Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
REVASHANKAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/09/1958
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 102 1959 SCR Supl. (1)1367
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1971 SC 221 (16)
R 1972 SC 905 (8)
R 1972 SC 989 (9,10)
R 1974 SC 710 (85)
ACT:
Contempt of Court-Ouster of High Court’s jurisdiction-Test
-Contempt of Courts Act, 1952 (XXXII Of 1952), s. 3(2)-
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (XLV of 1860), S. 228.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, who had filed a complaint in respect of an
alleged offence under s. 500 of the Indian Penal Code in the
Court of the Additional District Magistrate of Indore, made
a number of aspersions against the Magistrate in an
application
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made to him under s. 528 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
two of which were of a serious character. It was alleged
that the Magistrate was a party to a conspiracy with certain
others the object of which was two implicate the complainant
in a false case of theft and that a lawyer appearing for the
accused persons, to whom the Magistrate was favourably
inclined, had declared that he had paid a sum of Rs. 500 to
the Magistrate. Those allegations were later on repeated in
an affidavit. The Magistrate reported the matter to the
Registrar of the High Court for necessary action. The High
Court called upon the respondent to show cause why he should
not be proceeded against in contempt under the Contempt of
Courts Act, 1952. The judges of the Division Bench who
heard the matter, without going into the merits of the case,
held that, Prima facie, the offence was one of intentional
insult under s. 228 of the lndian Penal Code and,
consequently, the jurisdiction of the High Court was ousted
under s. 3(2) Of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1952.
Held, that the High Court had taken an erroneous view of the
matter and its order must be set aside.
The mere existence of an element of insult in the alleged
act of contempt was not conclusive as to the applicability
of
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S. 228 Of the Indian Penal Code so as to oust the
jurisdiction of the High Court under s. 3(2) of the Contempt
of Courts Act.
While Judges and Courts are not beyond criticism, and there
are well-recognised limits to such criticism, and contempt
proceedings are not meant to shield judges from personal
insults, there can be no question that where defamatory
aspersions are cast upon the character and ability of
individual judges or of Courts in general, which in
substance scandalise the Court itself and have the effect of
undermining the confidence of the public in it and thus
hinder due administration of justice, the contempt is of a
kind which exceeds the limits of s. 228 of the Indian Penal
Code.
The true test, therefore, is: is the act complained of an
offence under s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code, or something
more than that ? If it is something more, the jurisdiction
of the High Court is not ousted by S. 3(2) Of the Contempt
of Courts Act.
So judged, there could be no doubt that the aspersions cast
in the present case amounted to scandalising the court
itself, and were no mere personal insults, and the High
Court had jurisdiction to take cognizance of the same.
Bathina Ramkrishna Reddy v. The State of Madras, [1952] S.
C. R. 425 and Brahma Prakash Shayma v. The State of Uttar
Pradesh, [1953] S.C.R. 1169, relied on.
Ambard v. Attorney-Geneyal for Trinidad and Tobago, [1936]
A.C. 322, referred to.
1369
The question whether an insult offered to a public servant
is intentional so as to attract S. 228 of the Indian Penal
Code has to be decided on the facts of each particular case
and it is neither necessary nor advisable to Jay down any
hard and fast rule.
Narotam Das v. Emperor, A.I.R. 1943 All. 97, Queen Empress
v. Abdullah Khan, (1898) A.W.N. I45 and Emperor v. Murli
Dhar, (1916) I.L.R. 38 All. 284, considered.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 103 of
1956.
H. J. Umrigar and R. H. Dhebar, for the appellant. The
sole question arising for determination is whether on the
facts and circumstances of the case the High Court was
correct in holding that the act of the respondent complained
of constituted an offence under s. 228 of the Indian Penal
Code, and the jurisdiction of the High Court was, therefore,
ousted by reason of the provision of s. 3(2) of the Contempt
of Courts Act, 1952. The High Court in coming to this
conclusion appears to have relied on two decisions of the
Supreme Court--[1952] S.C.R. 425 and [1953] S.C.R. 1169.
The facts in the two Supreme Court cases were quite
different and they do not, in any way justify the view taken
by the High Court. It will be my submission that the
allegations made in the so-called transfer application as
also the affidavit are of such a serious nature that they
are not a mere personal insult to the Magistrate, but go far
beyond; they scandalise the Court in such a manner as to
create distrust in the minds of the public, and pollute the
stream of justice, and in such cases the jurisdiction of the
High Court is not ousted (Reads out portions of the transfer
application and the affidavit in support). From a perusal
of the extracts which have been read, it will be seen that
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the aspersions made against the Magistrate are of a very
serious nature alleging criminal conspiracy, and also that
he had taken a bribe of Rs. 500 from the opposite side.
So far as the offence under s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code
is concerned, the first essential ingredient is that there
must be an " intention " to insult. In the affidavit filed
in the High Court in reply to the
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show cause notice the respondent had stated that there was
no intention to insult or show disrespect to the Magistrate.
[Imam J.-I cannot agree with that, the language used in the
application and affidavit is such that intention to insult
was clearly there.]
That may be true, but there are several earlier decisions of
the Allahabad High Court which have been referred to in the
case relied upon by the High Court-Narotam Das v. The
Emperor, A.I.R 1943 All. 97, wherein it was held that where
scandalous allegations were incorporated in a transfer
application, there was not necessarily an intention to
insult, as the primary object was to seek a transfer and not
to insult the Court.
So far as the decisions are concerned, they support my
contention that when scandalous allegations are made against
a Magistrate in a transfer application they would not
necessarily constitute an offence under s. 228 of the Indian
Penal Code and could be punished by the High Court. In
I.L.R. 1941 Nagpur 304, the Judge, who was seized of the
case, made a complaint to the High Court about a letter sent
to him by one of the parties, and it was there held that the
sender of the letter could be punished for Contempt of Court
by the High Court. It is true that there is no discussion
about. 228 of the Indian Penal Code but in the course of the
judgment the case of Emperor v. Jagnath Prasad Swadhiry,
I.L.R. 1938 All. 548, was mentioned. In the Allahabad case
a person during the pendency of a suit sent communications
by post to the Judge containing scandalous allegations. It
appears that it was urged that s. 228 of the Indian Penal
Code would bar the jurisdiction of the High Court under s.
3(2) of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1926, but this
contention was repelled and the High Court stated that its
jurisdiction to punish for contempt was not ousted.
[Reference was also made to I.L.R. 12 Patna I and I.L.R. 12
Patna 172].
I submit that where the allegations made go beyond
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mere personal insult and tend to bring the whole
administration of justice, into disrepute, then the juris-
diction of the High Court would not be ousted by s. 3(2) of
the Act. In a case where there is only an insult to the
Judge by using vulgar abuse such as " rogue or rascal " and
this abuse was made " ex facie curiae ", then it may be said
that the jurisdiction of the High Court is ousted as the
offence falls within the purview of s. 228 of the Indian
Penal Code.
[Das J.-Also if the abuse relates to the private life of the
Judge, such as, calling him a drunkard or imputing some
immorality to him, unconnected with his judicial duties.]
I agree. In the instant case the Magistrate must have been
fully conscious of the powers possessed by him under s. 228
of the Indian Penal Code as also the relevant provisions in
the Criminal Procedure Code which permit him to punish for
Contempt of Court, yet he presumably must have felt that the
aspersions made in the present case were so grave as to
transcend mere personal insult and as such it was a fit case
to be referred to the High Court for taking necessary
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action. In conclusion, it is submitted that the view taken
by the High Court is much too narrow. and cannot be
supported either in principle or by the, authorities cited.
J. B. Dadachanji and S. N. Andley, for the respondent.
The view taken by the High Court is correct and is in
accordance with the judgments of the Supreme Court in the
cases reported in [1952] S.C.R. and [1953] S.C.R. If the act
complained of intentionally offers a personal insult to the
Magistrate concerned, it may tend to undermine the
administration of justice thereby, but it will nevertheless
amount to an offence under s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code
and as such the jurisdiction of the High Court will be
ousted by s. 3(2) of the Act. It is unsound to say that
there are two kinds of contempt, and the lesser kind of
contempt will come under s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code and
the grosser kind will not come under s. 228 ; every insult
to a Court, whatever its nature, is contempt and punishable
under s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code.
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[Kapur J.-Every insult to a Judge will not necessarily be a
contempt. A libel attacking the integrity of a Judge may
not, in the circumstances of a particular case, amount to a
contempt at all, although it may be the subject matter of a
libel proceeding.]
[Das J.-It appears that there is a further difficulty in
your way, that is, whether the Magistrate was sitting in any
stage of a judicial proceeding when the application and the
affidavit were filed; if he was not, then one of the
essential ingredients of s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code was
not satisfied.]
The High Court has assumed that the Magistrate was sitting
as a Court at that time and this was also borne out by the
facts stated in the petition for special leave to appeal
filed by the appellant wherein it is stated " the
application having been presented during the sitting of the
Court was clearly calculated to lower the dignity of the
Court in the public mind ".
Section 480 of the Code of Criminal Procedure specifically
mentions s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code and treats it as a
form of contempt, therefore, it will be an offence of
contempt punishable under the Indian Penal Code and as such
the jurisdiction of the High Court would be ousted under s.
3(2) of the Act.
I submit that the view taken by the High Court is the
correct view and is supported by the two decisions of the
Supreme Court as also the judgment of the Bombay High Court
in (1922) I.L.R. 46 Bom. 973.
Umrigar in reply. During the course of discussion, doubts
have arisen whether there was any intention to insult, or
whether what was said was an insult, or whether the insult
was offered in any stage of a judicial proceeding. If any
one of these three essentials is lacking, then, obviously,
there is no offence under s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code.
Where there is so much doubt as to whether an offence under
s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code has been committed or not,
and there is no doubt that " prima facie " a Contempt of
Court apart from the provisions of s. 228 has been
committed, it is wrong to say that the jurisdiction of the
High Court is ousted.
1373
I submit that the case relied upon by the High Court,
Narotam Das v. Emperor, A. 1. R. 1943 All. 97, correctly
lays down the law so far as the question of intention " is
concerned.
1958. September 24. The Judgment of the Court was
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delivered by
S. K. DAS, J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment and order of the then Madhya Bharat High Court,
dated February 9, 1955, in Criminal Miscellaneous
Application no. 2 of 1954. Originally, the appeal was filed
on behalf of the State of Madhya Bharat, now substituted by
the State of Madhya Pradesh. The appeal raises an important
question with regard to the interpretation of s. 3(2) of the
Contempt of Courts Act, 1952 (XXXII of 1952), hereinafter
referred to as the Act, which repealed the earlier Contempt
of Courts Act, 1926 (XII of 1926), as also the Indore
Contempt of Courts Act (V of 1930) which was earlier in
force in the State of Madhya Bharat.
The facts so far as they are relevant to this appeal are
these. One Ganga Ram, stated to be the landlord of the
respondent Revashankar, instituted a suit, which was
numbered as 1383 of 1952 in the court of the Additional City
Civil Judge, Indore, for ejectment and arrears of rent
against Revashankar. It was stated that the suit was filed
in the name of Ganga Ram and his wife Chandra Mukhi Bai. It
was further alleged that one Mr. Uma Shankar Chaturvedi, a
lawyer acting on behalf of Ganga Ram, advised the latter to
sign the name of his wife Chandra Mukhi Bai though Chandra
Mukhi Bai herself did not sign the plaint or the
vakalatnama. In this suit Chandra Mukhi Bai filed an
application for permission to prosecute her husband for
forgery. Another application was filed by certain other
persons said to be other tenants of Ganga Ram in which some
allegations were made against Revashankar. On June 29,
1953, Revashankar filed a complaint against five persons for
an alleged offence under s. 500, Indian Penal Code. This
complaint was verified on July 13, 1953, and was registered
as Criminal Case no. 637 of 1953 in the court of one
1374
Mr. N. K. Acharya, Additional District Magistrate, Indore.
In that case one Mr. Kulkarni appeared on behalf of the
complainant Revashankar. The accused persons appeared on
August 8, 1953, through Messrs. Mohan Singh and Uma Shankar
Chaturvedi. An objection was raised on behalf of the
accused persons to the appearance of Mr. Kulkarni as the
latter’s name appeared in the list of witnesses. This was
followed by a spate of applications and counter applications
and on October 12, 1953, the learned Additional District
Magistrate passed an order to the effect that the copies of
the applications as well as of the affidavits filed by both
parties should be sent to the District Judge for necessary
action against the lawyers concerned. In the-meantime a
criminal case was started against Revashankar in the court
of the Additional City Magistrate, Circle No. 2, for an
alleged offence under s. 497, Indian Penal Code. The case
was started on the complaint of Ganga Ram. That case was
numbered as 644 of 1953. We then come to the crucial date,
namely, December 17, 1953. On that date Revashankar filed
an application in the court of the Additional District
Magistrate who was in seizin of Criminal Case no. 637 of
1953. The application purported to be one under s. 528,
Code of Criminal Procedure. This application contained some
serious aspersions against the Magistrate, Mr. N. K.
Acharya. The aspersions were summarised by the learned
Judges of the High Court under the following four
categories. The first aspersion was that from the order
dated October 12, 1953 it appeared that Mr. N. K. Acharya
wanted to favour Mr. Uma Shankar Chaturvedi. The second
aspersion was that from certain opinions expressed by the
Magistrate, Revashankar asserted that he was sure that he
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would not get impartial and legal justice from the
Magistrate. The third aspersion was of a more serious
character and it was that the Magistrate had a hand in a
conspiracy hatched by Messrs. Mohan Singh and Uma Shankar
Chaturvedi regarding certain ornaments of Chandra Mukhi Bai
with the object of involving, Revashankar and his brother
Sushil Kumar in a false case of theft of ornaments. The
fourth aspersion was that Mr. Uma
1375
Shankar Chaturvedi had declared that he had paid Rs. 500 to
the Magistrate through Ganga Ram. These aspersions were
later repeated in an affidavit on December 21, 1953. On
January 11, 1954, the learned Magistrate reported the
aforesaid facts to the Registrar of the Madhya Bharat High
Court, and prayed for necessary action against Revashankar
for contempt of court. On this report the High Court
directed the issue of notice to Revashankar to show cause
why action should not be taken against him under the
Contempt of Courts Act, 1952 and Criminal Miscellaneous
Application no. 2 of 1954 was accordingly started against
Revashankar. On March 3, 1954, Revashankar showed cause.
The case was then heard by a Division Bench consisting of V.
R. Newaskar and S. M. Samvatsar, JJ. and by an order dated
February 9, 1955, the learned Judges held that by reason of
the provisions in s. 3(2) of the Act the jurisdiction of the
High Court was ousted inasmuch as the act complained of
constituted an offence under s. 228 of the Indian Penal
Code. The question for consideration in the present appeal
is if the aforesaid view of the High Court is correct.
Mr. H. J. Umrigar, who has appeared on behalf of the
appellant, has very strongly submitted before us that the
High Court has erred in holding that the act of the
respondent complained of constituted an offence under s.
228, Indian Penal Code, and the jurisdiction of the High
Court was, therefore, ousted by reason of the provisions in
s. 3(2) of the Act. It is necessary to read first s. :3(2)
of the Act. We may state here that the corresponding
section in the earlier Contempt of Courts Act, 1926 was s.
2(3) and in the judgment under consideration there is some
confusion as to the correct number of the sub-section.
Section 3(2) of the Act is in these terms :-
" No High Court shall take cognizance of a contempt alleged
to have been committed in respect of a Court subordinate to
it where such contempt is an offence punishable under the
Indian Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860)."
175
1376
The sub-section was considered in two decisions of this
Court, Bathina Ramakrishna Reddy v. The State of Madras (1)
and Brahma Prakash Sharma v. The State of Uttar Pradesh (2).
In the earlier case of Ramakrishna Reddy (1) the appellant
was the publisher and managing editor of a Telugu Weekly
known as " Praja Rajyam ". In an issue of the said paper
dated February 10, 1949, an article appeared which contained
defamatory statements about the stationary sub-Magistrate,
Kovvur, and the point for consideration was if the
jurisdiction of the High Court to take cognisance of such a
case was expressly barred under s. 2(3) of the earlier
Contempt of Courts Act, when the allegations made in the
article in question constituted an offence under s. 499,
Indian Penal Code. On behalf of the appellant it was argued
that what the subsection meant was that if the act by which
the party was alleged to have committed contempt of a s
subordinate court constituted offence of any description
whatsoever punishable under the Indian Penal Code, the High
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Court was precluded from taking cognizance of it. This
argument was repelled and this Court said (at page 429):-
" In our opinion, the sub-section referred to above excludes
the jurisdiction of High Court only in cases where the acts
alleged to constitute contempt of a subordinate court are
punishable as contempt under specific provisions of the
Indian Penal Code but not where these acts merely amount to
offences of other description for which punishment has been
provided for in the Indian Penal Code. This would be clear
from the language of the sub-section which uses the words "
where such contempt is an offence " and does not say " where
the act alleged to constitute such contempt is an offence ".
On an examination of the decisions of several High Courts in
India it was laid down that the High Court had the right to
protect subordinate courts against contempt but subject to
this restriction, that cases of contempt which have already
been provided for in the Indian Penal Code should not be
taken cognizance of
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 425.
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 1169.
1377
by the High Court. This, it was stated, was the principle
underlying s. 2(3) of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1926.
This Court then observed that it was not necessary to
determine exhaustively what were the cases of contempt which
had been already provided for in the Indian Penal Code; it
was pointed out, however, that some light was thrown on the
matter by the provision of s. 480 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure which empowers any civil, criminal or revenue
court to punish summarily a person who is found guilty of
committing any offence under ss. 175, 178, 179, 180 or s.
228 of the Indian Penal Code in the view or presence of the
court. The later decision of Brahma Prakash Sharma (1)
explained the true object of contempt proceedings.
Mukherjea J. who delivered the judgment of the Court said
(at page 1 176) :
" 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 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 ".
It was also pointed out that there were innumerable ways by
which attempts could be made to hinder or obstruct the due
administration of justice in courts and one type of such
interference was found in cases where there was an act which
amounted to " scandalising the court itself ": this
scandalising might manifest itself in various ways but in
substance it was an attack on individual Judges or the court
as a whole with or without reference to particular cases,
causing unwarranted and defamatory aspersions upon the
character and ability of the Judges. Such conduct is
punished as contempt for the 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.
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1169.
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Bearing the aforesaid principles in mind, let us now examine
the case under consideration. The High Court expressed the
view that the act of the respondent complained of merely
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amounted to an offence under s. 228, Indian Penal Code.
Nevaskar J. said:
" It appears to me that the application, though it was
stated to be an application for transfer, was intended to
offend and insult the Magistrate. A man’s intention can be
judged by the nature of the act he commits. The application
directly and in face attributes partiality and corruption to
the Magistrate. It was not an application made bona fide to
a court having jurisdiction to transfer the case from that
Court to some other Court. It was an application thrown in
the face of the Magistrate himself. The action is no better
than telling the Magistrate in face that he was partial and
corrupt. The allegations in the application no doubt are
insulting to the Magistrate and he felt them to be so and at
the time the application was submitted on 17th December,
1953, when he was sitting as a Court and dealing with the
case of the opponent."
" Thus, since I hold that the opponent intended to offer
insult to the Magistrate concerned there is no doubt that
the act would fall within the purview of section 228, Indian
Penal Code, and this Court will be precluded from taking
action for the contempt committed before the Court of the
Magistrate by reason of section 2(3) of the Contempt of
Courts Act ".
The other learned Judge also expressed the same view in the
following words:
" The subordinate Courts can sufficiently vindicate their
dignity by proceeding against the offenders under the
provisions of criminal law in such cases. Legislature has
deemed it proper to exclude such cases from the jurisdiction
of the High Court under section 2(3) of the Contempt of
Courts Act. This, however, does not mean that High Court’s
jurisdiction is excluded even in cases where the act
complained of, which is alleged to constitute contempt, is
otherwise an offence under the Indian Penal Code."
"The question to be considered in this case is
1379
whether the act complained of is punishable as contempt
under any one of the specific provisions of the Indian Penal
Code. In other words whether it falls under any one of the
sections 175, 178, 179, 180 or 228 of the Indian Penal
Code."
" If the act complained of constitutes an offence under any
of these sections, it can be dealt with by the subordinate
Court itself under section 480 of the Criminal Procedure
Code and the High Court will have no power to take
cognizance of it under the Contempt of Courts Act."
We are of the opinion that the learned Judges were wrong in
their view that prima facie the act complained of amounted
to an offence under s. 228, Indian Penal Code, and no more.
We are advisedly saying prima facie, because the High Court
did not go into the merits and we have no desire to make any
final pronouncement at this stage on the merits of the case.
Section 228, Indian Penal Code, is in these terms:
" Whoever intentionally offers any insult, or causes any
interruption to any public servant, while such public
servant is sitting in any stage of a judicial proceeding,
shall be punished with simple imprisonment for a term which
may extend to six months, or with fine which may extend to
one thousand rupees, or with both."
The essential ingredients of the offence are (1) intention,
(2) insult or interruption to a public servant and (3) the
public servant insulted or interrupted must be sitting in
any stage of a judicial proceeding. In the present case
there is an initial difficulty which has been pointed out to
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us. The respondent was sought to be proceeded against by
reason of the aspersions he made in the application dated
December 17, 1953, and the affidavit dated December 21,
1953. It is not very clear from the record if the learned
Magistrate was sitting in any stage of a judicial proceeding
when the application and the affidavit were filed. The High
Court no doubt says that the Magistrate was sitting as a
court at the time; but there is no reference to the
particular work, judicial or otherwise, which the
1380
Magistrate was doing at the time. The practice as to the
filing of applications and affidavits varies from court to
court and in some courts applications and affidavits are
filed within stated hours before the reader or the bench
clerk; they are so filed even when the Judge or Magistrate
is in chamber or preoccupied with some administrative
duties. So far as the present case is concerned, it is not
at all clear, from the record as placed before us, as to
what was the judicial work which the learned Magistrate was
doing when the application and affidavit were filed. If he
was not doing any judicial work at the relevant time, then
the third essential ingredient mentioned above was not
fulfilled and the act complained of would not amount to an
offence under s. 228, Indian Penal Code.
We are not, however, basing our decision on the mere absence
of materials to show what particular judicial work the
learned Magistrate was doing when the -application dated
December 17, 1953, and the affidavit dated December 21,
1953, were filed. If that were the only infirmity, the
proper order would be to ask for a finding on the question.
Our decision is based on a more fundamental ground. Learned
counsel for the parties have taken us through the applica-
tion dated December 17, 1953, and the affidavit dated
December 21, 1953. The aspersions made therein prima facie
showed that they were much more than a mere insult to the
learned Magistrate ; in effect, they scandalised the Court
in such a way as to create distrust in the popular mind and
impair the confidence of people in Courts. Two of the
aspersions made, taken at their face value, were (1) that
the learned Magistrate had joined in a conspiracy to
implicate the respondent in a false case of theft. In the
affidavit it was stated that the learned Magistrate had sent
for the respondent and his brother and had asked them to
make a false report to the police that the ornaments of
Chandra Mukhi Bai had been stolen. The learned Magistrate
characterised the aspersion as totally false and said that
he neither knew the respondent nor his brother and had no
acquaintance with them. Another aspersion was that the
Magistrate had taken a bribe
1381
of Rs. 500. This aspersion was also stoutly denied. We
must make it clear here that at this stage we are expressing
no opinion on merits, nor on the correctness or otherwise of
the aspersions made. All that we are saying is that the
aspersions taken at their face value amounted to what is
called scandalising the court itself, manifesting itself in
such an attack on the Magistrate as tended to create
distrust in the popular mind and impair the confidence of
the people in the courts. We are aware that confidence in
courts cannot be created by stifling criticism, but there
are criticisms and criticisms. " The path of criticism ",
said Lord Atkin in Ambard v. Attorney-General for Trinidad
and Tobago (1), " is a public way: The wrongheaded are
permitted to err therein: provided that members of the
public abstain from imputing improper motives to those
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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 ". If, therefore, the respondent
had merely criticised the Magistrate, no notice need have
been taken of such criticism as contempt of court whatever
action it might have been open to the Magistrate to take as
an aggrieved individual; but if the respondent acted in
malice and attempted to impair the administration of
justice, the offence committed would be something more than
an offence under s. 228, Indian Penal Code.
Learned counsel for the respondent has contended before us
that as soon as there is an element of insult in the act
complained of, s. 228, Indian Penal Code, is attracted and
the jurisdiction of the High Court to take cognizance of the
contempt is ousted. We are unable to accept this contention
as correct. Section 228 deals with an intentional insult to
a public servant in certain circumstances. The punishment
for the offence is simple imprisonment for a term which may
extend to six months or with fine which may extend to one
thousand rupees or with both. Our attention has been drawn
to the circumstance that under s. 4 of
(1) [1936] A. C.322, 335.
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the Act the sentence for contempt of court is more or less
the same, namely, simple imprisonment for a term which may
extend to six months. The fine is a little more and may
extend to two thousand rupees. Section 4 of the Act
contains a proviso that the accused person may be discharged
or the punishment awarded may be remitted on apology being
made to the satisfaction of the court. We do not, however,
think that a similarity of the sentence in the two sections
referred to above is a real test. The true test is: is the
act complained of an offence under s. 228, Indian Penal
Code, or is it something more than that ? If in its true
nature and effect, the act complained of is really "
scandalising the court " rather than a mere insult, then it
is clear that on the ratio of our decision in Ramakrishna
Reddy’s case(1) the jurisdiction of the High Court is not
ousted by reason of the provision in s. 3(2) of the Act.
Mr. Umrigar has urged a further point in this connection and
has contended that for an offence under s. 228, Indian Penal
Code, the insult must be an intentional insult. The first
essential requirement of the offence, according to him, is
that the insult must be offered intentionally. He has
pointed out that the application which the respondent filed
purported to be an application under s. 528, Criminal
Procedure Code, and though it is difficult to see how that
section applied in the present case, the intention of the
respondent was not to insult the Magistrate, but merely to
state the ’Circumstances in which the respondent was praying
for a transfer of the case. Mr. Umrigar has pointed out
that in the reply which the repondent gave to the notice
issued from the High Court, he said that he had no intention
to insult or show disrespect to the learned Magistrate. Mr.
Umrigar has further submitted that the decision in Narotam
Das v. Emperor (2) (on which the learned Judges of the High
Court relied) where in somewhat similiar circumstances it
was held that s. 228, Indian Penal Code, applied, does not
correctly lay down the law. In that case Yorke J. observed
that it would be a matter for
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 425.
(2) A.I.R. 1943 All. 97.
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consideration in each individual case how, insulting the
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expressions used were and whether there was any necessity
for the applicant to make use of those expressions in the
application which he was actually making to the court.
While we agree that the question of intention must depend on
the facts and circumstances of each case, we are unable to
accept as correct the other tests laid down by the learned
Judge as finally determinative of the question of intention.
In two earlier decisions of the same High Court, in Queen
Empress v. Abdullah Khan(1) and Emperor v. Murli Dhar (2),
it was held that where an accused person made an application
for transfer of the case pending against him and inserted in
such application assertions of a defamatory nature
concerning the Magistrate who was trying the case, there was
no intention on the part of the applicant to insult the
court, but the intention was merely to procure a transfer of
the case. We do not think that any hard and fast rule can
be laid down with regard to this matter. Whether there is
an intention to offer insult to the Magistrate trying the
case or not must depend on the facts and circumstances of
each case and we do not consider it necessary, nor
advisable, to lay down any inflexible rule thereto.
Taking the aspersions made by the respondent in the
application dated December 17, 1953, and the affidavit dated
December 21, 1953, at their face value, we have already
expressed the view that they amounted to something more than
a mere intentional, personal insult to the Magistrate; they
scandalised the court itself and impaired the administration
of justice. In that view of the matter s. 3(2) of the Act
did not stand in the way and the learned Judges of the High
Court were wrong in their view that the jurisdiction of the
High Court was ousted.
We accordingly allow the appeal and set aside the order of
the High Court dated February 9, 1955. In our view, the
High Court had jurisdiction to take cognizance of the act
complained of and the case must
(1) (1898) A.W.N. 145.
176
(2) (1916) 38 All. 284.
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now be decided by the High Court on merits in accordance
with law. It is only necessary to add that the act
complained of was committed as far back as 1953 and it is
desirable that the case should be dealt with as
expeditiously as possible.
Appeal allowed.