Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3050 of 2000
PETITIONER:
PRAVIN C. SHAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K.A. MOHD. ALI & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/10/2001
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, S.N.Variava
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
We thought that the question involved in this appeal
would generate much interest to the legal profession and
hence we issued notices to the Bar Council of India as well
as the State Bar Council concerned. But the Bar Council of
India did not respond to the notice. We therefore requested
Mr. Dushyant A. Dave, Senior Advocate, to help us as amicus
curiae. The learned senior counsel did a commendable job to
help us by projecting a wide screen focussing on the full
profiles of the subject with his usual felicity. We are
beholden to him.
When an advocate was punished for contempt of court
can he appear thereafter as a counsel in the courts, unless
he purges himself of such contempt? If he cannot, then what
is the way he can purge himself of such contempt. That
question has now come to be determined by the Supreme
Court.
This matter concerns an advocate practising mostly in
the courts situated within Ernakulam District of Kerala
State. He was hauled up for contempt of court on two
successive occasions. We wish to skip the facts in both
the said cases which resulted in his being hauled up for
such contempt as those facts have no direct bearing on the
question sought to be decided now. (The detailed facts
leading to the said proceedings have been narrated in the
two decisions of the High Court of Kerala reported in C.N.
Presannan vs. K.A. Mohammed Ali 1991 Criminal Law Journal
2194 and 1991 Criminal Law Journal 2205). Nonetheless it
is necessary to state that the High Court of Kerala found
the respondent-advocate guilty of criminal contempt in both
cases and convicted him under Section 12 of the Contempt of
Courts Act, 1971, and sentenced him in one case to a fine
of Rs.10,000/- (to be credited, if realised, to the funds
of Kerala Legal Aid Board). In the second case he was
sentenced to pay a fine of Rs.2,000/-. Though he challenged
the conviction and sentence imposed on him by the High
Court, he did not succeed in the Supreme Court except
getting the fine of Rs.2,000/- in one case deleted. The
apology tendered by him in this Court was not accepted, for
which a two Judge Bench made the following observation:
We regretfully will not be able to accept
his apology at this belated juncture, but
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would rather admonish the appellant for his
conduct under our plenary powers under the
constitution, which we do hereby.
The above conviction and sentence and refusal to
accept the apology tendered on his behalf did not create
any ripple in him, so far as his resolve to continue to
appear and conduct cases in the courts was concerned. The
present appellant (who represents an association Lalan
Road Residents Association, Cochin) brought to the notice
of the Bar Council of Kerala that the delinquent advocate
continued to conduct cases before the courts in Ernakulam
District in spite of the conviction and sentence.
The Bar Council of Kerala thereupon initiated
disciplinary proceedings against the respondent-advocate
and finally imposed a punishment on him debarring him from
acting or pleading in any court till he gets himself
purged of the contempt of court by an order of the
appropriate court. The respondent-advocate challenged
the order of the State Bar Council in an appeal filed
before the Bar Council of India. By the impugned order the
Bar Council of India set aside the interdict imposed on
him.
This appeal, in challenge of the aforesaid order of
the Bar Council of India, is preferred by the same person
at whose instance the State Bar Council initiated action
against the respondent-advocate.
While imposing the interdict on the advocate the
Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of the State took
into account Rule 11 of the Rules framed by the High Court
of Kerala under Section 34(1) of the Advocates Act, 1961,
regarding conditions and practice of Advocates
(hereinafter referred to as the Rules). Rule 11 reads
thus:
No advocate who has been found guilty of
contempt of Court shall be permitted to
appear, act or plead in any Court unless he
has purged himself of the contempt.
The above rule shows that it was not necessary for the
Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council to impose the
said interdict as a punishment for misconduct. Even if the
Bar Council had not passed proceedings (which the
Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India has
since set aside as per the impugned order) the delinquent
advocate would have been under the disability contained in
Rule 11 quoted above. It is a self-operating rule for which
only one stipulation need be satisfied i.e. the advocate
concerned should have been found guilty of contempt of
court. The termini of the period of operation of the
interdict is indicated by the next stipulation i.e. the
contemnor purges himself of the contempt. The inhibition
will therefore start operating when the first stipulation
is satisfied, and it would continue to function until the
second stipulation is fulfilled. The latter condition would
remain eluded until the delinquent advocate himself
initiates steps towards that end.
Regarding the first condition there is no difficulty
whatsoever in the present case because it is an admitted
fact that respondent-advocate has been found guilty of
contempt of court by the High Court of Kerala in two cases
successively. For the operation of the interdict contained
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in Rule 11 it is not even necessary that the advocate
should have been sentenced to any punishment after finding
him guilty. The difficulty arises in respect of the second
condition mentioned above.
The Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India
seems to have approached the question from a wrong angle by
posing the following question:
The fundamental question arising for
consideration in this appeal is whether Rule
11 of the Rules framed by the Honourable
High Court of Kerala under Section 34(1) of
the Advocates Act, 1961, is binding on the
Disciplinary Committee of the State Bar
Council and if not whether the Disciplinary
Committee was justified in ordering that on
account of the disqualification under Rule
11 the appellant could not be allowed to
appear, act or plead till he gets himself
purged of the contempt by an order of the
appropriate court.
There is no question of Rule 11 being binding on the
Disciplinary Committee or any other organ of the Bar
Council. There is nothing in the said rule which would
involve the Bar Council in any manner. But there is nothing
wrong for the Bar Council informing a delinquent advocate
of the existence of a bar contained in Rule 11 and remind
him of his liability to abide by it. Hence the question
formulated by the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council
of India, as aforequoted, was unnecessary and fallacious.
In the impugned order the Disciplinary Committee
rightly stated that the exercise of the disciplinary
powers over the advocates is exclusively vested with the
Bar Council and this power cannot be taken away by the High
Court either by a judicial order or by making a rule.
This is precisely the legal position adumbrated by the
Constitution Bench of this Court in Supreme Court Bar
Association vs. Union of India and anr. {1998 (4) SCC 409}
In fact the relevant portions of the said decision have
been quoted in the impugned order in extenso. But having
informed themselves of the correct legal position regarding
the powers of the Bar Council the members of the
Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India embarked
on a very erroneous concept when it observed the following:
But to say that an advocate who had been
found guilty of contempt of court shall not
be permitted to appear, act or plead in a
court unless he has purged himself of the
contempt would amount to usurpation of
powers of Bar Council.
After examining Rule 11 of the Rules the Disciplinary
Committee of the Bar Council of India held that there
cannot be an automatic deprivation of the right of an
advocate to appear, act or plead in a court, since such a
course would be unfair and even violative of the
fundamental rights guaranteed under Articles 14, 19(1)(g)
and 21 of the Constitution of India. In the end the
Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India made an
unwarranted proposition on a misplaced apprehension as
follows:
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The independence and autonomy of the Bar
Council cannot be surrendered to the
provisions contained in Rule 11 of the Rules
made by High Court of Kerala under S.34(1)
of the Advocates Act.
By giving expression to such a proposition the Bar
Council of India has obviously overlooked the legal
position laid down by the Constitution Bench in Supreme
Court Bar Association vs. Union of India (supra). In
paragraph 57 of the decision the Bench said thus:
In a given case, an advocate found guilty
of committing contempt of court may also be
guilty of committing professional
misconduct, depending upon the gravity or
nature of his contumacious conduct, but the
two jurisdictions are separate and distinct
and exercisable by different forums by
following separate and distinct procedures.
The power to punish an advocate by
suspending his licence or by removal of his
name from the roll of the State Bar Council
for proven professional misconduct vests
exclusively in the statutory authorities
created under the Advocates Act, 1961, while
the jurisdiction to punish him for
committing contempt of court vests
exclusively in the courts.
Thereafter in paragraph 80, the Constitution Bench
said the following:
In a given case it may be possible, for
this Court or the High Court, to prevent
the contemnor advocate to appear before it
till he purges himself of the contempt but
that is much different from suspending or
revoking his licence or debarring him to
practise as an advocate. In a case of
contemptuous, contumacious, unbecoming or
blameworthy conduct of an Advocate-on-
Record, this Court possesses jurisdiction,
under the Supreme Court Rules itself, to
withdraw his privilege to practice as an
Advocate-on-Record because that privilege
is conferred by this Court and the power
to grant the privilege includes the power
to revoke or suspend it. The withdrawal
of that privilege, however, does not
amount to suspending or revoking his
licence to practice as an advocate in
other courts or tribunals.
Rule 11 of the Rules is not a provision intended for
the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of the State
or the Bar Council of India. It is a matter entirely
concerning the dignity and the orderly functioning of the
courts. The right of the advocate to practise envelopes a
lot of acts to be performed by him in discharge of his
professional duties. Apart from appearing in the courts he
can be consulted by his clients, he can give his legal
opinion whenever sought for, he can draft instruments,
pleadings, affidavits or any other documents, he can
participate in any conference involving legal discussions
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etc. Rule 11 has nothing to do with all the acts done by
an advocate during his practice except his performance
inside the court. Conduct in court is a matter concerning
the court and hence the Bar Council cannot claim that what
should happen inside the court could also be regulated by
Bar Council in exercise of its disciplinary powers. The
right to practise, no doubt, is the genus of which the
right to appear and conduct cases in the court may be a
specie. But the right to appear and conduct cases in the
court is a matter on which the court must have the major
supervisory power. Hence the court cannot be divested of
the control or supervision of the court merely because it
may involve the right of an advocate.
When the rules stipulate that a person who committed
contempt of court cannot have the unreserved right to
continue to appear and plead and conduct cases in the
courts without any qualm or remorse, the Bar Council cannot
overrule such a regulation concerning the orderly conduct
of court proceedings. Courts of law are structured in such
a design as to evoke respect and reverence to the majesty
of law and justice. The machinery for dispensation of
justice according to law is operated by the court.
Proceedings inside the courts are always expected to be
held in a dignified and orderly manner. The very sight of
an advocate, who was found guilty of contempt of court on
the previous hour, standing in the court and arguing a case
or cross-examining a witness on the same day, unaffected by
the contemptuous behaviour he hurled at the court, would
erode the dignity of the court and even corrode the majesty
of it besides impairing the confidence of the public in the
efficacy of the institution of the courts. This
necessitates vesting of power with the High Court to
formulate rules for regulating the proceedings inside the
court including the conduct of advocates during such
proceedings. That power should not be confused with the
right to practise law. While the Bar Council can exercise
control over the latter, the High Court should be in
control of the former.
In the above context it is useful to quote the
following observations made by a Division Bench of the
Allahabad High Court in Prayag Das vs. Civil Judge,
Bulandshahr and ors. (AIR 1974 Allahabad 133):
The High Court has a power to regulate the
appearance of advocates in courts. The
right to practise and the right to appear in
courts are not synonymous. An advocate may
carry on chamber practice or even practise
in courts in various other ways, e.g.
drafting and filing of pleadings and
Vakalatnama for performing those acts. For
that purpose his physical appearance in
courts may not at all be necessary. For the
purpose of regulating his appearance in
courts the High Court should be the
appropriate authority to make rules and on a
proper construction of Section 34(1) of the
Advocates Act it must be inferred that the
High Court has the power to make rules for
regulating the appearance of Advocates and
proceedings inside the courts. Obviously
the High Court is the only appropriate
authority to be entrusted with this
responsibility.
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In our view, the legal position has been correctly
delineated in the above statements made by the Allahabad
High Court. The context for making those statements was
that an advocate questioned the powers of the High Court in
making dress regulations for the advocates while appearing
in courts.
Lord Denning had observed as follows in Hadkinson vs.
Hadkinson {1952 (2) All England Law Reports 567}:
I am of the opinion that the fact that a
party to a cause has disobeyed an order of
the court is not of itself a bar to his
being heard, but if his disobedience is such
that, so long as it continues, it impedes
the course of justice in the cause, by
making it more difficult for the court to
ascertain the truth or to enforce the orders
which it may make, then the court may in its
discretion refuse to hear him until the
impediment is removed or good reason is
shown why it should not be removed.
The observations can apply to the courts in India
without any doubt and at the same time without impeding the
disciplinary powers vested in the Bar Councils under the
Advocates Act.
We have already pointed out that Rule 11 of the Rules
is a self-operating provision. When the first postulate of
it is completed (that the advocate has been found guilty of
contempt of court) his authority to act or plead in any
court stands snapped, though perhaps for the time being.
If he does such things without the express permission of
the court he would again be guilty of contempt of court
besides such act being a misconduct falling within the
purview of Section 34 of the Advocates Act. The interdict
as against him from appearing in court as a counsel would
continue until such time as he purges himself of the
contempt.
Now we have to consider the crucial question - How can
a contemnor purge himself of the contempt? According to
the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India,
purging oneself of contempt can be done by apologising to
the court. The said opinion of the Bar Council of India can
be seen from the following portion of the impugned order:
Purging oneself of contempt can be only by
regretting or apologising in the case of a
completed action of criminal contempt. If
it is a case of civil contempt, by
subsequent compliance with the orders or
directions the contempt can be purged off.
There is no procedural provision in law to
get purged of contempt by an order of an
appropriate court.
Purging is a process by which an undesirable element
is expelled either from ones own self or from a society.
It is a cleansing process. Purge is a word which acquired
implications first in theological connotations. In the case
of a sin, purging of such sin is made through the
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expression of sincere remorse coupled with doing the
penance required. In the case of a guilt, purging means to
get himself cleared of the guilt. The concept of purgatory
was evolved from the word purge, which is a state of
suffering after this life in which those souls, who depart
this life with their deadly sins, are purified and render
fit to enter into heaven where nothing defiled enters.
(vide Words and Phrases, Permanent Edn., Vol.35A, page
307). In Blacks Law Dictionary the word purge is given
the following meaning: To cleanse; to clear or exonerate
from some charge or imputation of guilt, or from a
contempt. It is preposterous to suggest that if the
convicted person undergoes punishment or if he tenders the
fine amount imposed on him the purge would be completed.
We are told that a learned single Judge of the
Allahabad High Court has expressed a view that purging
process would be completed when the contemnor undergoes the
penalty (vide Dr. Madan Gopal Gupta vs. The Agra University
and ors., AIR 1974 Allahabad 39). This is what the learned
single Judge said about it:
In my opinion a party in contempt purged
its contempt by obeying the orders of the
court or by undergoing the penalty imposed
by the court.
Obeying the orders of the court would be a mode by
which one can make the purging process in a substantial
manner when it is a civil contempt. Even for such a civil
contempt the purging process would not be treated as
completed merely by the contemnor undergoing the penalty
imposed on him unless he has obeyed the order of the court
or he has undone the wrong. If that is the position in
regard to civil contempt the position regarding criminal
contempt must be stronger. Section 2 of the Contempt of
Courts Act categorises contempt of court into two
categories. The first category is civil contempt which is
the willful disobedience of the order of the court
including breach of an undertaking given to the court. But
criminal contempt includes doing any act whatsoever which
tends to scandalise or lowers the authority of any court,
or tends to interfere with the due course of a judicial
proceeding or interferes with, or obstructs the
administration of justice in any other manner.
We cannot therefore approve the view that merely
undergoing the penalty imposed on a contemnor is sufficient
to complete the process of purging himself of the contempt,
particularly in a case where the contemnor is convicted of
criminal contempt. The danger in giving accord to the said
view of the learned single Judge in the afore-cited
decision is that if a contemnor is sentenced to a fine he
can immediately pay it and continue to commit contempt in
the same court, and then again pay the fine and persist
with his contemptuous conduct. There must be something
more to be done to get oneself purged of the contempt when
it is a case of criminal contempt.
The Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India
highlighted the absence of any mode of purging oneself of
the guilt in any of the Rules as a reason for not following
the interdict contained in Rule 11. Merely because the
Rules did not prescribe the mode of purging oneself of the
guilt it does not mean that one cannot purge the guilt at
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all. The first thing to be done in that direction when a
contemnor is found guilty of a criminal contempt is to
implant or infuse in his own mind real remorse about his
conduct which the court found to have amounted to contempt
of court. Next step is to seek pardon from the court
concerned for what he did on the ground that he really and
genuinely repented and that he has resolved not to commit
any such act in future. It is not enough that he tenders
an apology. The apology tendered should impress the court
to be genuine and sincere. If the court, on being
impressed of his genuineness, accepts the apology then it
could be said that the contemnor has purged himself of the
guilt.
This Court has held in M.Y. Shareef and anr. vs.
Honble Judges of the Nagpur High Court and ors. (AIR 1955
SC 19) that an apology is not a weapon of defence to purge
the guilty of their offence, nor is it intended to operate
as a universal panacea, but it is intended to be evidence
of real contriteness. Ahmadi, J (as the learned Chief
Justice then was) in M.B. Sanghi, Advocate vs. High Court
of Punjab and Haryana and ors. {1991(3) SCC 600}, while
considering an apology tendered by an advocate in a
contempt proceeding has stated thus:
And here is a member of the profession who
has repeated his performance presumably
because he was let off lightly on the first
occasion. Soft justice is not the answer
not that the High Court has been harsh with
him what I mean is he cannot be let off on
an apology which is far from sincere. His
apology was hollow, there was no remorse
no regret it was only a device to escape
the rigour of the law. What he said in his
affidavit was that he had not uttered the
words attributed to him by the learned
Judge; in other words the learned judge was
lying adding insult to injury and yet if
the court finds him guilty (he contested the
matter tooth and nail) his unqualified
apology may be accepted. This is no
apology, it is merely a device to escape.
A four Judge Bench of this Court in Mulk Raj vs. State
of Punjab {1972 (3) SCC 839} made the following
observations which would throw considerable light on the
question before us:
Apology is an act of contrition. Unless
apology is offered at the earliest
opportunity and in good grace apology is
aborn of penitence. If apology is offered
at a time when the contemnor finds that the
court is going to impose punishment it
ceases to be an apology and it becomes an
act of a cringing coward. The High Court
was right in not taking any notice of the
appellants expression of apology without
any further word. The High Court correctly
said that acceptance of apology in the case
would amount to allow the offender to go
away with impunity after having committed
gross contempt.
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Thus a mere statement made by a contemnor before court
that he apologises is hardly enough to amount to purging
himself of the contempt. The court must be satisfied of
the genuineness of the apology. If the court is so
satisfied and on its basis accepts the apology as genuine
the court has to make an order holding that the contemnor
has purged himself of the contempt. Till such an order is
passed by the court the delinquent advocate would continue
to be under the spell of the interdict contained in Rule 11
of the Rules.
Shri Sadrul Anam, learned counsel for the respondent-
advocate submitted first, that the respondent has in fact
apologised before this Court through the counsel engaged
by him, and second is that when this Court observed that
this course should set everything at rest it should be
treated as the acknowledgement made by this Court that the
contemnor has purged himself of the guilt.
We are unable to accept either of the said
contentions. The observation that this course should set
everything at rest in the judgment of this Court cannot be
treated as anything beyond the scope of the plea made by
the respondent in that case. That apart, this Court was
certainly disinclined to accept the apology so tendered in
this Court which is clearly manifested from the outright
repudiation of that apology when this Court said thus:
We regretfully will not be able to accept
his apology at this belated juncture, but
would rather admonish the appellant for his
conduct under our plenary powers under the
constitution, which we do hereby.
The respondent-advocate continued to appear in all the
courts where he was earlier appearing even after he was
convicted by the High Court for criminal contempt without
being objected by any court. This is obviously on account
of the fact that presiding officers of the court were not
informed of what happened. We, therefore, direct that in
future, whenever an advocate is convicted by the High Court
for contempt of court, the Registrar of that High Court
shall intimate the fact to all the courts within the
jurisdiction of that High Court so that presiding officers
of all courts would get the information that the particular
advocate is under the spell of the interdict contained in
Rule 11 of the Rules until he purges himself of the
contempt.
It is still open to the respondent-advocate to purge
himself of the contempt in the manner indicated above. But
until that process is completed respondent-advocate cannot
act or plead in any court situated within the domain of the
Kerala High Court, including the subordinate courts
thereunder. The Registrar of the High Court of Kerala
shall intimate all the courts about this interdict as
against the respondent-advocate.
This appeal is disposed of accordingly.