Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
In re HIRA LAL DIXIT AND TWO OTHERS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/10/1954
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BOSE, VIVIAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1954 AIR 743 1955 SCR 677
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1971 SC 221 (16)
RF 1992 SC 904 (37)
ACT:
S. R. DAS, VIVIAN BOSE and GHULAM HASAN JJ.]
Contempt of Court-Court hearing a case-Leaflet distributed
by a party in Court premises during hearing-Language used
Affecting the Judges-Time and place of distribution-
Hindering or obstructing due administration of justice.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner was an applicant in one of the writ
petitions which had been filed in the Supreme Court
challenging the validity of U. P. Road Transport Act, 1951.
During the hearing of the writ petitions a leaflet printed
in the Hindi language and intituled "Our Transport
Department" purporting to be written by the petitioner was
distributed in the Court premises. The leaflet contained a
graphic account of the harassment and indignity said to have
been meted out to the writer by the State officers and the
then State Minister of Transport in connection with the
cancellation and eventual restoration of his license in
respect of a passenger bus.
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The second paragraph at page 15 of that leaflet
contains a passage of which the following is the English
translation :
" The public has full and firm faith in the Supreme
Court, but sources that are in the know say that the
Government acts with, partiality in the matter of
appointment of those Hon’ble Judges as Ambassadors,
Governors, High Commissioners, etc., who give judgments
against Government but this has so far not made any
difference in the firmness and justice of the Hon’ble
Judges. "
Held, (1) that the offending passage and the time and
place of its distribution tended to hinder or obstruct the
due administration of justice and was a contempt of Court.
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(2)It was not fair comment on the proceedings but an
attempt to prejudice the Court against the State and to stir
up public feeling on the very question then pending for
decision. The manner in which the leaflets were
distributed, the language used in them and the timing of
their publication could only have had one object, namely, to
try and influence the Judges in favour of the petitioner and
the others who were in the same position as himself. This
again was clear contempt of the Supreme Court.
(3)It is not necessary that there should in fact be an
actual interference with the course of administration of
justice but it is enough if the offending publication is
likely or if it tends in any way to interfere with the
proper administration of law. Such insinuations as were
implicit in the passage in question were derogatory to the
dignity of the Court and were calculated to undermine the
confidence of the people in the integrity of the Judges.
Brahma Prakash Sharma and Others v. The State of Uttar
Pradesh ([1953] S.C.R. 1 169) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: In the matter of the Contempt of
Court proceedings relating to the printing, publishing and
circulation of a pamphlet over the name of Hira Lal Dixit
(General-Secretary, Praja Socialist Party, Mainpur) entitled
"HAMARA VAHAN VIBRAG" arising out of (Civil) Petition No.
379 of 1953. (Hira Lal Dixit v. The State of Uttar Pradesh).
The Attorney-General for India (P. A. Mehta, with him)
to assist the Court.
S.C. Issacs (R. Patnaik and S. S. Shukla, with him) for
respondent No. I (Hira Lal Dixit).
Mohan Lal Saxena and S. S. Shukla for respondent No. 2
(Kishore Dutt Paliwal).
S.S. Shukla for respondent No. 3 (Printer, Sainik Press).
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1954. October 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DAS J.-This Rule was issued by this Court on the 16th
September, 1954, calling upon the respondents to appear and
show cause why they should not be proceeded against for
contempt of this Court.
It is desirable to mention at the outset the cir-
cumstances in which it became necessary for this Court to
issue this Rule. On the 14th September, 1954, there were on
that day’s cause list for hearing and final disposal two
appeals, being ’Appeal No. 182 of 1954 (Saghir Ahmad v. The
State of Uttar Pradesh and Others) and Appeal No. 183 of
1954 (Mirza Hasan Agha v. The State of Uttar Pradesh and
Others). A large number of writ petitions, 224 in number,
under article 32 of the Constitution raising the same
questions were also on the cause list for that day. Both
the appellants and all the petitioners were engaged in
carrying on businesses as carriers of passengers and goods
by motor buses or lorries on different routes under licenses
issued by the State of Uttar Pradesh and in cases where the
route passed into or through the State of Delhi,
countersigned by that State. Some of these persons had
originally been granted permanent permits by the Regional
Transport Authority. Pursuant to the policy of
nationalisation of road transport business the State of
Uttar Pradesh made declarations under section 3 of the Uttar
Pradesh State Road Transport Act, 1950, to the effect that
road transport services on certain routes should be run and
operated by the State Government in the manner mentioned in
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the relevant declarations and it also published schemes of
road transport services under section 4 of that Act. In
furtherance of its object the State Government began to
serve notices on the licensees to stop plying buses on
specified routes. The appellant thereupon applied to the
Allahabad High Court for a writ of mandamus directing the
State Government and its Minister of Transport to withdraw
the declaration made under section 3 of the Uttar Pradesh
Road Transport Act, 1950, in respect of their respective
routes and directing them and their officers to refrain from
proceeding further under sections 4 and
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5 of that Act and not to interfere with the operation of
their respective stage carriages and for other ancillary
reliefs. By an order made on the 17th November, 1953, the
Allahabad High Court dismissed those, applications. The two
petitioners thereupon filed these two appeals in this Court
after having obtained a certificate from the Allahabad High
Court under article 132(1) of the Constitution. The
appellants obtained orders for stay of proceedings until the
determination of their appeals. In view of the decision of
the Allahabad High Court many other persons holding licenses
for plying motor stage carriages or contract carriages came
direct to this Court with applications under article 32 for
appropriate writs and obtained interim stay. As already
stated, the two appeals and all those numerous applications
were posted on the cause list for the 14th September, 1954,
for final disposal. The respondent, Hira Lal Dixit, was the
petitioner in one of those writ applications. The two
appeals were called on for hearing on that day and were
part-heard. The hearing continued for the whole of the 15th
and 16th September, 1954, and was concluded on the 17th
September, 1954, when the Court took time for considering
its decision. The Court has not ’yet delivered its
judgment. A large number of persons, presumably the
petitioners in the writ petitions or otherwise interested
therein, attended the Court on all those dates, for the
result of the decision of the appeals would also conclude
the writ petitions. It appears that on the 15th September,
1954, a leaflet printed in the Hindi language and
characters, consisting of 18 pages, intituled "Hamara Vahan
Vibhag" meaning "Our Transport Department", purporting to be
written by the respondent Hira Lal Dixit and containing a
foreword purporting to be written by Sri Krishna Dutt
Paliwal and a block photograph of the respondent, Hira Lal
Dixit, on the front page was distributed in the Court
premises. The leaflet contained a graphic account of the
harassment and indignity said to have been meted out to the
writer by the State officers and the then State Minister of
Transport in connection with the cancellation and eventual
restoration of his license
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in respect of a passenger bus. The second paragraph on page
15 of that leaflet contained a passage of which the
following is an English translation prepared by an advocate
of this Court duly authorised in that behalf" The public has
full and firm faith in the Supreme Court, but sources that
are in the know say that the Government acts with partiality
in the matter of appointment of those Hon’ble Judges as
Ambassadors, Governors, High Commissioners, etc., who give
judgments against Government but this has so far not made
any difference in the firmness and justice of the Hon’ble
Judges. "
The leaflet containing the above offending paragraph
having been brought to its notice the Court on the 16th
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September, 1954, issued the present rule and sent a copy of
the rule to the Attorney-General for India. All the
respondents have been duly served. They have filed
affidavits and have appeared before us by their respective
advocates. The respondent, Sri Krishna Dutt Paliwal, the
writer of the foreword, who was present in Court, made the
following statement to the Court through his advocate, Sri
Mohan Lal Saksena:-
" When I wrote the foreword I did not go through the
whole manuscript. I was only told that it dealt with the
working of the Transport Control. Now that my attention has
been drawn to the passage objected to I am sorry that I
wrote a foreword to the pamphlet and I offer my apology to
the Court. I never knew that the pamphlet was intended for
circulation and I was not a party to its circulation. "
One., Devendra Sharma, the General Manager of the Sainik
Press, Agra, where the offending leaflet was printed, filed
an affidavit on behalf of the respondent Press stating that
at the time when the leaflet had been given to the Press for
being printed he did not notice the paragraph in question,
that his attention was drawn to it only after the service of
the present Rule, that he was sorry that it, had been
printed in the Press and that he never had the slightest
intention of committing any contempt of this Court. In his
affidavit as well as through his advocate, Sri S. Sukla, the
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respondent Press represented by Devendra Sharma who was
present in Court tendered an unqualified apology to the
Court. In view of the statements made in Court by the
advocates of these two respondents this Court accepts their
apology and discharges the rule as against them and nothing
further need be said about them.
Learned counsel appearing for the respondent, Hira Lal
Dixit, strongly urged that the passage complained of could
not possibly be capable of any derogatory meaning or
implication and could not be regarded as constituting a
contempt of Court. There are innumerable ways by which
attempts can be made to hinder or obstruct the due course of
administration of justice in Courts. One type of such
interference is to be found in cases where there is an act
or publication which scandalises the Court itself. A
situation of that type was considered by this Court in the
case of Brahma Prakash Sharma and Others v. The State of
Uttar Pradesh(1), and the principles governing a case of
that type were discussed-and laid down in the judgment of
the Court. The present case does not fall within that
category, for here there has been no scandalising of the
Court itself. The question here is whether the offending
passage is of such character and import or made in such
circumstances as would tend to hinder or obstruct or
interfere with the due course of administration of justice
by the Court. To begin with, the leaflet was written by a
person who was himself the petitioner in one of the writ
petitions which were on the cause list for hearing. The
actual timing of the publication of the leaflet is
significant. It was circulated at a time when the appeal
and the writ petitions including that of the respondent,
Hira Lal Dixit, himself were posted on the cause list and
the appeals, on the decision of which depended the fate of
those numerous petitions, were being actually heard. The
place of publication was also not without significance. It
was distributed in the Court premises where a very large
number of licensees had fore gathered. The fact of
distribution of the leaflet in the Court premises was denied
in the affidavit of this respondent but when a
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(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1169.
683
suggestion was made that evidence be recorded on this point
the learned counsel appearing for him did not press for it
and accepted the position that the leaflet was in fact
distributed in the Court premises. In the circumstances,
the only other question that remains is as to what was the
meaning and purpose of the offending passage in the leaflet.
Learned counsel for the respondent, Hira Lal Dixit,
maintained that the passage in question was perfectly
innocuous and only expressed a laudatory sentiment towards
the Court and that such flattery could not possibly have the
slightest effect on the minds of the Judges of this august
tribunal. We do not think flattery was the sole or even the
main object with which this passage was written or with
which it was published at the time when the hearing of the
appeals was in progress. It no doubt begins with a
declaration of public faith in this Court but this is
immediately followed by other words connected with the
earlier words by the significant conjunction "but." The
words that follow are to the effect that sources that are in
the know say that the Government acts with partiality in the
matter of appointment of those Judges as Ambassadors,
Governors, High Commissioners, etc., who give judgments
against the Government. The plain meaning of these words is
that the Judges who decide against the Government do not get
these high appointments. The necessary implication of these
words is that the Judges who decide in favour of the
Government are rewarded by the Government with these
appointments. The attitude of the Government is thus
depicted surely with a purpose and that purpose cannot but
be to raise in the minds of the reader a feeling that the
Government, by holding out high hopes of future employment,
encourages the Judges to give decisions in its favour. This
insinuation is made manifest by the words that follow,
namely, "this has so far not made any difference in the
firmness and justice of the Hon’ble Judges." The linking up
of these words with the preceding words by the conjunction
"but" brings into relief the real significance and true
meaning of the earlier words. The passage read as a
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whole clearly amounts to this: "Government disfavours Judges
who give decisions against it but favours those Judges with
high appointments who decide in its favour: that although
this is calculated to tempt Judges to give judgments in
favour of the Government it has so far not made any
difference in the firmness and justice of the Judges." The
words "so far" are significant. What, we ask, was the
purpose of writing this passage and what was the object of
the distribution of the leaflet in the Court premises at a
time when the Court was in the midst of hearing the appeals
? Surely, there was hidden in the offending passage a
warning that although the Judges have "so far" remained firm
and resisted the temptation of deciding cases in favour of
Government in expectation of getting high appointments,
nevertheless, if they decide in favour of the Government on
this occasion knowledgeable people will know that they had
succumbed to the temptation and had given judgment in favour
of the Government in expectation of future reward in the
shape of high appointments of the kind mentioned in the
passage. The object of writing this paragraph and
particularly of publishing it at the time it was actually
done was quite clearly to affect the minds of the Judges and
to deflect them from the strict performance of their duties.
The offending passage and the time and place of its
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publication certainly tended to hinder or obstruct the due
administration of justice and is a contempt of Court.
These is another aspect of the matter. Even if the
passage about the Judges were not in the leaflet the rest
would still amount to a serious contempt of Court. There is
in’ it a strong denunciation of the State of Uttar Pradesh,
a party to the appeal and the petitions’ regarding the very
matters then under the consideration of this Court. It was
not fair comment on the proceedings but an attempt to
prejudice the Court against the State and to stir up public
feeling on the very question then pending for decision. The
manner in which the leaflets were distributed, the language
used in them and the timing of their publication could only
have had one object, namely, to try and influence
685
the Judges in favour of the petitioner and the others who
were in the same position as himself. This again is a clear
contempt of this Court.
It is well established, as was said by this Court in
Brahma Prakash Sharma and Others v. The State of Uttar
Pradesh (supra), that it is not necessary that there should
in fact be an actual interference with the course of
administration of justice but that it is enough if the
offending publication is likely or if it tends in any way to
interfere with the proper administration of law. Such
insinuations as are implicit in the passage in question are
derogatory to the dignity of the Court and are calculated to
undermine the confidence of the people in the integrity of
the Judges. Whether the passage is read as fulsome flattery
of the Judges of this Court or is read as containing the
insinuations mentioned above or the rest of the leaflet
which contains an attack on a party to the pending proceed-
ings is taken separately it is equally contemptuous of the
Court in that the object of writing it and the time and
place of its publication were, or were calculated, to
deflect the Court from performing its strict duty, either by
flattery or by a veiled threat or warning or by creating
prejudice in its mind against the State. We are, therefore,
clearly of opinion and we hold that the respondent, Hira Lal
Dixit, by writing the leaflet and in particular the passage
in question and by publishing it at the time and place he
did has committed a gross contempt of this Court and the
qualified apology contained in his affidavit and repeated by
him through his counsel cannot be taken as sufficient amends
for his misconduct.
It should no doubt be constantly borne in mind that the
summary jurisdiction exercised by superior Courts in
punishing contempt of their authority exists for the purpose
of preventing interference with the course of justice and
for maintaining the authority of law as is administered in
the Court and thereby affording protection to public,
interest in the purity of the administration of justice.
This is certainly an extraordinary power which must be
sparingly exercised but where the public interest demands
it, the Court will
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not shrink from exercising it and imposing punishment even
by way of imprisonment, in cases where a mere fine may not
be adequate.
After anxious consideration we have come to the
conclusion that in all the circumstances of this case it is
a fit case where the power of the Court should be exercised
and that it is necessary to impose the punishment of
imprisonment. People must know that they cannot with
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impunity hinder or obstruct or attempt to hinder or obstruct
the due course of administration of justice. We, therefore,
find respondent, Hira Lal Dixit, guilty of contempt of
Court, make the Rule absolute as against him and direct that
he be arrested and committed to civil prison to undergo
simple imprisonment for a fortnight. He must also pay the
costs, if any, incurred by the Union of India.
Order accordingly.