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in the estimation of the public, of the very high office
they hold if they could so easily "disown" what they had
done after having really done it. [166 A-B]
3. Editors of responsible newspapers should be, aware that
it is courts of law and not newspaper readers who have to
try certain issues which Courts alone are empowered to
determine. The character and the legal consequences of any
publication about conduct of Judges are certainly matters
for Courts to determine. Editors of newspapers are expected
to know also something of the special place of this Court in
the Republic’s Constitution which amply protects its Judges
so that they may not be exposed to opprobrious attacks by
either malicious or ignorant persons. [166 B-D]
4. The judiciary cannot be immune from criticism. But,
when that criticism is based on obvious distortion or
grossmis-statement and made in a manner which seems designed
to lower respect for the judiciary and destroy public
confidence in it, it cannot be ignored. Though action for
contempt of Court, which is discretionary, should not be
frequently or lightly taken the Court should not abstain
from using this weapon even when its use is needed to
correct
163
standards of behaviour in a grossly and repeatedly erring
quarter. It may be better in many cases for the judiciary
to adopt a magnanimously charitable attitude even when
utterly uncharitable and unfair criticism of its operations
is made out of bona-fide concern for improvement. But, when
there appears some scheme and a design to bring about
results which must damage confidence in the judicial system
and demoralize Judges of the highest Court by making
malicious attacks, anyone interested in maintaining high
standards of fearless, impartial, and unbending justice will
feel perturbed. [170 A-C]
5. Although, the question whether an attack is malicious
or ill intentioned, may be often difficult to determine,
yet, the language in which it is made, the fairness, the
factual accuracy, the logical soundness of it, the care
taken in justly and properly analysing the materials before
the maker of it, are important considerations. Moreover, in
judging whether it constitutes a contempt of Court or not
the Court is concerned more with the reasonable and probable
effects of what is said or written than with the motives
lying behind what is done. A decision on the question
whether the discretion to take action for contempt of Court
should be exercised in one way or the other must depend on
the totality of facts and circumstances. [170 F-H]
Per Krishna Iyer, J. concurring
Precedentially validated judicial norms relating to contempt
powers of Courts are : (1) The Court will act with
seriousness and severity where justice is jeopardized by a
gross and/or unfounded attack on the judges, where the
attack is calculated to obstruct or destroy the judicial
process; (2) The Court must harmonise the constitutional
values of free criticism, and the need for a fearless curial
process and its presiding functionary, the judge. To
criticise a judge fairly albeit fiercely, is no crime but a
necessary right. Where freedom of expression subserves
public interest in reasonable measure, public justice cannot
gag it or manacle it; (3) The Court must avoid confusion
between personal protection of a libelled judge and.
prevention of obstruction of public justice and the
community’s confidence in that great process. The former is
not contempt, but later is, although overlapping spaces
abound; (4) The fourth functional canon is that the Fourth
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Estate should be given free play within responsible limits
even when the focus of its critical attention is the court,
including the highest Court; (5) The fifth normative
guideline for the Judges to observe is not o be
hypersensitive even where distortions and criticisms
overstep the limits, but to deflate vulgar denunciation by
dignified bearing and (6) The sixth consideration is that,
if the Court considers the attack on the judge or judges
scurrilous, offensive, intimidatory or malicious beyond
condonable limits, the strong arm of the law must strike a
blow on him who challenges the supremacy of the rule of law
by fouling its source and stream. [173 E, F 174F, 175 D, E,
F]
R. v. Brett [1950] C.L.R. 226, Queen v. Gray [1900]
Q.B.D., 36, Mcleod v. St. Aubyn [1899] A.C. 549, Ambard
v. Attorney-General for Trinidad [1936] A.C. 322, R. V.
Metropolitan Police Commissioner ex. p. Blackburn [1968] 2,
W.L.R. 1204, Sambhu Nath Jha v. Kedar Prasad Sinha & Ors.
[1972] 3 SCR 183 it 189, Perspective Publications Ltd. v
State of Maharasthra[1971] 2 SCR 779 R. C. Cooper v. Union
of India [1970] 2 SCC 298, 301=[1970] 3 SCR 230, Brahma
Prakash Sharma &’Ors. v. The State of Uttar Pradesh [1953]
SCR 1169 at 1178-1180 C. K. Daphtary & Ors. v. O. P. Gupta
[1971] Supp. SCR 76 at 92-93, Shri Baradak-anta Mishra v.
The Registrar of Orissa High Court and Anr. [1974] 1 SCC
374=[1974] 2 SCR 282, Bridges v. California [1941] 319 U.S.
252 at 279, 283, 284 Sheopard V. Maxwell [1966] 384 u.s 333,
Nebraska Press Association v. Stuarts [1976] 96 Sup. Ct.
2791 Los Angeles Times’ Case’(314 U.S. 263) and Craiq v.
Harney (331 U.S. 367) referred to.
Per Kailasam, J. concurring
Without hearing the parties concerned, it is not right and
proper to make any comments about the facts of the case.
Contempt proceedings were dropped without calling upon the
counsel for the respondents. [189G]
164
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : In Re : S. Mulgaokar.
V. M. Tarkunde and A. N. Goyall for the alleged contemner.
S. N. Kacker Solicitor General, Mr. R. N. Sachthey and
Miss A. Subhashini for the Sol. Genl.
Dr. L. M. Singhvi, D. Bhandari and S. K. Jain for the
intervener.
The following Orders of the Court were delivered
BEG, C. J.-The matter before us arises out of a publication
in the Indian Express newspapers dated 13th December, 1977.
Some people perhaps believe that attempts to hold trials of
everything and every body by publications in newspapers must
include those directed against the highest Court of Justice
in this country and its pronouncements. If this is done in
a reasonable manner, which presupposes accuracy of
information about a matter on which any criticism is
offered, and arguments are directed fairly against any
reasoning adopted, I would, speaking for myself, be the last
person to consider it objectionable even if some criticism
offered is erroneous. In Bennett Coleman & Co. & Others v.
Union of India & Ors.(1) I had said (at p. 828)
"John Stuart Mill, in his essay on "Liberty",
pointed out the need for allowing even
erroneous opinions to be expressed on the
ground that the correct ones become more
firmly established by what may be called the
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’dialectical’ process of a struggle with wrong
ones which exposes errors. Milton, in his
"Areopagitica" (1644) said :
’Though all the winds of doctrine were let
loose to play upon the earth, so Truth be in
the field, we do injuriously be licensing and
prohibiting to misdoubt her strength. Let her
and Falsehood grapple; whoever knew Truth put
to the worse, in a free and open encounter
?...... Who knows not that Truth is strong,
next to the Almighty; she needs no policies,
no stratagems, no licensings to make her
victorious; those are the shifts and defenses
that error makes against her power.........
Political philosophers and historians have
taught us that intellectual advances made by
our civilisation would have been impossible
without freedom of speech and expression. At
any rate, political democracy is based on the
assumption that such freedom must be jealously
guarded. Voltaire expressed a democrat’s
faith when he told an adversary in arguments
’I do not agree with a word you say, but I
will defend to the death your right to say
it’. Champions of human freedom of thought
and expression throughout the ages, have
realised that intellectual paralysis creeps
over a Society which denies, in however subtle
a form, due freedom of thought and expression
to its members.
(1) [1973] 2 S.C.R. 757 @ 828-29.
165
Although our Constitution does not contain a
separate guarantee of Freedom of the Press,
apart from the freedom of expression and
opinion contained in Article 19(1) (a) of the
Constitution, yet, it is well recognised that
the Press provides the principal vehicle of
expression of their views to citizens. It has
been said ’Freedom of the Press is the Ark of
the Covenant of Democracy because public
criticism is essential to the working of its
institutions. Never has criticism been more
necessary than today, when the weapons of
propaganda are so strong and so subtle. But,
like other liberties, this also must be
limited’."
I find, however, that gross distortions of what was actually
held by this Court in what is known as the Habeas Corpus
case (Additional District Magistrate, Jabalpur v. S. Shukla)
(1) are being made presumably to serve ulterior objects.
Some of these distortions have been exposed by me in a
separate statement of detailed reasons which place on record
my difference of opinion with the order ultimately passed by
a majority in this Court upon a case resulting from a news
item published in the Times of India recently. I have,
unfortunately, now to take notice of a much milder
publication in the Indian Express newspaper, in which the
following sentence occurs about the supposed code of
judicial ethics assumed wrongly to have been drafted by some
Judges of the Supreme Court :
"So adverse has been the criticism that the
Supreme Court Judges, some of whom had
prepared the draft code, have disowned it".
Judges of this Court were not even aware of the contents of
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the letter before it was sent by me as Chief Justice of
India to Chief Justices of various. High Courts suggesting,
inter-alia, that Chief Justices could meet and draft a code
of ethics themselves or through a Committee of Chief
Justices so as to prevent possible lapses from the path of
rectitude and propriety on the part of Judges. The error of
the assumption that Judges of the Supreme Court had any hand
in drafting a code which I could have had at the back of my
mind when I sent my suggestions to Chief Justices of High
Courts was pointed out to the Editor of the Indian- Express
in a letter sent by the Registrar of this Court. No
question of disowning the supposed code by any Judge could,
in the circumstances, arise. And, I had never "disowned"
the suggestions made by me. The Registrar of this Court,
therefore, wrote to inform the Editor of the misstatement
which ought to have been corrected. In reply, the Registrar
received a letter from the Editor showing that the contents
of my letter to Chief Justices of High Courts, which were
confidential, were known to the Editor. Instead of
publishing any correction of the misstatement about the
conduct of fudges of this Court, the Editor offered to
publish the whole material in his possession, as though
there was an issue to be tried between the Editor of the
newspaper and this Court and the readers were there to try
it and decide it.
(1) A.I.R. 1976 S.C. 1207.
166
Comments about Judges of the Supreme Court suggesting that
they lack moral courage to the extent of having "disowned"
what hety had done, or, in other words, to. the extent of
uttering what was untrue, at least verge on contempt. I do
not think that anyone could say that such suggestions would
not make Judges of this Court look ridiculous or even
unworthy, in the estimation of the public, of the very high
office they hold if they would so easily "disown" what they
had done after having really done it The readiness with
which possible correctness of such a suggestion could be
accepted by the Editor of a newspaper has its own
implications about the general fall in standards and values
in life which Judges ;Are supposed to share.
It seems to me that Editors of at least responsible
newspapers should be aware that it is Courts of law and not
newspaper readers who have to try certain issues which
courts alone are empowered to determine. Courts adopt a
procedure designed to prevent, as far as possible, unfair
prejudices, irrelevancies, and untruths creeping in. The
character and the legal consequences of any publication
about conduct of judges are certainly matters for Courts to
determine. Editors Of newspapers are expected to know also
something of the special place Of this Court in the
Republic’s Constitution which amply protects its judges so
that they may not be exposed to opprobrious attacks by
either malicious or ignorant persons.
This Court is armed, by article 129 of the Constitution,
with very wide and special powers, as a Court of Record, to
punish its contempts. Elsewhere, I have said in an attempt
to explain the principle. of the Supremacy of the
Constitution which this Court represents and expounds:
"Thus, the principle of Supremacy of the
Constitution requires for its maintenance in
full force and vigour; firstly, an executive
which respects the judiciary and its verdicts
and does not take away, by the exercise of its
constitutional powers, judicial powers to deal
with the rights of citizens even against
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executive actions of the State; and, secondly
the absence of any legislative interference
with judicial functions in a manner
characterised by Dean Roscoe Pound as
"legislative lynching" of threats of any kind
held out for reaching particular conclusions
however unpalatable they may be to any one
Articles 121 and 211 of our Constitution,
prohibiting discussion of the conduct of a
Supreme Court or a High Court Judge in the
discharge of his duties even by Parliament or
a State Legislature, except upon a motion for
his removal by the constitutionally prescribed
procedure of addresses presented by each House
of Parliament after proved misconduct or
incapacity of a Judge and resolutions by 2/3
majorities of each House present and voting,
are there in our Constitution to ensure this.
Can ordinary citizens do elsewhere, with
impunity, what members of Parliament cannot do
in Parliament and legislators cannot do in a
State Legislature, and, if so, to what extent
?
167
Such questions will have to be answered by
Courts with reference to the facts of
particular cases if and when brought to their
notice.
I also said there
"’It would be a sad day for the supremacy of
the Constitution and for the Rule of Law,
which it implies, if malicious or ill informed
persons, filled with the irrationality
involved in the spirit of what Dean Pound
called "lynching" or misguided zest or
vindictiveness, acting in a manner freed from
the restraints of law or reason, were allowed
to take upon themselves the task of passing
judgments on actions of others particularly of
Judges performing judicial functions. That
would certainly sound the death knell of what
Dean Roscoe Pound calls "judicial justice" and
the Rule of Law. The supremacy of the
Constitution can only be maintained when there
is a spirit. of law abidingness and discipline
amongst citizens so that principles of law can
be applied scientifically to facts by Courts
of Justice, which are the custodians of what
has been described by political philosophers
as the abiding or continuing "Real Will" of
the whole nation embodied in the Constitution
as contrasted with the will or wishes of some
or majority of citizens for the time being
expressed in legislatures or elsewhere.
Judges, who have taken oaths of allegiance to
the Constitution, are bound to uphold it,
conscientiously without fear or favour,
affection or illwill’. They have to give
their honest judgments without caring for
popular approval or disapproval."
It seemed particularly necessary to point out the
protections enjoyed by this Court and its Judges in order to
safeguard the supremacy of the Constitution and the rule of
law, which speak through pronouncements of this Court,
because it was found that, soon after the incorrect stand
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taken by the Editor of the Indian Express, in the manner
mentioned above, an article appeared, entitled "Behaving
like a Judge", in this very newspaper. The suggestion that
a code of ethics should be formulated by judges themselves
was characterised :in this article as "so utterly inimical
to the independence of the judiciary, violative of the
Constitutional safeguards in that respect, and offensive to
the self-respect of the Judges as to make one wonder how it
was conceived in the, first place". The writer of the
article asserted a right of the public to know what 1, at
any rate, would be quite willing to tell him it the came to
me as a citizen wanting, ’in good faith, correct
information.
The writer of an article of a responsible newspaper on legal
matters is expected to know that there is no constitutional
safeguard or provision realing to the independence of the
judiciary which could possibly prevent Judges themselves
meeting to formulate a code of judicial ethics or to
constitute a committee to formulate a code of judicial
ethics and etiquette. This is what was suggested to Chief
Justices of High Courts. Indeed, in America, the American
Bar Association has forniulated a code of this kind. None
has been formulated so far in this
168
country. A purported enactment which tried to prevent
Judges from meeting and formulating such a code of ethics
and etiquette so as to be clear about points on which, at
times, there is uncertainty in the minds of Judges
themselves, would not be valid. Such a purported law would
offend against article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution.
Neither out Constitution nor our law, could conceivably be
infringed if Judges were to meet to device means to prevent
situations arising in which an accusing finger could be
raised against the conduct of a judge, whether inside or
outside the Court, let alone involving Constitutional
provisions of Article 124 for his removal after an inquiry
by a body constituted under the Judges Inquiry Act, 1968. A
code of this kind, if scrupulously observed by all the
Judges, could only enhance their independence and prestige,
and not injure these in any way whatsoever.
This article proceeds on the assumption that there is
already a formulated code of ethics sent to the Chief
Justices. In fact, nothing more than some suggestions or
examples of the kind of conduct which a possible code could
deal with were sent to the Chief Justices. If there was
anything inappropriate, which could be found in those,
suggestions, that could be criticized and set right or
discarded. Better suggestions could be made and
incorporated in a proper code of judicial ethics and
etiquette, if that could be framed. Indeed, in case the
Judges felt bolder, it was suggested that they could formu-
late a mode of action to deal with allegations which are
sometimes made baselessly or maliciously against Judges. If
a Committee of Chief Justices or Judges could consider the
allegations made against any individual Judge and was to
find them baseless or malicious it would protect the
unfortunate Judge who was made a victim of malicious
onslaughts. On the other hand, if there was substance in
the very serious allegations which are sometimes made
against Judges of High Courts (I am glad to say that their
number is extremely small and limited), the Committee could
itself forward its findings for appropriate action under
Article 124 of the Constitution, to the Central Government
which could then set up a Committee of Inquiry. In this
way, in serious cases, the Judge concerned would get a
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consideration from his peers as well as by the Committee
provided by the Judges’ Inquiries Act, 1968.
The article of 21 December, 1977, referred to above, ends by
attempting to make a distinction between the wonderful
performance of High Court Judges and the "disappointing"
record of the Supreme Court. It was suggested there that
this was due to the fact that the Supreme Court is "packed"
by the former Prime Minister, Mrs. Gandhi,, With pliant and
submissive judges except for a few". Questions, naturally,
must arise in the, public mind : To what do they become
"pliant" ? is it to the dictates or directions of the
Executive? When and how have they done so ? Had such
insinuations any factual basis-which they, fortunately, do
not have would, at any rate, be among those who would say
that the sooner this Court is wound up the better it would
be for the country.
169
The supposed writer of the article was evidently so shaky
about his ability to substantiate his suggestions, on the
strength of his own knowledge or opinion, that he took
shelter behind views alleged to have been expressed by Mr.
Jayaprakash Narayan on some occasion to the effect alleged
by him in the article. We cannot pass any judgment upon
such views without giving notice to other parties, and with-
out taking evidence about the circumstances and the context,
which largely determine the real meaning, in which any
opinion to that effect may or may not have been expressed by
anybody.
Mr. Jethmalani appearing for A. G. Noorani, to whom we had
issued no notice, tried to convince us that there was no
intention on the part of the writer of the article or the
editor to injure the. dignity or position of this Court but
the intention was only to direct public attention to matters
of extreme importance to the nation. If this were so it
would be a desirable object. But, as we should all know,
there are proper and permissible ways of carrying out such
an object and others which are not permitted by law, or, at
least by, elementary rules of fairness.
A reason which has also weighed with me in dropping this and
a similar earlier proceeding is that, we have been passing
through a period of exceptional strain and stress and
excitement in this country in which unusual remarks made
have not been confined to what appears in newspapers.
Indeed, extraordinary and surprisingly erroneous
’statements, which could not be there if rules of judicial
ethics were formulated and strictly adhered to, have found
place even in solemn pronouncements of this Court on rare
occasions. However, I do not want to expatiate on that
theme here. AR I can say is that, if this is a correct
observation, it would also disclose a need for rules of
judicial ethics or propriety for judges of even this august
Court.
The statement made above by me should remove the
misapprehension, if there was really any in the mind of
whoever wrote the article in the Indian Express of 13th
December, 1977, condemning my proposals for framing a code
of judicial ethics on the ground, inter alia, that it was
proposed to have one only for High Court Judges. I think
that there should be codes of ethics not merely for judges
but for occupants of every office-high or low-and for
members of every profession and calling. Without such
codes, progress in right directions in any sphere becomes
more uncertain and problematic than it could be with such
codes of ethics.
National interest requires that all criticisms of the
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judiciary must be strictly rational and sober and proceed
from the highest motives without being coloured by any
partisan spirit or tactics. This should be a part of
national ethics. Newspapers, in particular, ought to
observe such a rule imbued with what Montesquieu considered
essential for a healthy democracy : the spirit of "virtue".
They should, if they are interested in promoting national
welfare and progress, support proposals for framing correct
rules of ethics for every class of office holder and citizen
in the country. And, the judiciary must, in its actions and
thoughts and pronouncements, bold aloft the values and
12-21 1 SCR 178
170
the spirit of justice and truth enshrined in the
Constitution and soar high above all other lower loyalties
and alignments if it is to be truly independent.
The judiciary cannot be immune from criticism. But, when
that criticism is based on obvious distortion or gross
misstatement and made in a manner which seems designed to
lower respect for the judiciary and destroy public
confidence in it, it cannot be ignored. I am not one of
those who thinks that an action for contempt of Court, which
is discretionary, should be frequently or lightly taken.
But at the same time, I do not think that we should abstain
from using this weapon even when its use is needed to
correct standards of behaviour in a grossly and repeatedly
erring quarter. It may be better in many cases for the
judiciary to adopt a magnanimously charitable attitude even
when utterly uncharitable and unfair criticism of its
operations is made out of bona fide concern for improvement
But, when there appears some scheme and a design to bring a
results which must damage confidence in our judicial system
and demoralize Judges of the highest court by making
malicious attacks, anyone interested in maintaining high
standards of fearless, impartial, and unbending justice will
feel perturbed. I sincerely hope that my own undisguised
perturbation at what has been taking place recently is
unnecessary. One may be able to live in a world of logic
detachment when unjustified abuses are hurled at one’s self
personally, but, when the question is of injury to an
institution, such as the highest Court of justice in the
land, one cannot overlook its effects upon national honour
and prestige in the comity of nations. Indeed, it becomes a
matter deserving consideration of all serious minded people
who are interested in seeing that democracy does not
flounder or fail in our country. If fearless and impartial
courts of justice are the bulwark of a healthy democracy,
confidence in them cannot be permitted to be impaired by
malicious attacks upon them. However, as we have not
proceeded further in this case, I do not think that it would
be fair to characterize anything written or said in the
Indian Express as really malicious or ill-intentioned and I
do not do so. We have recorded no decision on that although
the possible constructions on what was written there have
been indicated above.
My opinion on matters touched by my learned brother Krishna
Iyer is that, although, the question whether an attack is
malicious or ill intentioned, may be often difficult to
determine, yet, the language in which it is made, the
fairness, the factual accuracy, the logical soundness of it,
the care taken in justly and properly analysing the
materials before the maker of it, are important
considerations. Moreover, in judging whether it constitutes
a contempt of Court or not we are concerned more with the
reasonable and probable effects of what is said or written
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than with the motives lying behind what is done. A decision
on the question whether the discretion to take action for
contempt of Court should be exercised in one way or the
other must depend on the totality of facts and
circumstances.
After I had drafted my reasons for dropping the proceedings
I have had the benefit of perusing the views expressed by my
learned brother Kailasam. I would like to make it quite
clear that there is,
171
as I have already mentioned above, no finding given here by
me against any person. I entirely agree that it would not
be, fair or legal, without giving opportunities to be heard
to any persons against whom any aspersions are to be cast or
any remarks are to be made to record findings against them.
But, I think that we axe entitled to express our separate
and individual opinions for dropping the proceedings now
before us. Indeed, my separate judgment in the case
relating to the recent publication in the Times of India
case was a dissenting one. It was, therefore, all the more
necessary for me to record my reasons for a dissent. In the
case now before us, we are all agreed that the proceedings
should be dropped. Nevertheless, I think that we are com-
pletely justified in giving and are free to give our
separate reasons why this should be done either with or
without comment so long as we do not give any finding which
may be unfair to anyone. I would, therefore, like to make
it clear once again that, as the matter has not proceeded
beyond putting the cause of the notice to learned counsel
and hearing only their prima facie reactions on whether the
proceedings should be dropped or not, we have accepted the
submissions of Mr. Tarkunde and Mr. Jethmalani that we
should not proceed further, there is no question of
recording any finding against anyone and I have not done so.
It was, however, necessary to indicate the way in which and
reasons for which the notice was issued. It seems to me
that it was also necessary for me to refer to the reasons
why I consider codes of ethics’. and, in particular,
judicial ethics are necessary. That is a matter of
conscience and of my understanding of what is right for a
judge to do "without fear or favour, affection or ill will".
The need for appropriate standards relating even to what our
judgments should or should not contain is so great that I
think this matter has to be taken up soon by Judges
themselves at some stage or other. Even the difference of
views between learned judges of this Court on such a
question illustrates that. If we had clear rules of
judicial practice and ethics on even such matters our
judgments would no, be encumbered with what should not be
there. If such rules are absent there may be, sometimes,
serious disagreement as to what a judgment should or should
not contain. In such a case, the only sound rule I could
follow is to bear all those who are to be beard according to
law but no- others and then to express the opinion feel
bound by my conscience to express without allowing any other
consideration to weigh with me.
As I have already Pointed out above, I think that the need
for appropriate norms of conduct exists in practically every
sphere of life in which enlightened people strive to attain
exalted ends irrespective of consequences. If our separate
statements of reasons for dropping the proceedings before us
succeed in at least emphasizing that need they would not
have been made in vain. I concur in the order that the
proceedings before us be dropped at this stage without any
finding against any individual.
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KRISHNA IYER, J.-Silence is no sanctuary for me when speech
from the Chief Justice persuades my pen into a divergent
course.
172
profoundly appreciate and deeply respect his sense of hurt
and obligation for explanation but prefer to travel along
another street in stating why agreed to jettison the
contempt proceedings. My judgment is more an explanation
than an expostulation and certainly not a reflection on the
respondents.
We had unanimously directed that the above proceedings in
contemplation of contempt action be dropped but the fact
that we had converged to this conclusion did not rule out-as
is no* appellant our divergence in the process of reasoning.
Minds differ as rivers differ Such, perhaps, in part, is the
case here.
The contempt power, though jurisdictionally large, is
discretionary in its unsheathed exercise. Every commission
of contempt heed not erupt in indignant committal or demand
punishment, because judges are judicious, their valour non-
violent and their wisdom goes into action when played upon
by a volley of values,. the least of which is personal
protection-for a wide discretion, range of circumspection
and rainbow of public considerations benignantly guide that
power. Justice is not hubris; power is not petulance and
prudence is not pussilanimity, especially when judges are
themselves prosecutors and mercy is a mark of strength, not
whimper of weakness. Christ and Gandhi shall not be lost on
the judges at a critical time when courts are on trial and
the people ("We, the People of India") pronounce the final
verdict on all national institutions. Such was the sublime
perspective, not plural little factors, that prompted me to
nip in the bud the proceeding started for serving a larger
cause of public justice than punitive action against a
publisher, even assuming (without admitting) he was guilty.
The preliminary proceeding has been buried publicly; let it
lie in peace. Many values like free press, fair trial,
judicial fearlessness and community confidence must
generously enter the verdict, the benefit of doubt, without
absolutist insistence, being extended to the defendant.
Such are the dynamics of power in third special
jurisdiction. These diverse indicators, carefully
considered, have persuaded me to go no further. by a
unilateral decision of the bench. This closure has two
consequences. It puts the lid on the proceedings without
pronouncing on the guilt or otherwise of the opposite
parties. In a quasi-criminal action, a presumption of inno-
cence operates. Secondly, whatever belated reasons we may
give for our action, we must not proceed to substantiate the
accusation, if any. To condemn unheard is not fairplay.
Bodyline bowling, perhaps, is not cricket. So my reasons do
not reflect on the merits of the charge.
Poise and peace and inner harmony are so quintessential to
the judicial temper that huff, ’haywire’ or even humiliation
shall not besiege; nor, unveracious provocation, frivolous
persiflage nor terminological inexactitude throw into
palpitating tantrums the balanced cerebration of the
judicial mind. The integral yoga of shanti and neeti Is so
much the cornerstone of the judicial process that criticism,
wild or valid, authentic or anathematic, shall have little
purchase over the mentation of the court. I quite realise
how hard it is to resist, with
173
sage silence, the shafts of acid speech; and, how alluring
it is to succumb to the temptation of argumentation where
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the thorn, ’not the rose, triumphs. Truth’s taciturn
strategy, the testimony of history says, has a higher power
than a hundred thousand tongues or pens. in contempt
jurisdiction, silence is a sign of strength since our power
is wide and we are prosecutor and judge.
Why did I concur in the short order ? Why do I now strike a
variant note to that of the learned Chief Justice ? I do not
take up the position that wandalising the Judges does not
come within the contempt clutches of the court. The Court’s
jurisdiction to initiate proceedings and punish for
constructive contempt suo motu crystallized in the
eighteenth century even though it is clear that the Court’s
inherent powers in this regard were not as wide as Wilmot J.
made them out to be in his posthumously published opinion in
R. v. Almon [1765] published in (1802) Wilmot’s opinions(1).
Fortunately, the attacks on the judiciary have been
comparatively few in most countries, having regard to the
character assassination of the personnel in the other great
branches of Government. Even so, the law which punishes
those who scandalize judges is as old as the Common Law
itself. The existence of the contempt power, however, does
not obligate its exercise on every occasion but triggers it
only in special situations, not routinely.
What then are the complex of considerations dissuasive of
punitive action ? To be exhaustive is a baffling project; to
be pontifical is to be impractical; to be flexible is to be
realistic. What, then, are these broad guidelines-not a
complete inventory, but precedentially validated judicial
norms’?
The first rule in this branch of contempt power is a wise
economy of use by the Court of this branch of its
jurisdiction. The Court will act with seriousness and
severity where justice is jeopardized by a gross and/or
unfounded attack on the judges, where the attack is
calculated to obstruct or destroy the judicial process. The
court is willing to ignore, by a majestic liberalism,
trifling and venial offenses-the dogs may bark, the caravan
will pass. The court will not be prompted to act as a
result of an easy irritability. Much rather, it shall take
notice look at the conspectus of features and be guided by a
constellation at constitutional and other considerations
when it chooses to use, or desist from using, its power of
contempt.
The second principle must be to harmonise the constitutional
values of free criticism, the fourth estate included, and
the need for a fearless curial process and its presiding
functionary, the judge. A happy balance has to be struck-
the benefit of the doubt being given generously against the
judge, slurring over marginal deviations but severely pro-
ving the supremacy of the law over pugnacious, vicious,
unrepentant and malignant contemners, be they the powerful
press, gang-up of vested interests, veteran columnists or’
olympian establishmentarians. Not because the judge, the
human symbol of a high value, is personally
(1) See further R. Dhavan : "Contempt of Court and the
Phillimore Committee Report" (1976) 5 Anglo American Law
Review, 186 at 194 and the literature cited there.
174
armoured by a regal privilege but because ’be you-the
contemner--ever so high, the law-the People’s expression of
Justice-is above you. Curial courage overpowers arrogant
might even as judicial benignity, forgives errant or
exaggerated critics. Indeed, to criticise the judge fairly,
albeit fiercely, is no crime but a necessary right, twice
blessed in a democracy. For, it blesseth him that gives and
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him that takes Where freedom of expression, fairly
exercised, subserves public interest in reasonable measure,
public justice cannot gag it or manacle it,.
constitutionally speaking. A free people are the ultimate
guarantors of fearless justice. Such is the cornerstone of
our Constitution; such is the touchstone of our Contempt
Power, oriented on the confluencer of free speech and fair
justice which is the scriptural essence of our Fundamental
Law. Speaking of the social philosophy and philosophy,, of
law in an integrated manner as applicable to contempt of
court, there is no conceptual polarity but a delicate
balance, and judicial ’ sapience’ draws the line. As it
happens, our Constitution-makers foresaw the need for
balancing all these competing interests. Section 2(1) (c)
of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 provides :
"Criminal contempt" means the Publication
(whether by words, spoken or written, or by
signs, or by visible representations, or
otherwise) of any matter or the doing of any
other act whatsoever which-
(i) scandalises or tends to scandalize, or
lowers or tends to lower the authority of any
court.’
This is an extremely wide definition. But, it cannot be
read apart from the conspectus of the constitutional
provisions within which the Founding Fathers of the
Constitution intended all past and future statutes to have
meaning. All laws relating to contempt of court had,.
according to the provisions of Article 19(2), to be
’reasonable restrictions" on the exercise of the right of
free speech. The courts were given the power-and, indeed,
the responsibility-to harmonize conflicting aims, interests
and values. This is in sharp contrast to the Phillimore
Committee Report on Contempt of Court in the United Kingdom
(1974) bund. 5794 prs. 143-5, pp. 61-2) which did not
recommend the defence of public interest in contempt cases.
The third principle is to avoid confusion between personal
protection of a libeled judge and prevention of obstruction
of public justice and the community’s confidence in that
great process. The former is, not contempt, the latter is,
although overlapping spaces abound.
Because the law of contempt exists to protect public
confidence in the administration of justice, the offence
will not be committed by’ attacks upon the personal
reputation of individual judges as such,. As Professor
Goodhart has put it :
"Scandalising the court means any hostile
criticism of the judge as judge; any personal
attack upon him, unconnected with the office
he holds, is dealt with under the ordinary
rules of slander and libel."
175
(See ’Newspapers and Contempt of Court (1935)
48, Harv. L. R. 885, 898.)
Similarly, Griffith, C. J. has said in the
Australian case of Nicholls(1) that :
"In one sense, no doubt, every defamatory
publication concerning a judge may be said to
bring him into contempt as that term is used
in the law of libel, but it does not follow
that everything said of a judge calculated to
bring him into contempt in that sense amounts
to contempt of Court."
Thus in In the matter of a Special Reference from the Bahama
Island(2) the Privy Council advised that a contempt had not
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been committed through a publication in the Nassau Guardian
concerning the resident Chief Justice, who had himself
previously criticised local sanitary conditions. Though
couched in highly sarcastic terms the publication did not
refer to the Chief Justice in his official, as opposed to
personal, capacity. Thus while it might have been a libel
it was not a contempt.
The fourth functional canon which channels discretionary
exercise of the contempt power is that the Fourth Estate
which is an indispensable intermediary between the State and
the people and necessary instrumentality in strengthening
the forces of democracy, should be given free play within
responsible limits even when the focus of its critical
attention is the court, including the highest Court.
The fifth normative guideline for the judges to observe in
this jurisdiction is not to be hypersensitive even where
disortions and criticisms overstep the limits, but to
deflate vulgar denunciation by dignified bearing,
condescending indifference and repudiation by judicial
rectitude.
The sixth consideration is that, after evaluating the
totality of factors, if the court considers the attack on
the judge or judges scurrilous, offensive, intimidatory or
malicious beyond condonable limits, the strong arm of the
law must, in the name of public interest and public justice,
strike a blow on him who challenges the supremacy of the
rule of law by fouling its source and stream.
Speaking generally, there are occasions when the right to
comment may be of supreme value (for instance, the
thalidomide babies cases in England) (3) and the law of
contempt must adjust competing values and be modified, in
its application by the requirements of a free society and
the shifting emphasis on paramount public interest in a
given situation.
(1) (1911) 12 C.L.R. 280, 285.
(2) (1893) A.C. 138.
(3) 1 prefer the judgment of Lord Denning M. R. in the
Court of Appeal to those in the Divisional Court or House of
Lords in the Thalidomide case : Att. Gen. v. Times
Newspapers Ltd. (1972) 3 All. E.R. 1136 (D.C.) ; (1973) 1
All. E.R. 815 (C.A.) ; (1973) 3 All. E.R. 54 (14.L.).
176
Indeed, there is an interesting Australian decision R. V.
Brett(1) which has a meaningful relevance for our case and I
quote from the Australian Law Journal
"In R. v. Brett, the publisher of a newspaper
was called on to show cause why he should not
be committed for contempt of court. It
appeared that the newspaper, under the heading
"Mr. Justice Sholl-Diehard Tory" had
criticized the appointment, of Mr. Justice
Shall and inferentially of all his brethren
except one not specified, because they were
out of touch with the- life of the people and
had no experience (it was alleged) in the
Criminal Court "the only court where even a
semblance of the problems of the people
arise". and it concluded that his appointment
showed that the judiciary was "an institution
forming an integral part of the repressive
machinery of the State".
"O’ Bryan, J. pointed out that the fact that
the article made ridiculous mistakes of fact
and that its logic was greatly at fault, did
hot prove that it was a contempt. The
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question was whether the article, honestly
though mistakenly and offensively, criticised
the policy of this and previous adminis-
trations in appointing judges, or whether it
did indeed set out to lower the authority of
the Court as such and to excite misgivings as
to its partiality. With very great
hesitation, his Honour came to the conclusion
that a case for the exercise of the extra-
ordinary summary jurisdiction of the Court had
not been made out and he discharged the order
nisi."
Another useful illustration from the
Australian jurisdiction is contained in short
report made of a decision in Australian Law
Journal, 1928-29, Vol. 2, 145-146 :
"The Tasmanian case (The King v. Ogilvie)
concerned statements made by the respondent at
public meetings, imputing lack of impartiality
to Mr. Justice Crisp, and asserting that the
respondent was personally disliked by his
Honour, and that respondent’s clients could
not get justice from him. Nicholls, C. J., in
delivering the judgment of the Court, agreed
with the authorities that fair comment
on judicial actions is not only justifiable,
but beneficial. He then pointed out "that we
regard these proceedings as instituted and our
powers conferred, not for the benefit or com-
fort of the Judges personally, to protect them
from criticism or even from libel, but simply
to secure that this institution, the Supreme
Court, which in the final analysis has to
declare and enforce the rules which hold the
community together, shall be challenged only
in the proper ways, which are two" first, by
appeal, and secondly by approach in the proper
form to ’Parliament."
(1) (1950) C.L.R. 226.
177
A quick flash back to English decisions also
is instructive. A, early as 1900 in Queen,v.
Gray(1). Gray published in a newspaper an
article which was "personal scurrilous abuse
of a judge as a judge" Lord Russel of Killowen
C. J. observed :
"It is not too much to say that it is an
article of scurrilous abuse of a judge in his
character of a judgescurrilous abuse, in
reference to the conduct of the judge While
sitting under the Queen’s Commission, and
scurrilous abuse published in a newspaper in
the town in which he was still sitting under
the Queen’s Commission. It cannot be doubted-
indeed it has not been argued to the contrary
by the learned counsel who represents Howard
Alexander Gray-that the article does
constitute a contempt of Court; but, as these
applications are, happily, of an unusual
character, we have thought it right to explain
a little more fully than is perhaps necessary
what does constitute a contempt of Court, and
what are the means which the law has placed at
the disposal of the Judicature for checking
and punishing contempt of Court. Any act done
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or writing published calculated to bring a
Court or a judge of the Court into contempt,
or to lower his authority, is a contempt of
Court. That is one class of contempt.
Further, any act done or writing published
calculated to obstruct or interfere with the
due course of justice or the lawful process of
the Courts is a contempt of Court. The former
class belongs to the category which Lord
Hardwicke L. C. characterized as "scandalizing
a Court or a Judge."
The learned Law Lord, however.. indicated a
guideline which is extremely important :
"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 or would treat that as, contempt
of Court. The law ought not to be astute in
such cases to criticise adversely what under
such circumstances and with such an object is
published; but it is to be remembered that in
this matter the liberty of the press is no
greater and no less than the liberty of every
subject of the Queen. Now, as I have said, no
one has suggested that this is not a contempt
of Court and nobody has suggested, or could
suggest that it falls within the right of
public criticism in the sense I have
described. It is not criticism : I repeat
that it is personal scurrilous abuse of a
judge as a judge........
(emphasis, added)
,The tone of R. v. Gray (supra) sharply
contrasted with the much more liberal tone
adopted by the Privy Council in McLeod v. St.
(1) (1900) Q.B.D. 36.
178
Aubyn(1) even though certain aspects of the
latter decision assume a somewhat imperialist
tone. Dr. Rajeev Dhavan has observed :
"For some strange reason the Privy Council
judgment was neither referred to by the Chief
Justice or even cited to the Court even though
a time lag of nine months separates the two
judgments".(2)
A harmonious blend and a balanced co-existence
of a free press and fearless justice
desiderates that the law ought not to be too
astute in such cases and that public criticism
has a part to play, even if it oversteps the
limit, in preserving the democratic health of
public institutions. But. beyond a point, the
wages of contempt is committal.
In Ambard v. Attorney-General for Trinidad(3)
the Privy Council pronounced on a case of
public criticism of the administration of jus-
tice. Lord Atkin stated, with admirable
accuracy, the law on this branch of contempt
of Court :
"But whether the authority and position of an
individual judge, or the due administration of
justice, is concerned, no wrong is committed
by any member of the public who exercise the
ordinary right of criticising, in good faith,
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in private or public, the public act done in
the seat of justice. The path of criticism is
a public way : the wrong headed are permitted
to err therein : provided that members of the
public abstain from imputing improper motives
to those taking part in the administration of
justice, and are genuinely exercising a right
of criticism, and not acting in malice or
attempting to impair the administration of
justice, they are immune. Justice is not a
cloistered virtue : she must be allowed to
suffer the scrutiny and respectful, even
though outspoken comments of ordinary men."
Indeed, Lord Morris in Mcleod v. St. Aubyn
(supra) has commented
"Courts are satisfied to leave to public
opinion attacks or comments derogatory or
scandalous to them. But it must be considered
that in small colonies, consisting princi-
pally, of coloured populations, the
enforcement in proper cases of committal for
contempt of Court for attacks on the Court may
be absolutely necessary to preserve in such a
community the dignity of and respect for the
Court."
In will not condemn the Indian people with the contempt
manifest in Lord Morris’ observation regarding small
colonies and coloured populations. We are cultured people
with traditions and canons and may at least be equated in
these matters with English men.
(1) [1899] A.C. 549.
(2) See R. Dhavan : "Contempt of Court and the Phillimore
Committee Report" (1976) 5 Anglo American Law Review 186 at
205.
(3) (1936) A.C. 322.
179
A very valuable and remarkably fresh approach to this
question of criticism of Courts in intemperate language and
invocation of contempt of court against the contemner, a
person of high position, is found in Regina v. Metropolitan
Police Commissioner ex. p. Black,burn(1). Lord Denning’s
judgment is particularly instructive in the context of the
obnoxious comments made by Queen Hogg in an article in
"Punch" about the members of the Court of Appel. The
remarks about the Court of Appeal were highly obnoxious and
the barbed words thrown at the judges obviously were
provocative. Even so, in a brief but telling judgment, Lord
Denning held this not to be contempt of court. It is
illuminating to excerpt a few observations of the learned
judge :
"This is the first case, so far as I know,
where this court has been called on to
consider an allegation of contempt against
itself. It is a jurisdiction which
undoubtedly belongs to us but which we will
most sparingly exercise more particularly as
we ourselves have an interest in the matter.
Let me say at once that we will never use this
jurisdiction as a means to uphold our own
dignity. That must rest on surer foundations.
Nor will we use it to suppress. those who
speak against us. We do not fear criticism,
nor do we resent it. For there is something
far more important at stake. It is no less
than freedom of speech itself.
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It is the right of every man in Parliament or
out of it. in the Press or over the broadcast,
to make fair comment, even outspoken comment,
on matters of public interest. Those who
comment can deal faithfully with all that is
done in a court of justice. They can say that
we are mistaken, and our decisions erroneous,
whether they are subject to appeal or not.
All we would ask is that those who criticise
us will remember that, from the nature of our
office we cannot reply to their criticisms.
We cannot enter into public controversy.
Still less into political. We must rely on
our conduct itself to be its own vindication.
Exposed as we are to the winds of criticism,
nothing which is said by this person or that,
will deter us from doing what we believe is
right; nor, I would add, from saying what the
occasion requires, provided that it is
pertinent to the matter in hand. Silence is
not an option when things are ill done.
The Indian precedents must naturally receive referential
attention from us and so switch over to the cases of this
Court which have relevance to that branch of the contempt
jurisprudence bearing upon scandalising the judges. After a
brief survey, I will summarise the conclusions. In Sambhu
Nath Jha v. Kedar Prasad Sinha & Ors.(2)
(1) (1968) 2 W.L.R. 1204.
(2) [1972] 3 S.C.R. 183, 189.
180
" It would follow from the above that the
courts have power to take action against a
person who does an act or publishes a writing
which is calculated to bring a court or judge
into contempt or to lower his authority or to
obstruct the due course of justice or due
administration of law.... in such cases, the
court would exercise circumspection and
judicial restraint in the matter of taking
action for contempt of court. The court has
to take into account the surrounding
circumstances and the material facts of the
case and on conspectus of them to come, to a
conclusion whether because of some
contumacious conduct or other sufficient rea-
son the person proceeded against should be
punished for contempt of court."
’In Perspective Publications Ltd. v. State of,
Maharashtra(1) Grover, J., speaking on behalf
of the Court, reviewed the entire case law and
stated the result of the discussion of the
cases on contempt as follows
"(1) It will not be right to say that
committals for contempt few scandalizing the
court have become obsolete.
(2) The summary jurisdiction by way of
contempt must ’be exercised with great care
and caution and only when its exercise is
necessary for the proper administration of law
and justice.
(3) It is open to anyone to express fair,
reasonable and legitimate criticism of any act
or conduct of a judge in his judicial capacity
or even to make a proper and fair comment on
any decision given by him because "justice is
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’not a cloistered virtue and she must be
allowed to suffer the scrutiny and respectful,
even though outspoken, comments of ordinary
men.’
(4) A distinction must be made between a
mere libel or defamation of a judge and what
amounts to a contempt of the Court.
The test in each case would be whether the
impugned publication is a mere defamatory
attack on the judge or whether it is
calculated to interfere with the due course of
justice or the proper administration of law by
this Court. It is only in the latter case
that it will be punishable as ’Contempt.
(5) Alternatively the test will be whether
the wrong is done to the judge personally or
it is done to the public. To borrow from the
language of.Mukherjee, J. (as he then was)
(Brahma Prakash Sharma’s Case) (1953) S. C.
R., ’1169) the publication of a disparaging
statement will be an injury to the public if
it tends to create an apprehension in the
minds of the people regarding the integrity,
ability
(1) [1971] 2 S.C.R. 779.
181
or fairnes 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 embarrass-
ment in the mind of the judge himself in the
discharges of his judicial duties."
Hidayatullah, C. J., in R. C. Cooper v. Union
of India(1) observed :
"There is no doubt that the Court like any
other institution does not enjoy immunity from
fair criticism. This Court does not claim to
be always right although it does not spare any
effort to be right according to the best of
the ability, knowledge and judgment of the
judges. They do not think themselves it
possession of all truth or hold that wherever
others differ from them, it is so far error.
No one is more conscious of his limitations
and fallibility than a judge but because of
his training and the assistance he gets, from
learned counsel he is apt to avoid mistakes
more than others........ We are constrained to
say also that while fair and temperate
criticism of this Court or any other Court
even if strong, may not be actionable,
attributing improper motives, or tending to
bring judges or courts into hatred and
contempt or obstructing directly or indirectly
with the functioning of Courts is serious
contempt of which notice must and will be
taken. Respect is expected not only from
those to whom the judgment of the Court is
acceptable but also from those to whom it is
repugnant. Those who err in their criticism
by indulging in vilification of the
institution of courts, administration of
justice and the instruments through which the
administration acts, should take heed for they
will act at their own peril. We think this
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will be enough caution to persons embarking on
the path of criticism."
In Brahma Prakash Sharma and Others v. The
State of Uttar Pradesh(2) this Court said :
"It seems, therefore, that there are two
primary considerations 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 reflection on the
conduct or character of a judge in reference
to the discharge of his judicial duties would
not be contempt of such reflection is made in
the exercise of the right of fair and
reasonable criticism which every citizen
possesses in 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 (Ambard v. Attorney-General for Trinidad
and
(1) (1970) 2 S.C.C. 298, 301.
(2) (1953) S.C.R. 1169, 1178, 1180.
182
Tobago, (1936) A.C. 322 at 335) 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 (In the
matter of a special reference from the Bahama
Islands (1893) A. C. 138). A man in the
Bahama Islands, in a letter published in a
colonial newspaper criticised 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 (70
I. A., 216) referred to above. It was
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followed and approved of by the High Court of
Australia in King v. Nicholls (12 Corn. L. R.
280), and has been accepted as sound by this
Court in Reddy v. The State of Madras (1952)
S. C. R., 452). The position 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
libeller in a proper action if lie 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
183
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 interference with the proper
administration of law."
Mookerjee J. in In re : Motilal Ghosh and
Others ILR, 45, Cal., 269 at 283.)
There is no doubt that condign and quick
punishment for scandalising publication has
been awarded by this Court, (Vide C. K. Daph-
lary & Ors. v. O. P. Gupta(1)
Another one is Shri Baradakanta Mishra v. The
Registrar of Orissa High Court-and Another (
2). In the latter case, I had occasion to
examine the root principles of Indian Contempt
jurisprudence and I summed up thus :
"Judges and Courts have diverse duties. But
functionally, historically and
jurisprudentially, the value which is clear to
the community and the function which deserves
to be cordoned off from public molestation, is
judicial. Vicious criticism of personal and
administrative acts of Judges may indirectly
mar their image and weaken the confidence of
the public in the judiciary but the
countervailing good, not merely of free speech
but also of greater faith generated by ex-
posure to the actinic light of bona fide, even
if marginally over-zealour, criticism cannot
be overlooked. Justice is no cloistered
virtue."
"The Court being the guardian of people’s
rights, it has been held repeatedly that the
contempt jurisdiction should be exercised
"with scrupulous care and only when the case
is clear and beyond reasonable doubt"."
I relied on an observation made by Justice
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Gajendragadkar, C.J., In Special Reference No.
1 of 1964 and proceeded to state the key to
the jurisdiction :
"We ought never to forget that the power to
punish for contempt, large as it is, must
always be exercised cautiously. wisely, and
with circumspection. Frequent or indiscrimi-
nate use of this power in anger or irritation
would not help to sustain the dignity or
status of the court, but may sometimes affect
it adversely. Wise Judges never forget that
the best way to sustain the dignity and status
of their office is to deserve respect from the
public at large by the quality of their
judgments, the fearlessness, fairness and
objectivity of their approach, and by the
restraint, dignity and decorum which they
observe in their judicial conduct."
if judges decay the contempt power will not
save them and so the other side of the coin is
that Judges, like Caesar’s wife, must be above
suspicion.
(1) (1971) Supp. S.C.R. 76, 92-93.
(2) (1974) 1 S.C.C. 374.
184
To wind up, the key word is "justice", not
"judge"; the key-not thought is unobstructed
public justice, not the selfdefence of a
judge; the cornerstone of the contempt law is
the accommodation of two constitutional
values-the right of free speech and the right
to independent justice. The ignition of
contempt action should be substantial and mala
fide interference with fearless judicial
action, not-fair comment or trivial
reflections on the judicial process and per-
sonnel."
Indeed, I am convinced that democratic
institutions, including the Court system and
judges, must suffer criticism and benefit from
it This approach has been emphasised by me in
that case :
"Even so, if Judges have frailties-after all
they are human-they need to be corrected by
independent criticism. If the judicature has
serious shortcomings which demand systemic
correction through socially-oriented reform
initiated through constructive criticism, the
contempt power should not be an interdict.
All this, far from undermining the confidence
of the public in Courts, enhances it and, in
the last analysis, cannot be repressed by
indiscriminate resort to contempt power. Even
bodies like the Law Commission or the Law
Institute and researchers, legal and
sociological, may run ’contempt’ risks because
their professional work sometimes involves
unpleasant criticism of judges, judicial
processes and the system itself and thus hover
perilously around the periphery of the law if
widely construed. Creative legal journalism
and activist statesmanship for judicial reform
cannot be jeopardized by an undefined
apprehension of contempt action."
American legal history has lessons for us but when national
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conditions vary adaptation, not imitation, is the creative
alternative, to avoid breakdown on the rock of real life.
New York is not New Delhi and New York Times deals with
different customers from the Times, of India. The law of
contempt fluidly flows into the mould of life. This fact
once noted, there is instructive thought in the American
cases.
Their lofty approach, grounded on constitutional values, has
an appeal for us. The issue is one of the gravest moment
for free peoples and to choose between the cherished basics
of free expression and fair hearing is a trying task. For a
free press it may be argued as did the U. S. judges
" What is at stake here is a societal function
of the First Amendment in preserving free
public discussion of governmental affairs
Public debate must not only be unfettered; it
must also be informed. For that reason this
Court has repeatedly stated that First
Amendment concerns encompass the receipt of
information and ideas as well as the
185
right of free expression...... An informed
public depends on accurate and effective
reporting by the news media. No individual
can. obtain for himself the information needed
for the intelligent discharge of his political
responsibilities. For most citizens the
prospect of personal familiarity with
newsworthy events is, hopelessly unrealistic.
In seeking out the news the press therefore
acts as an agent of the public at large.
It is the means by which the people receive
that free flow of information and ideas
essential to intelligent selfgovernment.
By enabling the public to assert meaningful
control over the political process, the press
performs a crucial function in effecting the
societal purpose of the First Amendment. That
function is recognized by specific reference
to the press in the text of the Amendment and
by the precedents of this Court.
The argument further asserts that a
curtailment of press freedom is a serious
matter. If they can be justified at all, it
must be in terms of some serious substantive
evil which they are designed to avert. The
substantive evil here sought to be averted has
been variously described below. It appears to
be double disrespect for the judiciary; and
disorderly and unfair administration of
justice. The assumption that respect for the
judiciary can be won by shielding judges from
published criticism wrongly appraises the
character of American public opinion. For it
is a prized American privilege to speak one’s
mind, although not always with perfect goo
d
taste, on all public institutions. And an
enforced silence, however limited, solely in
the name of preserving the dignity of the
bench, would probably engender resentment,
suspicion, and contempt much more than it
would enhance respect."
We may glance at the vigorous dissent of Mr.
Justice Frankfurter to this reasoning in
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Bridges v. California(1)
"Our whole history repels the view that it is
an exercise of one of the civil liberties
secured by the Bill of Rights for a leader of
a large following or for a powerful metro-
politan newspaper to attempt to overawe a
judge in the matter immediately pending before
him. The view of the majority deprives
California of means for securing to its
citizens justice according to law-means which,
since the Union was founded have been the
possession, hitlierta unchallenged, of all the
states. This sudden break with the
uninterrupted course of constitutional history
has no constitutional warrant. To find
justification for such deprivation of the
historic powers- of the states is to
misconceive the idea of freedom of thought and
speech as guaranteed by the
Constitution......"
(1) [1941] 319 U.S, 252, 279, 283, 284.
13-211 SCI/78
186
A trial is not a "free trade in ideas," nor is
the best test of truth in a courtroom "the
power of the thought to get itself accepted in
the competition of the market A court is a
forum with strictly defined limits for
discussion. It. is circumscribed in the range
of its, inquiry and in its methods by the
Constitution, by laws, and by age-old tradi-
tions. Its judges are restrained in their
freedom of expression by historic compulsions
resting on no other officials of government.
They are so circumscribed precisely because
judges have in their keeping the enforcement
of rights and the protection of liberties
which, according to the wisdom of the ages,
can only be enforced and protected by
observing such methods and traditions.
continue the historic process of prohibiting
expressions calculated to subvert a specific
exercise of judicial power. So to assure the
impartial accomplishment of justice is not an
abridgment of freedom of speech or freedom of
the press as these phases, of liberty have
heretofore been conceived even by the stoutest
libertarians. In fact, these liberties
themselves depend upon an untrammeled
judiciary whose passions are not even
unconsciously aroused and whose minds are not
distorted by extra-judicial considerations.
Of course freedom of speech and of the press
are essential to the enlightenment of a free
people and in restraining those who wield
power. Particularly should this freedom be
employed in comment upon the work of courts,
who are without many influences ordinarily
making for humor and humility, twin antidotes
to the corrosion of power. But the Bill of
Rights is not self-destructive. Freedom of
expression can hardly carry implications that
nullify the guarantees of impartial trials.
And since courts, are the ultimate resorts for
vindicating the Bill of Rights, a state may
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surely authorize appropriate historic means to
assure that the process for such vindication
be not wrenched from its rational tracks into
the more primitive melee of passion and
pressure. The need is great that courts be
criticized, but just as great that they be
allowed to do their duty."
The representative thinking on the subject is
neatly summed up by John R. Brown, Chief Judge
:
"Thus does Alexander again confront the
Gordian Knot. For our history demands that
breaches of ’the unqualified commands of the
First Amendment cannot be tolerated and
freedom of the press must be given the broad-
est scope that a liberty-loving people can
allow On the other hand, our fundamental
concepts of absolute fairness in trials
dictate that the environment within which jus-
tice, is administered must be maintained
unpolluted by ’the
187
potential infamous notoriety and biased
predilections which a completely unfettered
but omnipresent press can irrevocably engender
in an age of the mass media.........."
It is apparent from this long discussion that the future of
Free Press and of Fair Justice desiderates a juristic socio-
political national debate, not ex-cathedra admonitions from
the Bench or assertions from the Bar. We must evolve a
know-how for the co-existence of free speech and free
justice in tune with the Preamble and Article 19.
Scurrilous attacks on judges or on parties to pending cases
foul the course of justice. Mischievous half-truths, brazen
untruths and virulent publicity by partisan media, political
organs and spokesmen for vested interests can be traumatic
to the cause of social justice.
In an area of competing social values absolutist approaches
are sure to err. And yet benign neglect of courts to arrest
injurious publicity may be misread as importance and timely
affirmative action may stem the rot. Sheppard(1) is an
American case in point Remember, a ’free’ press is often a
monopoly press and has been made gargantuan by modern
technology. Of course, we must also remember, courts work
in public and publishing their proceedings fairly cannot be
taboo. Please remember, further, that those who cry ’wolf’
against Contempt Power are more often the Proprietariat, not
the Proletariat, with exceptions which prove the rule.
Prejudicial publicity, indulged in by a ’free’ press owing
no institutional responsibility or public accountability,
cannot be all that good, especially when judges are
personally vilified, assured that the robes’ traditionally,
and for good reasons, do not and should not wrestle with
calumniating columnists or yellow journalists. Likewise, a
litigant or judge, run down by powerful vested interests
wearing the mask of mass media owned by them or hiring the
pen of arch spokesmen of political or economic
reactionaries, cannot run riot, raising the alarm that free
speech is in peril and get away with it. Heroism on the
face may often be villainy at heart and the law cannot
retreat from its justice-function scared by slogans.
Balancing of values is difficult, delicate but
indispensable. Neither the Press nor the courts are above
the People. Otherwise, even gutter talk or, to borrow the
phraseology of justice Stevens in Nebraska(2), shabby,
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intrusive or perversely motivated media practices, may be
dignified as free press and given protective constitutional
status, leaving the citizen litigant demoralized and citizen
judge powerless, panicked by the ballyhoo of Press
restraint.
The Court is not an inert abstraction; it is people in
judicial power. And when drawing up standards for Press
freedom and restraint, as an ’interface’ with an unafraid
court, we must not forget that in our constitutional scheme
the most fundamental of all freedoms is the free quest for
justice by the small man. ’When beggars
(1) Sheppard v.Mawell [1966] 384,U.S.,333.
(2) Nebraska Press Association v. Stuarts [1976] 96 Sup.
Ct. 2791.
188
die, there are comets seen’ and ’when the bull elephants
fight, the. grass is trampled’. The contempt sanction, once
frozen by the high and mighty press’ campaign, the sufferer,
in the long run, is the small Indian who seeks social
transformation through a fearless judicial process. Social
justice is at stake if foul press unlimited were to reign.
As Justice Frankfurter stated, may be ’judges as persons, or
courts as institutions, are entitled to no greater immunity
from criticism than other persons or institutions’ (a
question I desist from deciding here), but when comment
darkens into coercive imputation or calculated falsehood,
threats to impartial adjudication subtly creeps. Not
because judges lack firmness nor that the dignity of the
bench demands enhanced respect by enforced silence, as
Justice Black observed in the Los Angeles Times(1) case but
because the course of justice may be distorted by hostile
attribution. Said Justice Jackson in Craige v. Harney(2) :
"I do not know whether it is the view of the
Court that a judge must be thickskinned or
just thickheaded, but nothing in my experience
or observation confirms the idea that he is
insensitive to publicity. Who does not prefer
good to ill report of his work? And if fame-a
good public name-is, as Milton said, the "last
infirmity of noble mind," it is frequently the
first infirmity of a mediocre one.
I do not dogmatise but indicate the perils. Of course, the
evil must be substantive and substantial, not chimerical or
peripheral.
A concluding note. I have launched on this long,
inconclusive essay in contempt jurisprudence bearing on
scandalizing the judge& qua judges, aware that not high
falstaffian rhetoric but hard-headed realism, illumined by
constitutional values, must set the limit and interpret the
statute. It is a disturbing development in our country that
the media and some men in the, trade of traducement are
escalatingly scandalizing judges with flippant or motivated
write-ups wearing a pro bono publico veil and mood of
provocative mock-challenge. The court shall not meditate
nor hesitate but shall do stern justice to such
’professional" contemners, not shrink because they are
scurrilous, influential or incorrigible. Even so, to be
gentle is to be just and the quality of mercy is not
strained. So, it is that a benign neglect not judicial
genuflexion, is often the prescription, and to inhibit hapha
zardness or injustice it is necessary that the Bar and the
Press evolve a dignified consensus on the canons of ethics
in this area, with due regard to the Constitution and the
laws, so that the Bench may give it a close look and draw
the objective line of action. The process of arriving at
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these norms by those mighty forces who influence Public
opinion, cannot be delayed and until then the law laid down
in precedents of this court will go into action when judge-
baiting is indulged in by masked ’men or media might.
Freedom is what Freedom does and Justice fails when Judges
quail.
(1) 314 U.S. 263.
(2) 331 U.S. 367.
189
For sure, my plea is not for judicial pachydermy, but for
dignified detachment which ignores ill-informed criticism in
its tolerant stride, but strikes when offensive excesses are
established. Frankly, all these are hypothetical and have
no specific reference to the present case. These obiter-
dacta are intended to indicate the pros and cons, not to
pontificate on the precise limits for exercise of contempt
power and to emphasize what Chief Justice Warren Burger
mentioned in Nebraska Press Association(1) as ’something in
the nature of a fiduciary duty’ of the press to act
responsibly and I may add, respectfully.
An afterword.
An afterword has become necessitous because the learned
Chief Justice has, in his reasons, made some critical
observations on men and matters based on his rich
experience, high responsibility and urge to right wrongs.
While respecting his feeling of hurt and attempt to set the
’record straight regarding his prior judgment and letters on
canons of judicial ethics, I desist from comments on the
author or the article, including its correctness and
propriety, for fear that an indelible word, writ
incautiously, may fester into an incurable wound. I am in
no mood to pronounce on these subjects or to judge these
generalities. Many an arrow at random sent hits a mark the
archer never meant, and ex cathedra generalizations run the
genetic risk of notice imperfections. The Almighty does not
share His omniscience with the Judiciary.
KAILASAM, J.-I had the benefit of reading the Judgments pro-
posed to be delivered by My Lord the Chief Justice and
Justice Krishna Iyer.
I would have been contented with stating that, in my view,
on taking into account the facts and circumstances of the
case this is not a fit case to be proceeded with under the
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971. But now it has become
necessary for me to state whether I agree with the judgments
to be delivered.
MY learned Brother Justice Krishna Iyer in his concluding
note has expressed that he had launched on this long
inconclusive essay which relates to hypothetical questions
and has no specific reference to the present case. The
Judgment which lie himself characterizes as obiter dicta may
be left alone without any comments.
When the matter was taken up in the Court on 27th January,
1978, the contempt proceedings were dropped without calling
upon the learned counsel who was appearing for the
respondent in response to the notice. Without bearing the
parties concerned, it is not right and proper to make any
comments about the facts of the case. In this view I
refrain from referring to the publication in "The Indian
Express" or about the article in the newspaper by Shri A. G.
Noorani.
Contempt proceedings will stand dropped.
P.B.R. Proceedings dropped.
(1) 96 S. Ct. 2803.
190
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