Revised Project of LRM
Revised Project of LRM
CONTEMPT OF COURT
BBA LLB
1
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I express my warm thanks to Mr. vijayant sinha for his support and guidance at chanakya law
university University.
I would also like to thank all the concerned authorities and all the people who provided me with
the facilities being required and conductive conditions for my project.
Thank you,
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CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION
2. HISTORY AND BACKGROUND TO THE CONTEMPT OF
COURT
3. CONTEMPT UNDER COMMON LAW POSITION IN UK
4. CONTEMPT OF COURT AND THE INDIAN JUDICIARY
5. CIVIL AND CRIMINAL CONTEMPT
6. CONTEMPT OF COURT AND FREEDOM OF SPEECH
CONSTITUTIONAL ASPECT
7. CONTEMPT BY LAWYERS AND CONTEMPT AGAINST
JUDGES
8. WHAT OUGHT TO BE CONTEMPT OF COURT
9. BIBLIOGRAPHY
1.
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INTRODUCTION
Said the book worm to the silverfish
Contempt of court is an offence, which by the common law of England was punishable by the
High Court, in a summary manner, by fine or imprisonment or both. The power to punish for
contempt of court was applied originally in England to contempt committed in the presence of
the court. In 1747, Thomas Martin, Mayor of Great Yamouth, sent a banknote fundamental rights
Pound 20 to lord Hardwicke, Lord Chancellor, with a letter referring to a proposed chancery
proceeding. The Lord Chancellor ordered Martin to show cause why he should not be committed
for contempt. He sought pardon and the Lord Chancellor in consideration of this, his public
office, the payment of costs, and his willingness to the suggestion that the bank note be sent to
the warden of the Fleet Street prison for debtors for their relief, did not take any action.
In 1631, when a prisoner threw a brickbat at the Judge and narrowly missed him, the prisoner’s
right hand was ordered to be cut off and hung on the gallows. In 1938, when the disgruntled
litigant threw tomatoes at the Court of Appeal, consisting of Clauson and Goddard JJ. He was
immediately committed to prison, but released after a few days of incarceration, because, he did
not score a direct hit and secondly Christmas was soon approaching. There are several instances
of contempt in the face of the Court in English Tradition and they would not end even if we write
a book on it. The development of contempt law in England did contribute great principles to the
law of contempt, which are presently followed by several common law jurisdictions.
The Indian Courts as guided by Common Law principles ought to have followed similar
principles as laid down by the common law courts. The law of contempt is well developed under
the English precedent system. With regard to other laws the Indian Courts have blindly followed
them but the law of contempt has been exercised in an arbitrary and uncontrolled manner, as
1
https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1396751/
4
there was no limit to the period of imprisonment that may be inflicted, or the fine that may be
imposed. Article 129 of the Constitution provides that the Supreme Court shall be a court of
record with all the powers of such a court; including the power to punish for contempt of itself.
Similarly, Article 215 provides that every High Court shall be a Court of Record with all the
powers of such a Court including the2 power to punish for contempt of itself. Under Article 129
the Supreme Court has power to deal with contempt committed vis-à-vis the High Courts.Under
Entry 77 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution, Parliament has the power to make
laws relating to the jurisdictions and powers of the Supreme Court, including contempt of such
court. Under Entry 14 List III, Parliament and a State Legislature have power to make laws
relating to contempt of court, but not contempt of the Supreme Court. Sarthi in his book outline
three basic principles of contempt jurisdiction:
1. The power to punish for contempt of court is under Articles 129 and 215 of the
Constitution and not solely under the Contempt of Courts Act. The real jurisdiction to try
contempt is conferred upon the courts by the Constitution, the basic document of all the
laws.
2. But there should be wise economy in the use of this power, as in the case of any other
power. Judges should never use this jurisdiction as a means to uphold their dignity, which
must rest on better and stronger foundations. It should never be used to suppress those
who speak against them, because, good judges do not fear criticism nor do they resent it.
The freedom of speech is a very important right and it is only when it is abused to the
extent of interfering with the administration of justice that the contempt jurisdiction
should be invoked.
3. The dichotomy between the personal protection of a libeled Judge and prevention of
obstruction of public Justice should be clearly kept in mind. It is only when the court
considers the attack on the Judge or Judges scurrilous, offensive, intimidating or
malicious beyond condonable limits, that 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.
The issue in question has been if the statement made by the contemnor is the truth, then can it
still be considered contempt. It is submitted that in all cases the so-called contemnor should be
allowed to prove the truth of his statement. If he is able to show some prima facie justification,
the Judge should be left to his personal remedy of invoking the criminal law of defamation. But
if the contemnor fails to show any justification, he must be severely punished.
In light of these powers and principles laid down under our Constitution and common law, the
authors attempt to analyse the law on contempt of court in India. The position of this principle
seems to be arbitrary as far as the recent debates in media portrayed it to be. This is an important
tool in the hands of the court and sometimes they need to be used as a sword and sometimes as a
shield to protect itself.
2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contempt_of_court
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Aim
The aim of this paper is to find out the concept of contempt of court. This paper seeks to identify
the development of contempt under different jurisdictions
Scope
The project limits itself in understanding the concept of contempt of court. This paper traces the
historical jurisprudence of the concept and the latest developments and the contempt as
understood under both UK systems and US.
Research Questions
Research Methodology
The approach has been primarily descriptive and analytical.
Hypothesis
The law of contempt, which developed under the common law system, has been clearly defined
by the English courts. Even though the Indian courts have deliberated a number of times on
contempt law, they have given different interpretations and still the law of contempt is
ambiguous under the Indian system.
Mode of citation
A uniform mode of citation has been adopted throughout the project. It is as follows:
Name of author, Title of book, Place of Publication, Name of the Publishers, Year of Publication,
page number.
Name of the Author, “Name of the Article”, Name of the Journal, Volume, Year, Page Number.
Sources
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Both primary and secondary sources are used for the project.
Chapter-I
HISTORY AND BACKGROUND TO THE
CONTEMPT OF COURTS ACT
“Our Judges are so honest as other men,
It is a great question to every judicial system as to what “ contempt of court” is. James Francis
Oswald defines contempt of court3 as “ to speak generally contempt of court may be said to be
constituted of the law into disrespect or disregard, or to interfere with or prejudice parties litigant
or their witness during the litigation”. Lord Hadwick in 1742 made a three-fold classification of
contempt:
The law of contempt is as old as the concept of justice and judicial system. From the times of
Romans, this concept was used by the judicial officers of the state to preserve the dignity of the
justice system as a whole. But during those days these concepts were used liberally by the
sovereign. Oswald in his book provides an illustration. T. of F went armed in the palace, which
was shown to the council of the King, by which he was taken and disarmed before Chief Justice
Shard, and committed to the prison of the Marshalsea and could not be bailed till the king sent
his will. With the change in time, the concepts of contempt also evolved. As the art of
governance began to grow, the King yielded his powers to the three organs of the government,
the Executive, the Parliament/ Legislature and the Judiciary. The judges were deemed to have
acted in the name of the king. It was Kings justice and as such demanded all respect and
obedience. Any disrespect to the seat of justice was affront to the dignity and majesty of law. It is
apt to quote what Justice Wilmot states in Rex v. Wilmot: “ And whenever men’s allegiance to
the law is so fundamentally shaken, it is the most fatal and most dangerous obstruction of justice
and in my opinion calls for rapid and immediate action than any other obstruction whatsoever
not for the sake of the judges as private individuals but as they are the channels by which the
Kings justice is conveyed to people.”
3
http://www.mcrhrdi.gov.in/88fc/Week-12/Contempt%20of%20Courts%20in%20India.pdf
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Thus the provision of contempt of court was first put forward and given a firm footing by the
English judges. Later the process of contempt of court was introduced into India by the British
following the establishment of the courts of record in the 19 th Century. This was put on a firm
basis in India by Contempt of Courts Act, 1926. The need for contempt of Courts Act, 1926 was
felt on account of the difference of opinion between the madras and Bombay High Courts on the
one hand and Calcutta High Court on the other regarding the protection of subordinate courts.
The attempt at a comprehensive legislation relating to contempt of courts in India was the
contempt of Courts Act, 1926. The Act did not contain any provision with regard to contempt of
courts subordinate to courts other than High Courts, that is, the courts subordinate to Chief courts
and judicial commissioners. The Act also did not deal with the extra territorial jurisdiction of
High courts in matters of contempt.
The Act of 1926 was a short Act containing only three sections. The preamble mentions that it
was an act to define and limit the powers of certain courts in punishing for contempt of courts
and since doubts arose as to the powers of the High Court of Judicature to punish for contempt, it
was considered4 expedient to resolve these doubts and limits the powers of the High Court in
punishing for contempt of courts. Section 3 of the Act laid down that a contemnor may be
punished for simple imprisonment for a term which may extend to 6 months or fine which may
extend to 2000 Rupees or with both. The Contempt of Courts Act, 1926 was not found adequate
and as such the Contempt of Courts Act, 1952 was enacted. From the statement of objects and
reasons which led to the enactments of the contempt of Courts Act, 1952, it is obvious that this
law was made as there was no specific provision of law which enabled a High Court to exercise
this power in respect of Contempt Committed beyond its territorial jurisdiction.
The provisions for punishment contained in the Contempt of Courts Act, 1926 and the Act of
1952 though valid and constitutional fell short of the expectations of the people and interfered
with their fundamental rights of freedom of speech and expression. It was felt that the Act of
1952 did not contain sufficient safeguards for the freedom of press particularly. Thus a
committee was set up under the then Additional Solicitor General of India, Sri H. N. Sanyal. The
Sanyal Committee submitted a very detailed and comprehensive report suggesting drastic
changes in the contempt law. The draft bill was referred to a select committee and the Bill was
finally introduced In the Rajya Sabha on 19 th February 1968 and the Contempt of Courts Act,
1952 was replaced by the 1971 Act.
It is generally felt that the existing law relating to contempt of courts is somewhat uncertain,
undefined and unsatisfactory. The jurisdiction to punish for contempt touches upon two
important fundamental rights of citizen, namely, the right to personal liberty and the right to
freedom of expression. It was therefore, considered advisable to have the entire law on the
subject scrutinized by a special committee. The Sanyal Committee was set up to look into this
aspect, which made recommendations and most of it were accepted by the Government.
Contempt proceedings do not partake the character of a traditional lis. In the legalistic sense a
contempt proceeding is not a dispute between two parties but is primarily between the court and
the person who alleged to have committed the contempt of court.
4
http://www.vakilno1.com/bareacts/contemptact/contemptact.html
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The individual who brings to the notice of the court that contempt has been committed is not a
prosecutor but merely an assistant of the court or friend of the court. In Supreme Court Bar
Association v. Union of India a Constitution Bench described the special jurisdiction to punish
for contempt as an unusual type combining the Jury, the Judge and the Hangman and explained
this apparent anomaly on the ground that the Court was not adjudication upon any claim between
litigating parties. The power to commit for contempt is a punitive power. This is to honor the
dignity and integrity of the court and the orders passed by them.
“In the law of contempt, difficulty and vagueness start at the definition stage itself. Contempt in
its root sense signifies disrespect to that which is entitled to respect or regard and the expression
contempt of court has been a recognized phrase in English law from the 12 thcentury. If
administration of justice has to be effective, respect for its administration has to be fostered and
maintained and it is out of rules framed by courts in this behalf that the law of contempt has
grown. From rudimentary5 rules devised for the limited purpose of securing obedience to the
orders of courts, there evolved in the course of time elaborate and far reaching doctrines and
extraordinary procedures. Right till the present century, these doctrines and procedures were
never subjected to legislative scrutiny with the result that the law of contempt had, as it were, a
wild growth. Each new precedent was not declaratory but creative of the law. Each new type of
attack on the administration of justice received a corresponding elaboration or extension of the
contempt law. As Craries has said the ingenuity of the Judges and some of those who are
concerned to defeat or defy justice has rendered contempt almost protean in this character. And
even now, it may well be said the categories of contempt are not closed. The result is that there
are contempt, contempt’s ranging from mere disobedience to orders of the court and involving
only a wrong of a private nature as between the parties to a suit at one end and contempt
involving physical violence or large scale blackmail or mudslinging by means of publication on
the judge at the other end. In view of the haphazard development inherent in the process of
development of law by judicial precedent, it is not possible to attempt neat and clear cut
classifications of various branches of the law of contempt and, in view of the possibility of new
types of contempt arising in future, it is not possible to demarcate the area of operation of the law
of contempt arising in future, it is not possible to demarcate the area of operation of the law of
contempt. It is for these reasons that judges and jurists have not succeeded in formulating a
comprehensive and complete definition of the concept of contempt of courts. The Shawcross
Committee observed: Not the least of the difficulties in this field (definition) is that contempt,
being growth of the common law, has no authoritative definition or limitation…It can be defined
in the most general terms. In the words of one of our own judges, “It is indeed difficult and
almost impossible to frame a comprehensive and complete definition of contempt of court. The
law of contempt covers the whole field of litigation itself. The real end of a judicial proceeding,
civil or criminal, is to ascertain the true facts and dispense justice…Anything that tends to curtail
5
http://www.lectlaw.com/def/c118.htm
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or impair the freedom of the limbs of the judicial proceeding must sof necessity result in
hampering the due administration of law and in interfering with the course of justice.”
The reasons given by the Sanyal committee does not require any clarification or explanation to
the problem of defining the concept of contempt of court. It is the discretion that is left to the
judge to decide whether the contemnor has passed the tests laid down by prior decision or has in
any manner affected the dignity or integrity of the court. If we provide with a concrete definition
that would limit the scope of contempt, hence it should be left to the courts to decide whether
any contempt has been done. But the fear that crops up with this vagueness is the danger of
misusing this power by the court and the judges. The discretion of defining contempt is given to
the judges with an assumption that they are honest and would always be fair and just.
Chapter-II
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Contempt under Common Law- Position In United
Kingdom
Lord Justice Otton gave an overview of the concept of contempt of court. In England, contempt
has inhered in the judicial power to run the courts and to prevent interference with justice “since
time immemorial”. Contempt protects the dignity of the Court, not the individual judge.
English contemnors are not entitled to a trial by jury. Parliament enacted the Contempt of Court
Act of 1981, which for the first time imposed a two-year maximum jail sentence for civil and
criminal contempt as well as maximum fines. The court can use all its contempt powers but still
suspend sentence if the contemnor promises not to repeat the contumacious act and apologizes.
Lord Justice Otton described a fine of £40,000 against The Evening Standard newspaper, which
had been sustained by the Court of Appeal a week earlier for publishing the criminal records of
defendants on trial for explosives offenses with IRA links. England imposes limits with respect
to reports of proceedings and publication of material likely to interfere with the administration of
justice. The result in The Evening Standard case was very prejudicial, including a halt to the
criminal trial. He also noted a reluctance to use the contempt power for fear of creating a cause
that spurs public sympathy as, for example, in various English coal strike orders.
6
http://study.com/academy/lesson/what-is-contempt-of-court-definition-punishment.html
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The main aim of contempt of court rules is to prevent potential jurors from being prejudiced for
or against a defendant because of what has been published in the media before or during a trial.
A jury is supposed to reach 7their decision only on the evidence produced in court. The jury must
also presume that the accused is not only innocent but also that he has no previous convictions.
One of the tests to determine contempt is whether the story creates a substantial risk that
the course of justice will be seriously impeded or prejudiced.
The important words are ‘substantial’ and ‘serious’. These are the tests by which the court
decides whether the story would create a substantial risk of serious prejudice the mind of
anyone who read it and who was then was selected to serve on the jury hearing the case.
Time: The longer the time between the story being published and the jury retiring to reach its
verdict the less chance there is of the story being in contempt. News desks should know the
average time it takes in their Crown Court area for a case to go from arrest to trial. If the story is
published, say, on the night before the trial opens then the risk of contempt is higher than if it
were published months previously.
Proximity: The court will weigh up the chances of a juror having actually read the offending
story. If the story is published in the Northern Echo in Darlington and the trial is held in
Cornwall then there is plainly little chance of a substantial risk of serious prejudice because a
potential juror could never be expected to have read it.
Initial Impact: Presuming, though, that the story is likely to have been read by a potential juror
then the court will try to assess the impact the story would have had on him.
It does so by determining how novel was the way it was presented. A screaming Page One lead
in the local paper would plainly have more impact than a down page three-par story on page 18
of a national. Then the court would try to evaluate the:
Residual Impact: The theory is that if a juror listens in court to all the evidence, and hears all the
witnesses cross-examined, and then is guided by the trial judge on what is, and is not, important
then any initial prejudicial impact the story might have had will fade away as the juror
concentrates on the actual evidence.
The trend is towards liberalization 8when it comes to applying the Contempt of Court Act 1981.
Judges seem to have accepted that most pre-trial coverage, while maybe prejudicial, falls short of
creating a substantial risk of being seriously prejudicial. National tabloids have used lurid
7
http://www.hrdiap.gov.in/87fc/study_meterial/law/L-21%20Md.Shafiquz%20Zaman.pdf
8
https://indialawyers.wordpress.com/category/contempt-of-court/
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accounts of Geoff Knights beating up a taxi driver and have been cleared of contempt.
But each case is different. By using the above tests an editor can at least make his own
assessment of whether the particular story creates a substantial risk of serious prejudice.
There is a particular danger in revealing that the defendant has a previous conviction. A jury
(which must presume that a defendant has an unblemished past) would find that hard to forget.
The Contempt of Court Act 1981 ceases to be active when: The arrested person is released
without being charged – except when released on police bail. No arrest is made within 12 months
of the issue of the warrant the case is discontinued the defendant is acquitted or sentenced the
defendant is found unfit to be tried, or unfit to plead or the court orders the charge to lie on the
file.
Newspapers are safe when they use police appeals for help in tracing a wanted man for whom a
warrant has been issued even though the ‘Danger Man’ or ‘ Find this Monster’ type of headline
would plainly create a substantial risk of serious prejudice especially as most such stories reveal
his past convictions. This is classic contempt of court territory but the Attorney General has
promised not to prosecute because the public safety outweighs the fugitives right to a fair trial.
As soon as ‘Danger Man’ is arrested, however, the immunity ceases.
Section 3 of the Contempt of Court Act gives an editor a defence if, at the time of publication,
having taken all reasonable care, he did not know and had no reason to suspect that proceedings
in the particular case were active.
Section 5 of the Contempt of Court Act gives protection to stories, which are a discussion of
public affairs as long as the risk of prejudice to a particular case is merely incidental to the wider
discussion.
Civil proceedings: The Act states that civil proceedings become active as far as contempt risk is
involved when the case is set down for trial (put on the waiting list) or when an actual date is
fixed for the case to be heard.
Pictures: A picture can be in contempt in the same way as a story if , for instance, the case
hinged on witnesses identifying the man in court or at an identity parade. And if you used a
picture of the defendant handcuffed and guarded by armed police it might also prejudice a juror.
The risk of contempt under the 1981 Act only starts when the Initial Step is taken – a person is
arrested, charged, or has a warrant or summons issued against him. Common Law contempt
covers the time before that initial step is taken but when a trial could plainly be seen to be
imminent or pending. If a known criminal, for instance, takes a group of people hostage and a
newspaper identifies him and his previous convictions before he is arrested or charged or a
warrant is issued then there is plainly going to be a risk of contempt to proceedings which will
almost certainly take place.
If the newspaper is prosecuted under Common Law contempt the prosecution has to prove that
the editor intended to create prejudice. The court can infer intent by taking account of all of the
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circumstances leading to publication. Common Law contempt can also be used against articles
prejudicial to the course of justice generally, as distinct from the particular case governed by the
81 Act.
The American Jurisprudence defines contempt of court in Vol 17. It can be classified as follows:
In the United States of America freedom of speech was originally protected by the doctrine clear
and present danger propounded in Schenk v. United States In that case the Supreme Court of
USA passed observations upon the military censorship provisions of the Espionage Act of 1917,
which imposed certain limitations upon press and speech. Rejecting the contention Justice
Holmes wrote an opinion unanimously concurred by the court, upholding the Constitutionality of
the Espionage Act. The right of speech he said “ had never been an absolute one at any time, in
peace or in war. Free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre, and
causing a panic. When a nation is at war he added many things that might be said in time of
peace are such a hindrance to its effort that their utterance will not be endured so long as men
fight and no court could regard them as protected by any Constitutional Right.”
According to this view freedom of speech could be abridged only if the Government could show
that there was a clear and present danger to the state arising from the abuses of that freedom.
This doctrine, however, was jettisoned in Dennis v. United States. In that case the validity of the
Alien Registration Act, 1940 was in question. Vinson C.J. observed as follows “ In this case we
are squarely presented with the application of the clear and present danger test and must decide
what the phrase imports.” The test of clear and present danger was discarded and the test of clear
and probable danger has been substituted. The time factor has been thus eliminated from the test.
Judged by the new test it was held that the impugned statute was constitutional, though it
penalized even conspiring to advocate the future overthrow of the state and no imminent danger
is to be apprehended thereby. The arm of the law has been lengthened thereby. No doubt
Douglas J., in his dissenting opinion bewails that free speech, the glory of our system of
government, had been eclipsed by the majority ruling in Dennis case.
9
https://www.justice.gov/usam/usam-9-39000-contempt-court
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In Yates v. United States while appearing to adhere to the modification of the clear and present
danger test, the Supreme Court has in a measure really overruled the Dennis Case. In Yates case
the Supreme Court set aside the conviction of fourteen communists who had been convicted
under Smith Act. It was held that the10 advocacy of the overthrow of the Government as an
abstract principle did not constitute an offence under the Smith Act. It is only when action to that
end, though it may not be immediate action, has been advocated, that the offence would be
committed. The decision in Yates case restored to some extent the protection to freedom of
speech which had been withdrawn in Dennis case. But his test is not applicable in India as this
principle was rejected by Justice Madhokar in 1961.
Under the US law of contempt, the courts have recognized both direct and indirect contempt.
Contempt is indirect when it occurs out of the presence of the court, thereby requiring the court
to rely on the testimony of third parties for proof of the offense. It is direct when it occurs under
the court’s own eye and within its own hearing. See Matter of Heathcock, 696 F.2d 1362, 1365
(11th Cir. 1983); United States v. Peterson, 456 F.2d 1135, 1139 (10th Cir. 1972). The
requirement that direct contempt be committed in the presence of the court does not limit direct
contempts to those which take place in the courtroom, but some degree of formality usually
found in the courtroom setting must accompany an exercise of the judicial function for the
proceedings to be in the actual presence of the court. Matter of Jaffree, 741 F.2d 133 (7th Cir.
1984). Direct contempt for conduct in the court’s presence may be punished
summarily. McGuire v. Sigma Coatings, Inc., 48 F.3d 902 (5th Cir. 1995).
The law of contempt cannot have a broad general principle applicable to the concept of
contempt in totality. The courts have made a distinction between civil and criminal
contempt. Because different substantive and procedural rules apply to civil and criminal
contempt, distinctions between the two forms of contempt are important. “Criminal
contempt is a crime in the ordinary sense,” Bloom v. Illinois,], and “criminal penalties may
not be imposed on someone who has not been afforded the protections that the Constitution
requires of such criminal proceedings.” Hicks v. Feiock. These constitutional protections
include the right (1) not to be subject to double jeopardy, see United States v. Dixon]; In re
Bradley,; (2) to receive notice of the charges, (3) to receive assistance of counsel; (4) to
receive summary process; (5) to present a defense, Cooke v. United State (6) not to self-
incriminate oneself, and (7) to proof beyond a reasonable doubt, Gompers v. Bucks Stove &
Range Co.26]. For serious criminal contempt involving imprisonment of more than six
months, these protections include the right to a jury trial.
By contrast, civil contempt sanctions–which are designed to compel future compliance with a
court order–are coercive and avoidable through obedience, and “thus may be imposed in an
ordinary civil proceeding upon notice and an opportunity to be heard. Neither a jury trial nor
proof beyond a reasonable doubt is required.” International Union, UMWA v. Bagwell27].
10
http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5757&context=fss_papers
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Chapter-III
CONTEMPT OF COURT AND THE INDIAN JUDICIARY
The Media and the Judiciary share a need that neither can live without: you must have
journalistic independence and judges must have judicial independence. He further elaborated “
Hitler’s Germany is still fresh in memory, so we can recall two of his major steps to consolidate
his power when he became the Chancellor. One was to destroy the free press; the other was to
control the courts and eliminate an independent judiciary. Knew and we know that no dictation
can survive with an independent press and independent judiciary.28]
The power of the Supreme Court of India in dealing with the day-to-day affairs of the citizens
has increased many a fold during the past few decades. Looking at the pages of Law Reports
prior to lifting of emergency will reveal11 the irrelevance of the courts to a large part of the
Indian population. It is after the lifting of emergency from the 1980’s that the Supreme Court
fully realized its potential. The failure of the Legislature and the Bureaucracy to live up to the
expectations in the eyes of the people put the Judiciary in a higher pedestal. It was seen as the
last resort for justice to the otherwise “justice starved” citizens of India. The Supreme Court of
India as well as other courts arose to the occasion in helping the poor and down trodden section
of the society.
But it was precisely this magnanimous view taken up by the Supreme Court to look into almost
all the aspects of the other two wings that gave rise to criticisms. The criticisms were from the
public, from the press and the media. The view of the Supreme Court towards these criticisms
were not always static. It kept on changing from the stating that the judiciary’s shoulders are
broad and going to the other extreme by punishing an individual who had made a contempt of
court. It is precisely those exercise of the contempt powers of the Supreme Court and the Indian
Judiciary in general over the past few decades, that will be dealt with in these chapters. There is
no better way to look at these exercise of power but to examine the judgments passed by the
Supreme Court and the High Courts regarding this matter.
One of the first and interesting cases regarding law of contempt arose in 1954.29] In this case the
members of the Executive Committee of the District Bar Association at Muzaffarnagar within
the state of U.P made certain allegations against a judicial officer Mr. Kanhaya Lal Mehra and a
Revenue Officer Mr. Latta Prasad. A resolution was passed in the meeting of the Bar
Associations that complaints should be filed to the superior authorities against the misconduct of
these judges. The allegations were in all”
1. The judicial officer does not record evidence in cases tried before him properly, that in all
the Criminal matters that are transferred to the court, where the accused are already in
bail, he does not give them time to furnish fresh sureties with the result he is sent to jail.
He is not accommodating to lawyer as whole
2. The revenue officer follows the highly illegal procedure of leaving 2 cases at a time,
wherein he records the evidence of one case and ask the court clerk to do so with the
11
http://education.dewsoftoverseas.com/vakilno4/contemptact/S12.html
15
other. Also he is highly temperamental and constantly threatens the lawyers with
contempt of court.
3. It is now our considered opinion that the two officers are thoroughly incompetent in law,
do not inspire confidence in their judicial work. They state wrong facts when passing
judgments and are overbearing and discourteous to the litigant public and the lawyers
alike.
The High Court found the lawyers12 to be prima facie in contempt of court and fined them Rs.
300/-. The Supreme Court considered all the relevant facts including the fact that the meeting
was held in closed quarters. Only members were present, the resolutions were typed by the
president of the Bar itself and even the minutes book didn’t have the record. After considering all
the relevant facts and circumstances the Supreme Court speaking through Justice Mukherjee
held:
“We are unable to agree with the learned counsel for the respondents that whether or not the
representation made by the appellants in the present case is calculated to produce these results. It
is to be kept in mind, 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 libel
on the judge and what amounts to contempt of court. The fact that a statement is defamatory so
far as the judge is concerned does not really make it a contempt.”
More over the judge said that the object of representations made by the appellant in the present
case were not for the purpose of exposing the public alleged short comings of the officers
concerned, the whole object was to have the grievance of the lawyers and the litigating public
really felt. The Supreme Court reversed the decision and allowed the appeal.
One of the excellent examples for the so-called “hyper sensitivity” of the Supreme Court is the
case of E.M.S. Namboodri v. T.N. Nambiar.30] The case arose out of a press conference that the
then Chief Minister E.M.S Namboodripad held.3 During the press conference he made certain
remarks:
“ Marx and Engel considered the judiciary as an instrument of oppression…Judges are guided
and dominated by class hatred, class interests and class prejudices and where the evidence is
balanced between a well dressed, pot bellied rich man and a poor, ill-dressed and illiterate
person, the judge instinctively favors the former…..Judiciary is part of the class rule of the ruling
class. And there are limits to the sanctity of the judiciary. The judiciary is weighed against
workers, peasants and other sections of the working class and the law and the system of judiciary
essentially serve the exploiting classes.”
Namboodripad was convicted by the Kerala High Court for contempt of court and sentenced to a
fine of Rs 1000/-. This was a majority decision made by Justice Raman Nair, Justice
Krishnamoorthy Iyer and with Justice Mathew dissenting. Namboodripad appealed to the
Supreme Court pleading:
12
http://education.dewsoftoverseas.com/vakilno4/contemptact/S12.html
16
1. His observations did no more than give expressions to the Marxist philosophy and what
was contained in the programme of his party.
2. They contained a fair criticism of the judicial administration.
3. They did not contain criticism of any particular judge or his judgment or conduct.
4. The law of contempt ought to be interpreted so as to cause no encroachment upon the
freedom of speech guaranteed by Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution of India.
The judges Hidayatullah CJ, G. K. Mitter and A. N. Ray after looking deeply into the teachings
of Lenin and Marx came to the conclusion that no where in their writings have they shown any
direct attack on the judiciary. The court arrived at the conclusion that in all their writings there is
no mention of judges, which the appellant had made. The court further states that “ either he does
not know or has deliberately distorted the writings of Marx. The Supreme Court hence convicted
Namboodripad for contempt of court but reduced the fine from Rs 1000/- to Rs. 50/-.
Another case which relates to Freedom of Press and contempt of court, and also which gave rise
to vehement criticism from both inside and outside legal circles is P. N Duda v. P. Shivshanker.3
The case arose out of a complaint filed by P.N Duda against P. Shivshanker who was the Union
law minister. According to the petitioner the Union Law Minister had committed contempt of
court during speech made by P Shivshanker on the occasion of the silver jubilee of the Bar
Council of Andhra Pradesh. Even though the speech was addressed to Judges and lawyers, a
large number of press personnel were present. P. N. Duda complained about 5 passages in his
speech. The two main point were:
1. The Supreme Court composed of the element from the elite class had their sympathy for
the haves i.e. the Zamindars. As a result they interpreted the word compensation in
Article 31 contrary to the spirit and amendment of the Constitution and rules the
compensation must represent the price which a willing seller is prepared to buy from a
buyer. The entire programme of Zamindari abolition suffered a set back. The Constitution
as amended by the 1st 14th and 17th Amendments to remove this oligarchic approach of the
Supreme Court with little or no help. Ultimately this rigid reactionary and traditional
outlook of property, led to the abolition of property as a fundamental right.
2. Anti social elements, i.e. FERA violators, bride burners and whole horde of reactionaries
have found their haven in the Supreme Court.
The case was 13heard by a bench comprising of Justice Sabyasachi Mukherjee and S
Ranganathan. To the biggest surprise of everyone the Supreme Court took a liberal view.
Speaking through Justice Mukherjee, the SC held that: “ there was no imminent danger of
interference with the administration of justice, nor of bringing a administration into disrepute. In
that view the minister was not guilty of contempt of the court. The speech of the Minister read in
its proper perspective, did not bring the administration of justice into disrepute or impair
administration of justice, though in some portions of the speech language used could have been
avoided by the minister having background of being former judge of the High Court. The
minister perhaps could have achieved his purpose by making his language but his facts deadly.
The petition was dismissed.
13
https://www.scribd.com/doc/53639643/Contempt-of-Courts-Act-1971-Final-Notes
17
The Supreme Court has not been the only court, which has issued contempt of court proceedings.
Many of the High Courts have also done the same. Recently the Delhi High came into the
limelight following what has been called as the “ Wah India” case. The case arose out of the
publication by the publishers of a magazine by the name of Wah India ! on their website, the
results of a purported survey grading the judges of Delhi High Court. Each of the judges whose
photos were also published were graded14 in a five column table rating the inter alia, on their
personal integrity, depth in law and quality of judgments delivered. The publishers claimed that
the grades were based on a survey where fifty of the senior members of the Delhi Bar were
consulted. The publication was titled “ Judged out” and it also claimed that the survey is by no
means an attempt to cast any aspersion on the competence of the judiciary, but is a small and
humble attempt to hold a mirror to it. It might make some Judges uncomfortable, but the truth
sometimes does.
The Delhi High Court passed an order summarily directing the confiscation of the unsold copies
of the issue of the news magazine barred its circulation and ordered the media not to publish any
thing that would lower the authority, dignity and prestige of the members of the judiciary. The
next day the court lifted the ban on reporting of the contempt proceedings and directed that the
reporting must be fair and accurate.34] But the court let the publishers off after the acceptance of
an apology by the publisher Rahul Mishra, editor Madhu Trehan and three journalists.
Another case that came up before the Supreme Court recently was Re: S K Sundaram. The case
arose out of a suo motu action in the Supreme Court. A Chennai based advocate had sent
telegrams to the then CJ of India Dr. A.S Anand, demanding his resignation on the ground that
the latter had exceeded the age of superannuation. Within three days of sending the telegram, he
filed a criminal complaint against the CJ under the IPC, 1860 alleging cheating, criminal breach
of trust and falsification of records, that Dr. Anand had usurped the office of Chief Justice of
India and ‘caused loss to the exchequer to the tune of Rs. 3 Crores’. The petitioner who had
previously filed a mandamus seeking the president of India to verify the age of Dr. Anand,
alleged that he was spurred into action by an article that appeared in The Hindu on 3-11-2000,
publishing a statement by Ram Jethmalani and an annexure published in the book “ Big Egos
Small Men”.
The Supreme Court in this case held that ‘well if he is determined to sign that he would not look
at any one of those material as well as the final decision rendered by the president of India
regarding the age of Dr. Anand, and then decided to persistently jump into the foray with the
tirade, putting himself into the outfit and chasuble of his proof insignia, it is only reminiscent of
the Spanish heir Don Quiescent of La Mancha. On the part of this court, we may observe that if
the contemnor had stopped with his telegram we would have persuaded ourselves to ignore its as
a case of ranting gibberish. But when he followed it up with lodging of a criminal complaint
before a criminal court in which the Chief Justice of India was arrayed as an accused having
committed the offence of cheating, criminal breach of trust and falsification of records we
realized that he seriously meant to malign and undermine the dignity and authority of this
court.36] Sundaram was sent to 6 months imprisonment.
14
http://www.livelaw.in/not-able-impossible-not-contempt-court-sc/
18
The most recent as well as the most controversial one was Arundhati Roy, In Re. The facts of
this case arose from a former case Narmada Bachao Andolan v. Union of India. While the case
was pending before the Supreme Court Mrs. Arundhati Roy wrote an article “ The Greater
Common Good” which was published in outlook and Frontline magazines. Two of the judges of
the Supreme Court found that the comments made by her were, prima facie, a misrepresentation
of the proceedings of the Court. The Court showed its discontent “ we are unhappy at the way
leaders of NBA and Mrs. Arundhati Roy have attempted to undermine the dignity of the court.
We expected better behaviour from them.39] But the court let the matter lie in the larger interest
of the issues pending before them. But on 30-12-2000 Mrs. Arundhati and Mrs. Medha Patkar
led a huge protest rally in front of the Supreme Court and shouted abusive slogans at the court.
They also attacked the petitioners to judges R Parashar advocate and others. Hence they filed a
petition stating that Mrs. Arundhati Roy is guilty of contempt of court.40] Moreover the
respondent also stated in her affidavit; “ on the grounds that judges of the Supreme Court are too
busy, the CJ of India refused to allow a sitting Judge to head the judicial enquiry into the Tehelka
Scandal…
Yet when it comes to an absurd, despicable entirely unsubstantiated petition in which all the
three respondents happen to be people, who have publicly- though in markedly different ways
questioned the policies of the Government and15 severely criticized a recent judgment of the
Supreme Court, the court displays a disturbing willingness to issue notice. It indicates a
disquieting inclination on the part of the court to silence criticism and muzzle dissent, to harass
and intimidate those who disagree with it. By entertaining a petition based on an FIR that even a
local police station does not see fit to act upon, the Supreme Court is doing its own reputation
and credibility considerable harm. The Bench comprising of Justice G. B. Patnaik and R. P. Sethi
allowed her to retract her averments. But she stood her ground.
The court held that “A fair criticism of the conduct of a judge the institution of the judiciary and
its functioning may not amount to contempt if made in good faith and in public interest. To
ascertain the good faith and the public interest, the courts have to see all the surrounding
circumstances including the person, his knowledge in the field and the intended consequence. All
citizens cannot be permitted to comment upon the conduct of the courts in the name of fair
criticism which if not checked would destroy the institution itself.
More over the Supreme Court stated these cannot come under the exception of P. N.
Duda v. Shiv Shanker, the court held that “it may be noticed that the criticism of the judicial
system was made by a person who himself had been the judge of the High Court and was the
Minister at the relevant time. He had made studies about the system and expressed his opinions
which, under the circumstances was held to be not defamatory despite the fact that the court
found than in some portion of the speech the language used could have been avoided by the
Minister having the background of being a former judge.” The court here found that Mrs. Roy
was devoid of any special knowledge of law and hence was fined Rs. 2000/-.
15
http://www.apat.ap.gov.in/CONTEMPTOFCOURT_RULES.aspx
19
Chapter-IV
CIVIL AND CRIMINAL CONTEMPT
The concept of contempt is a broad one, which has the capacity to encompass any act done in
detriment of the court. Contempt may range from disobedience to orders of the court to throwing
of tomatoes at the Judges. Broadly we can categorize contempt into two types: Civil Contempt
and Criminal Contempt.
CIVIL CONTEMPT
It has been defined under Section 2(b) of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971.The essential
ingredient is ‘willful’ disobedience and not any and every disobedience due to various reasons
such as delay due to unavoidable circumstances, or inadvertence. It has to be proved that the
disobedience was ‘willful’. It connotes a ‘clear intention to flout’. A civil contempt involves
disobedience to a Court’s order affecting the rights of other parties to that order basically
denying the rightful fruits of the suit to the other party. But Mens Rea has been made an essential
ingredient in the 1971 Act, which is a departure from the pre-existing law with the introduction
of the word ‘willful’. So Civil contempt does not attract strict liability any more. It is sometimes
supposed that the ‘will’ being a party to 16the disobedience is not enough and that there should
further be an element of obstinacy, rebellion or defiance. In Worthington v. Adlib Club Ltd., the
court held that the word ‘contumaciously’ as meaning was not different from ‘willfully’. In
India also, the courts use the word ‘contumaciously’ in describing contempt and invariably use it
disjunctively with ‘willful’ or ‘deliberate’. In Deba Brata Bandopadhyaya v. State of West
Bengal. , The Supreme Court observed that “if orders of stay, bail, injunction, received from
higher courts must be attended to promptly, and if there is a delay in dispatching them or dealing
with them the court may draw an inference of indifference and even contumaciousness.”
In Md.Ikram Hussain v. State of U.P., the court asked the appellant to produce his daughter in a
matter for habeas corpus. He made false excuses and did not produce her. He was found guilty
of contempt. In Alligarh Municipality v. E.T. Mazdoor Union , during the pendency of the suit
the trial court passed an order prohibiting the appellant municipality from realizing any fees from
the tongawallas for the use of a stand, which they did not follow and it was held as ‘willful
disobedience’ and amounted to contempt of court. In Union of India v. Oswal Wollen Mills],the
court held that “When as a result of an order of the High Court in a writ petition, an application
for license was to be disposed of by the statutory authority, no contempt can be said to be
committed merely because there is a failure to dispose of the petition.” Any order of the court
should give sufficient time for compliance before contempt proceedings can be initiated.
Regarding violation of an undertaking given to a court it was held in M v Home Office, that if a
16
http://www.huffingtonpost.in/vandana-shah-/heres-why-contempt-of-court-laws-are-important/
20
party or his advocate acts so as to covey to the court the firm conviction that undertaking is being
given the party would be bound and it will be no answer that he did not think that he was giving
it or that he was misunderstood and he would be held for contempt. But an undertaking, which
runs counter to the statutory provisions or law is an unauthorized undertaking and cannot be the
basis of contempt proceedings for its breach.
In Md. Idris v. Rustam Jehangir, where there was a clear breach of the undertaking the court,
held that it was entitled to give directions for closing the breach in addition to imposing
punishment.
CRIMINAL CONTEMPT
It has been defined under Section 2(c) of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971.It is thus seen that
scandalizing or prejudicing a Judge or interfering with the administration of justice is Contempt.
Even tending to scandalize or tending to prejudice or tending to interfere or obstruct is enough to
invoke action in criminal contempt. In Naraindass v. State of UP,the Supreme Court held that, it
is necessary to examine whether any of the impugned statements do interfere or have a tendency
to interfere with due course of the proceedings by creating prejudice against appellant or the writ
petition. In N. Rajagopala Rao v. Murtaza Mujtabbi,the AP high court held that the publication
of an article casting aspersions on the integrity of the High Court Judges while selecting and
recommending candidates for appointment of District judges was held to be criminal contempt.
All acts, which bring the court into disrespect or disrepute or which offends its dignity, or
challenge its authority, certainly amount to contempt. In Delhi Judicial Service
Association v. State of Gujarat, the17 Supreme Court observed that “the definition of criminal
contempt is wide enough to include any act by a person which would tend to interfere with the
administration of justice or which would lower the authority of the court. The publics have a
vital stake in effective and orderly administration of justice. The court has the duty of protecting
the community in the due administration of justice and, so, it is entrusted with the power to
commit for contempt of court, not to protect the dignity of the court against insult or injury, but,
to protect and to vindicate the right of the public so that the administration of justice is not
perverted, prejudiced, obstructed or interfered with. In Pratap Singh v. Gurbaksh Singh, the
court held that any kind of threat or any action which may amount to a threat held out to a person
who has approached the civil court for redressal of his grievance with a view to forgo the
assistance of the civil court amounts to criminal contempt. A threat held out to a judge with a
view to obtain favourable order would amount to criminal contempt as interference with the
administration of justice in State of A. P. v. V. Prakash Rao. The threat need not be a threat to the
judge himself personally.
A false or misleading or a wrong statement deliberately and willfully made by the party to a
proceeding to obtain a favourable order would prejudice or interfere with the due course of
judicial proceeding was held to be criminal contempt in Afzal v. State of Haryana
17
http://litigation.findlaw.com/going-to-court/civil-contempt-of-court.html
21
Distinction between Civil and Criminal Contempt
Civil contempt is basically wrong to the person who is entitled to the benefit of a court order
while criminal contempt involves defiance of the court revealed in conduct, which amounts to
obstruction or interference with the administration of justice. A helpful illustration is a case
where the person restrained commits a breach, he is guilty of civil contempt but a third party
aiding and abetting a breach commits criminal contempt because he interferes with the
administration of justice. In A-G v. Times Newspapers Ltd.18, the House of Lords, on the
rationale behind the distinction held that “A distinction is sometimes drawn between what is
described as ‘civil contempt’, that is to say contempt by party to the proceeding in matter of
procedure, and ‘criminal contempt’. One particular form of contempt by party to proceedings is
that constituted by an intentional act, which is in breach of the order of a competent court. Where
this occurs as a result of the act of a party who is bound by the order or of others acting at his
direction or on his instigation, it constitutes a civil contempt by him which is punishable by the
court at the instance of the party for whose benefit the order was made and can waived by him.
The intention with which the act was done will, of course, be of the highest relevance in the
determination of the penalty (if any) to be impose by the court, but the liability here is a strict
one in the sense that all requires to be proved its service of the order and the subsequent doing by
the party bound of that which is prohibited. When, however, the prohibited act is done not by the
party bound himself but by third party, a stranger to the litigation, that person may also be liable
for contempt. There is, however, this essential distinction that his liability is for criminal
contempt and arises not because the contemnor is himself affected by the prohibition contained
in the order but because his act constitutes a willful interference with the administration of
justice by the court in the proceedings in which the order was made. Here the liability is not strict
in the sense referred to, for their has to be shown not only knowledge of the order but an
intention to interfere with or impede the administration of justice- an intention which can of
course be inferred from circumstances.”
But a decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court6 failed to appreciate this distinction where the
conduct of the contemnor in instituting a suit and obtain in interim order of status quo and
thereafter writing letters to the Advocate Commissioner to stall a decree passed earlier were
characterized as civil contempt in spite of the express finding that the offending acts were
deliberately intended to thwart the earlier orders passed by the High Court.
18
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/contempt_of_court_indirect
22
Chapter-V
CONTEMPT OF COURT AND FREEDOM OF SPEECH-
CONSTITUTIONAL ASPECT
“Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or
newspapers without a government. I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”
Though the concept of freedom of press is not a new one, it is very hard to find a suitable
definition. Abraham Lincoln has aptly put it when he said, “ the world has never had a good
definition of it.” But people have defined the concept of Freedom of Press and continue to do so.
The concept was explained by William Blackstone way back in 1769 “ The liberty of the press is
indeed essential to the nature of a free state; but this consists in laying no previous restraints
upon publications and not in the freedom from censure for criminal matter when published.
Every freeman has an undoubted right to lay what sentiment he pleases before the public; to
forbid this is to destroy the freedom of the press; but if he publishes what is improper,
mischievous, illegal he must take the consequence of his own territory.”
In 1977 the royal Commission on Press has emphasized the importance of, and defined the
freedom of the press as “ that degree of 19freedom from restraint which is essential to enable
proprietors, editors ad journalist to advance the public interest by publishing the facts and
opinions without which a democratic electorate cannot make responsible judgments.
Prof Chafee said “the truth is, I think, that the framers had no very clear idea as to what they
meant by the freedom of speech or of the press, but we can say with reasonable assurance that
the freedom which congress was forbidden to abridge was not, for them, some absolute concept
which had never existed on the earth.” Professor Baxi says that freedom of press means two or
three things. “First it implies the freedom to have the infrastructure required to set up a
newspaper and to run it efficiently. Secondly, it means freedom to gather and report information.
Thirdly, it means freedom to express opinion.”
But quite adverse view has also been put in by K. K. Mathew when he said “ the question of the
freedom of press has to be understood in the context of freedom for whom the publisher who has
put in the money; the worker who produces the paper, the advertiser who sustains it, the
politician who runs the administration or the reader who reads it? Freedom of the press is the
freedom of the community, of society as a whole. It is not the exclusive privilege of any of the
four categories who are associated with the newspaper publication. The reader who represents
society, should have the ultimate freedom.
The eminent Jurist and writer Mr. Krishna Iyer has summed up what is Freedom of Press.
According to him the major contents of the freedom of press are:
19
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/contempt_of_court_direct
23
1. Freedom to gather information from diverse and antagonistic sources, on a competitive
basis, free from any monopolistic control from the government.
2. Freedom to inform the public true facts without fear or favor.
3. Right to have free access to sources of information.
The contempt of freedom of press has come quite a long way. There was a time in U.K. When
the freedom of Press wasn’t encouraged. Sit William Scrogg who became Lord Chief Justice in
1678, pronounced a judgment that to publish a newspaper was illegal as, according to him,
manifested an intention to commit breach of the peace. On 24th February 1703 Daniel Defoe was
fined 200 Marks and condemned to be pillared thrice to be imprisoned indefinitely and to find
sureties for his good behaviors during seven years for writing an anonymous pamphlet called “
shortest way with dissenters. Thus even though the church and state resorted to all methods to
suppress, corruption of youth or sedition. Such restraints through licensing and censorship came
to be accentuated after the invention of printing and the appearance of newspapers in
17th century, which demonstrated how powerful the press as a medium of expression is. It is in
protest to such governmental interference that the freedom of the press was built up in England.
A classic example for this situation would be John Milton’s “Aeropagtica” which was a protest
addressed to the long Parliament which had taken up licensing, after the abolition of star
chamber. Milton Said: “Truth and understanding are not such wars as to be monopolized and
traded by tickets…give me the liberty to know to utter and to argue freely according to
conscience, above all liberties. Whoever knew truth put to worse in a free and open encounter?
Who knows not that truth is strong next to almighty; she needs no policies, no strategies, no
licensing to make her victorious; these are the shifts and defines that error makes against her
power.”
It was result of such agitation that the Licensing Act of 1662 was eventually refused to be
renewed by the House of Commons in 1694 though reasons given were technical. Thus even
though the concept of Press Freedom20 developed in United Kingdom, Sweden was the first
country in the world to recognize lawfully the freedom of press. The Swedish press Law of 1756
guaranteed a clear protection or the press. The law of freedom of press was first promulgated in
1810 in Sweden. It was replaced in 1949 by a new Act, which enjoyed of being part of the
Constitution itself. Certain amendments were made to the Freedom of Press Act in 1976. We can
see from Article 1 of Swedish Constitution that Swedish law expressly provides for freedom of
press. So is the case of United States. In America the struggle for freedom of Press had its
greatest triumph when it came to be guaranteed by a written Constitutions, as a fundamental
right. The First Amendment declared: “ Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of
press.” In Bridges v. California, the American Supreme Court held that freedom of press will
include the freedom to possess those means and equipment which are necessary for the
achievement of the object or goal for which freedom of the press is required.
The Indian Constitution though has not recognized this right specifically under any of the
freedoms the Indian courts have read this freedom under freedom of speech and expression under
Article 19(1)(a). Supreme Court in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India observed that “to be a
fundamental right it is not necessary that a right must be specifically mentioned in a particular
20
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/contempt_of_court_direct
24
article specifically, it may be a fundamental right if it is an integral part of a named fundamental
right or parties of the same basic nature and character as that fundamental right. Every activity,
which facilitates the exercise of the named fundamental right, may be considered integral part of
that right and hence be a fundamental right-freedom of press in Article 19.
But the freedom of press impliedly provided under Article 19(1)(a) is not absolute. It is liable to
reasonable restrictions as imposed by an existing law or a law to be made by a state on various
grounds like a) sovereignty and integrity of India b) the security of the state c) friendly relations
with foreign states d) public order e) decency or morality f) or in relation with contempt of court
and g) defamation or incitement to an offence.
It is this nexus between freedom of press as impliedly provided in Article 19(1)(a) and its
restriction based upon contempt of court that will be dealt in detail in the coming chapters.
1. The reflection on the conduct or character of a judge in reference to the discharge is made
in the exercise of the right of fair and reasonable criticism.
2. When attacks/ comments are made against judge/ judges’ care should be taken to
distinguish between what is a libel on the judge and what amounts to contempt. If the
statement is defamatory so far as the judge is concerned, then he can proceed against the
libel or for libel.
The importance of this case lies in the fact that the circumstances as a whole should be looked
into. It is one of the very 1st cases, which states the principle. The fact that the meeting was held
in a closed room, with only four members present, the President himself typing the letter, and
forwarding it to superiors in letter marked “ confidential” all made the court think that whatever
they did was to seek an answer for the grievances faced by the Bar and the public and not to
inform the public about the so-called misdeeds of the judiciary and to scandalize and lower the
value of the court.
The Namboodripad Case was one in which we believe that a more severe punishment ought to
have been imposed. The 21Supreme Court to a surprise penalized merely with a symbolic fine. H
M Seervai points out “ it is submitted that the judgment is correct in the result but unsatisfactory
when it tends to summarize.77]But if we look into it closely we can see that Namboodripads
observations have to be seen in the context of the circumstances they were made in. they were
general in nature. They pertained neither to a pending case nor were they in disobedience of
court order or in defamation for any judge. They contained a criticism of the judicial system in
21
http://www.gktoday.in/blog/understanding-contempt-of-courts/
25
general and were expressed at a press conference before press correspondents so that they were
not likely to cause even distantly, any interference with the 22administration of justice. They were
as you can see of purely academic in nature, so far as their effect on the listeners are concerned.
The gravity of speech and the conviction did not seem to get along together.
But whatever the results were the methods by which the court arrived at the conclusion is
nothing but pitiable. In order to refute the arguments of Mr. Menon who appeared on behalf of
the Chief Minister, the Court went and examined the whole Marxian ideology. Vehement
criticisms were raised against this approach of the Court. After the court decided, S. P. Sathe
wrote, “ it is not clear. However, that there was any need to undertake an examination of the
writings. The Courts could have told Mr. Menon that they were interpreting the Indian
Constitution and not Marx, Engel or Lenin. Whether they had learnt about communism only by
reading Miclellitan-Murray was irrelevant. If Namboodripad’s statement amounted to contempt
of court, he had to be punished no matter whose views he was voicing.” The Supreme Court
could have resorted to what justice Holmes stated in his classic dissenting judgment
in Lochner v. New York 23 “the case is depended upon an economic theory which a large part of
the country does not entertain. If it were a question whether I agreed with that theory, I should
desire to study it further and long before making up my mind. But I do not conceive that to be
my duty, because I strongly believe that my agreement or disagreement has nothing to do with
the right of the majority to embody their opinions in law…the 14th amendment doesn’t enact Mr.
Herbert Spencer’s social statistics.” This is what court ought to precisely have done. Apart from
the fact that their dwelling into history of Marxist ideology sidetracks the main issues. It also
unnecessarily involves the court in a political controversy.
It comes to as a surprise to many that the Supreme Court who convicted Namboodripad who was
a chief minister and widely acclaimed scholar, acquitted Shiv Shanker. The speech by Shiv
Shanker is highly inflammatory and with complete disregard to his position. If it was to be
argued that the decision in Namboodripad’s case was correct, because a person in such a high
position should have taken more care while making such statements before the press, that
argument collapses when one reads the ShivShanker judgment. Justice Mukherjee not only
didn’t convict him but even stated that the statement was a compliment to the judiciary.
Justice Mukherjee applied the test of “imminent dangers” as laid down by Justice Holmes
in Schnenck v. U.S. Justice Mukherjee said “ with these observations, it must be held that there
was no imminent danger of interference with the administration of justice, nor of bringing
administration into disrepute. In that view it must be held that the minister was guilty of
contempt of court.”
Moreover the judges should have looked into the consequence when the Union Law Minister
himself speaks to the gathering where the press is present, that Supreme Court is comprised of
the elite class…what will be the impression on the normal man; will he have faith in the judicial
system? H. M. Seervai remarks about that he intended no disrespect to the Supreme Court and
that he had high regard for the Hon’ble court can only be compared to a man who slaps another
22
https://indialawyers.wordpress.com/category/contempt-of-court/
23
http://www.rotlaw.com/legal-library/what-does-it-mean-to-be-held-in-contempt-of-court/
26
person very hard and then says that he had high regard for that person and was merely trying to
rouse him to a sense of his own shortcomings.
The case of Wah India where they were hauled up for contempt was a correct decision by the
Apex court. As put forward by Lord Simons in Attorney General v. Times Newspaper there are
always 2 conflicting interests before the court.24 One in the publics right to information and thus
the freedom of press and the other in uninterrupted administration of justice. Here I cannot see
how the public’s right to information is infringed. They were putting up news item, which had no
real and substantial basis at all. The publishers claimed that the grades were based on a survey
where fifty of the senior members of Delhi Bar were consulted. But how far is this credible?
Wouldn’t it happen that a lawyer who lost an important case will have some grudge against that
particular judge? So the element of truth cannot be found out. The Wah India case does no credit
to the case for journalistic freedoms. If the media demands greater freedom to criticize the
administration of justice, there is also a corresponding duty on the media to report with a much
greater degree of responsibility. Also we should look at the facts that judges by the nature of
their office cannot respond to criticism or get embroiled in controversy 25in the public arena.Also
in De Haes and Gijsels v. Belgium, the European Court while reiterating that the press plays an
essential role in a democratic society remarked that “the courts must be protected from
destructive attacks that are unfettered, specially in view of the fact that judges are subject to a
duty of discretion that precludes them from replying to criticism.”
In the case of Re. S K Sundaram the distinction between libel and contempt is almost completely
blurred. The court while discussing the charges contained in the telegram held that “anyone of
those postulates would certainly scandalize and at any rate would tend to scandalize and lower
the authority of the courts as a whole, and particularly the Supreme Court of India. The Chief
Justice of India by virtue of his Constitutional ranking is the head of the Indian Judiciary. When
threats of the above nature have been hurled at him, they would unmistakably ten to undermine
the positions, majesty and dignity of the courts and the law.
Another important aspect about this case was put forward by Madhavi Divan in an article. Divan
stated “where the allegations ceased to be libel and when they amounted to contempt is not
explained. Also, although the court referred to Jethmalani’s Book Big Ego Small men, it appears
that the context of this book, the apparent source of renewed attack by Sundaram were not
examined. This book in addition to containing material in support of the claim that the then chief
justice had passed the age of superannuation, also alludes to a controversial land acquisition case
involving members of Dr. Anand’s family. Yet those writings of the former law minister of India
and far more damaging than any “ ranting gibberish” by an unknown entity provoked no judicial
response.
In Re Arundhati Roy the verdict of the Supreme Court, which distinguishes this case from P. N.
Duda v. Shivshanker is utterly illogical. The court held that since Mr. Shivshanker was a retired
High Court Judge and Union Law Minister, he had made studies about the system and expressed
his opinion which, under the circumstances was held not to be defamatory. But the courts also
held that in the instant case the respondent has not claimed to possess any special knowledge of
24
http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/satyam-bruyat/its-time-to-amend-law-on-contempt-of-court/
25
http://indianexpress.com/about/contempt-of-court/
27
law and the working of the institution of judiciary. She 26has not made any studies regarding the
working of judiciary in this country and in these case, the benefit to which Mr Shivshanker under
the circumstances was held entitled is therefore not available to the respndent in the present
proceedings.
This however I cannot grapple with. To say explicitly that only a person who has knowledge of
law and working of the judiciary can criticize the judiciary, is to saying that only lawyers, jurists
and academicians can criticize the judiciary. Then what about the average and so called lay man
to do?
It has been rightly held in M.R. Parashar v. Farooq Abdullah by Chandrachud CJ that “ the right
of free speech is an important right of the citizen, in the exercise of which he is entitled to bring
to the notice of the public at large the27 infirmities from which any institution suffers, including
institutions which administer justice. Thus it is clear from this statement that every citizen has a
right to healthy and constructive criticism. Here one cannot differentiate the citizens by barriers
of specialist knowledge of law and the working of judiciary. A G Noorani writes a disturbing
judgment has looked into these aspects and commented “all men are equal before the law, one
cannot but wonder how the Supreme Court at last distinguish citizens into two categories.”
One cannot help but wonder at the irregular pattern in which the Supreme Court gives its verdict
for contempt cases. In Namboodripads Case, the Supreme Court convicted him and went to great
lengths to check up the works of Marx and Engel to prove him wrong. In P. N.
Duda v. Shivshanker it went to the other extreme and even said what he had said was a
compliment and exonerated him. This was not the only instance. Even the Kerala High Court
hauled up Justice Krishna Iyer for contempt of Court twice but exonerated him by stating “ he
was an eminent jurist author and judge, and has better and more thorough knowledge in the field
of law. In J. Subramanium Potti’s wards. “There is an ocean of difference between well-
informed and ill-informed criticism. Those who have spent years and perhaps life time as part of
the institution or to study an institution may have occasion to make a through objective
assessment of that institution. What they say in regard to a matter concerning that institution
should be viewed differently from a similar statement by an uninformed person.
One of the important questions that arise in the specter of contempt power of the courts is the
right of the contemnor to go ahead and prove the truth of his allegations. Or otherwise will truth
be a defence in contempt in contempt proceedings?
A few years back the honorable Supreme Court had the occasion to consider this question
in D.C. Saxena v. Hon’ble the Chief Justice of India. In that case a contemnor filed a writ
petition against the then Chief Justice of India was unfit to hold that office and hence he should
26
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/contempt_of_court_civil
27
http://www.livemint.com/Politics/vwdCg7zPRglANLWwNvPleO/A-guide-to-contempt-law.html
28
be stripped of his citizenship. He also sought for a direction to register an FIR against the then
CJI under different provisions of IPC and also to prosecute him under the Prevention of
Corruption Act.
Looking into the relevant facts the28 3 judges bench held that “ it tends to lower the dignity and
authority of the court and also sow seeds to persons with similar propensity to undermine the
authority of the court or the judiciary as whole, he crossed all boundaries of reckless and
indulges in wild accusations.
Speaking about truth as a defence judges K Ramaswamy said “ it would not be open to the
contemnor to bring forward evidence or circumstances to justify on to show whether and how
fairly imputatious were justified because the judge is not before the count.”
It is humbly submitted that the view taken by the Supreme Court is not right in this matter. It has
completely ignored the precedents of the same court in which “Truth as a defence” was stressed.
In Bathina Ramakrishna Reddy v. Madras, judges, Mukherjee said, “the article in questions is a
scurrilous attack on the integrity and honesty of a judicial officer. Specific instances have been
given where the officer is alleged to have taken bribes or behaved with impropriety to litigants
who did satisfy his dishonest demands. If the allegations were true, obviously it would be to the
benefit of the public to bring these matters into light. But if they were false, they cannot
undermine the confidence of the public in the administration of justice and bring the judiciary
into disrepute.
Thus it is added that if a contemnor is prepared to go forward and prove the charges to the
extreme with all the required evidence then he must be permitted to do so. It would be desirable
to wrap up the argument with the reasons given by the noted Constitutional Law expert H. M.
Seervai “ A judge is a public servant and if he takes bribes he is not acting or purporting to act as
a judge he is committing a crime, and is liable to be punished for that crime. Since public
confidence in a fearless and judiciary is a vital public interest, it would be desirable if a public
spirited lawyer or lawyers Association30 conveyed in good faith and in sober language, the
allegations of corruptions, with supporting evidence, to the appropriate authorities with a view to
action being taken against the judge. However practicing lawyers may be unwilling to take such
28
https://www.reference.com/government-politics/happens-found-contempt-court-b1b85668e50b92b1
29
https://books.google.co.in/books?
id=gujNYPcNETMC&pg=PA13&lpg=PA13&dq=contempt+of+court&source=bl&ots=mvkFQIDT2B&sig=k6WP9uPoOz
3bpV7ig7IIjzzoiK0&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjpu5GamuPPAhUIR48KHaE0BqA4HhDhttp://www.apat.ap.gov.in/C
ONTEMPTOFCOURT_RULES.aspxoAQguMAQ#v=onepage&q=contempt%20of%20court&f=false
30
29
a step, or persons in authority may turn a blind age or do nothing. The process of removal of a
judge by impeachment is cumbrous, and without a public outcry might not be resorted to. It then
falls to the press to expose, in good faith a corrupt judge in sober and dignified language, and
place relevant evidence, which can be proved, before the public. If true, the writing cannot be a
can be proved, before the public. If true, the writing cannot be a contempt of court, because
nothing brings the administration of justice into disrepute so much as corruption in the
judiciary.”
People who propagate these 31grudges are often lawyers themselves. Top lawyers have big egos.
And egotistical lawyers never like to lose, and when they do, some of them are not averse to
blaming the Judge or suggesting to their clients that there was some ulterior motive.
Now, judging cases is a difficult business and the occupational hazards of judging are many- the
memory of a wrong decision (or what is ultimately found to be a wrong decision) sometimes
festers; it also gives rise to irresponsible sometimes scurrilous comment- first about the case
itself, and then inevitably about the judge or court which rendered judgment.
The law reports are strewn with cases of disgruntled litigants going to great lengths in making
charges, often unfounded, against the Judiciary.
The law of contempt that part of which is so colourfully described as “scandalizing the court” is
intended as a wall of protection against the vicissitudes of judging. Ours is a very litigious
society and there are a number of unreasonable people in the system, persons who will make any
type of allegation against anyone at the drop of a hat.
This is why I believe that this part of the Criminal Contempt Jurisdiction though now obsolete in
England, should remain in India.
But there are problems in this branch of the law the lines are thinly drawn and are not very clear:
and they depend very much on the perception of the Judge administering the Contempt
31
http://lawrato.com/indian-kanoon/criminal-law/what-all-comprises-contempt-of-court-in-india-639
30
Jurisdiction in the name of the court. The 32public, the men and women of the media, and the
lawyers are content to accept constraints imposed by the “Rule of Law”, but are not prepared to
accept ad hoc rules imposed according to the whims, vagaries and idiosyncrasies of individual
judges.
No one liked what V.C. Mishra said and did in Allahabad, but the three Judge Bench that
decided his case in their enthusiasm to teach him a lesson deviated from the law: ultimately,
sobriety prevailed; the Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court also did not like what Mishra
said or did and yet they overruled the punishment meted out to him and set out the true contours
of the penalties that can be imposed in contempt cases. This case has set an example and prompts
a word of advice to all: lawyers and judges. Never-never behave as Mishra did. And never, never
lose your temper as the three Judge 33Bench did in Mishra’s case: always keep your cool as the
five Judge Bench did, and so earned the admiration of all. Mishra’s case has established that the
contempt jurisdiction must not and cannot be used to discipline the lawyer in conduct of a case:
this must be left to the Bar Councils entrusted with disciplinary powers under the Advocates Act.
It was Jeremy Bentham who characterized the Common Law as “Dog Law”. “When your dog
does anything you want to break him off”, (he wrote in 1823), “you wait till he does it, and then
beat him for it. This is the way you make laws for your dog, and this is the way judges make
laws for you and me.”
The law of contempt of court in Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence both in England in the past, and in
India in the past and present has been no more, no less “Dog Law”. There are no rules, no
constraints- no precise circumstances when the administration of justice is brought into
contempt. The judgments are strewn with pious platitudes that give little guidance to the editor,
to the commentators, to lawyers, and to members of the public: this part of the law of contempt
though necessary, is a standing threat to free expression. It leaves too much to the discretion of
the particular judge. And at times decisions do give rise to a strange feeling that the status of the
status of the person who scandalizes the Court perhaps did affect the ultimate result.
In 1988 a sitting Cabinet Minister made wide and improper remarks against Judges of the
Supreme Court- he said:
“Zamindars like Golakhnath (he was speaking of Golakhnath’s Case) evoked a sympathetic cord
nowhere in the whole country except the Supreme Court of India. And the bank magnates, the
representatives of the elitist culture of this country ably supported by industrialists, the
beneficiaries of independence, got higher compensation by the intervention of the Supreme
Court in Cooper’s case (1970), Anti social elements, FERA violators, bride burners and a whole
hoard of reactionaries have found their heaven in the Supreme Court.”
32
https://www.reference.com/government-politics/happens-found-contempt-court-b1b85668e50b92b1
33
http://lawrato.com/indian-kanoon/criminal-law/what-all-comprises-contempt-of-court-in-india-639
31
The minister then went on to say that because the Judges of the highest Court had their
“unconcealed sympathy for the haves” 34(as opposed to the have nots) they had interpreted the
expression “compensation” in the manner they did: clearly attributing motives. And yet a Bench
of two Judges (in Duda’s case) exonerated him. Let me read to you what the Bench said:
“Bearing in mind the trend in the law of contempt (they were speaking of the liberal trend)-
established by the Judgment of Justice Krishna Iyer in Mulgaokar’s case the speech of the
Minister has to be read in its proper perspective, and when so read it did not bring the
administration of justice into disrepute or impair administration of justice. The minister is not
guilty of contempt of the court”
Again when an important personage Mr. Mohd. Yunus, Chairman of the Trade Fair Authority of
India known at the time to be very close to the Prime Minister – had criticized a judgment
delivered by a Supreme Court Judge in the ‘Jehovah Witness’ case holding that the singing of the
National Anthem for a particular sect of Christians was not compulsory – Mr. Mohd. Yunus said
that the Judge “has no right to be called either an Indian or a Judge”. An Association of
individuals called the Conscientious Group v. Mohd. Yunus & Ors filed a petition seeking a
direction that Mr. Yunus should be hauled up for contempt.
These examples are given 35not to deride our judges or criticize previous decisions. It is only to
illustrate very graphically – that the true nature of this aspect of contempt jurisdiction: is
mercurial, unpredictable – capable of being exercised (and therefore in fact exercised) differently
in different cases by different Judges in the same Court.
The origin of the branch of law known as “scandalizing the court’ is shrouded in antiquity – it
has been described in text books as both “dubious and controversial”. It originates from a
celebrated dictum of Justice Wilmot in his judgment in Wilkes Case way back in 1765, a
judgment which was never actually delivered, but meant to be delivered, and later published by
Justice Wilmot’s son when his father’s paper were edited. It was a judgment reserved after
argument, and when ready to be delivered it was discovered that the writ against Wilkes was
incorrectly titled and since an amendment of the Writ was not consented to, the case had to be
abandoned. This is the real ancestry of that part of the law of contempt known today as
“scandalizing the Court”: it is based on a judgment never delivered in a case, – a case which had
already abated!
The Law of Contempt is an exception to the fundamental right of free speech and expression
guaranteed under Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution, the law must then be justified on the
ground that it is a “reasonable restriction” under Article 19(2): otherwise it would be
unconstitutional. There is a judgment of the Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court delivered
some years ago, which correctly appreciated this constitutional principle. It was not widely
reported and deserves grater publicity than it has so far received. It is a judgment of a Bench of
two judges S.C. Sen J. & U.C. Banerjee J. The fact that the law of contempt is an exception to
the fundamental right of the free speech has been nowhere more felicitously described than in
34
http://www.lexisnexis.in/the-law-contempt.htm
35
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Contempt_of_court
32
this judgment (delivered for the Bench by Justice Banerjee). In 36that case the Court was called
upon to decide whether an article in a Calcutta daily, which had condemned a prior judgment of
the Calcutta High Court, unread and by distorting facts, was contemptuous.
The article had the disquieting heading “Let the High Court save itself from Ignominy”. A suo
moto rule was issued by the High Court. When it came up for hearing no apology was called for
or tendered. But the newspaper was exonerated: the contempt notice discharged. The judges said:
“None of the articles can be defended as fair comment made in temperate language about a court
case. In fact the distorted version of the judgment given and the language employed in the
articles may have the effect of shaking the confidence of the people in the judiciary and thereby
lowering the dignity and majesty of the law.”
And yet, upholding the importance of freedom of speech the Calcutta High Court held that the
publication was not contempt – though the Judges did say that the language used could have
been better, polite and more sober. Freedom to criticize (even wrongly and obtusely) a judgment
of the court was upheld as part of the cherished freedom of speech. The judgment of the Calcutta
High Court make us recall what 37was said by Lord Denning in a famous contempt case: Quinton
Hogg, son of a Lord Chancellor and a future Lord Chancellor of England himself had written an
article in very critical and caustic tone about a decision of Denning in a game case. The litigant
Blackburn moved for contempt and that is what Lord Denning said.
“This is the first case, so far 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. It is the right of every man, in parliament or out of it, in the
Press or over the broadcast, to make a 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 criticize us will remember that, from the nature
of our office, we cannot reply to their criticisms. We cannot enter into public controversy. Still
no less in political controversy. 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, nothing
which is written 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. So it comes to this. Mr. Quinton Hogg
has criticized the court, but in so doing he is exercising his undoubted right. The article contains
an error, no doubt, but errors do not make it a contempt of court. We must uphold his right to the
uppermost. I hold this not to be a contempt of court, and would dismiss the application.” Lord
36
http://www.mgutheses.in/page/?q=T%202281&search=&page=&rad=
37
http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/contempt-of-court.html
33
Denning in England, like Justices Sen and Banerjee in India put free speech first – in a conflict
between this freedom and the contempt jurisdiction.
It was asked of him why no contempt proceedings were initiated against the particular
newspaper. He apparently smiled, and without a trace of bitterness, said the Judges in England
did not take notice of personal insults, uttered without malice. After all, he said, he was old, and
though he believed he wasn’t a fool, someone else who sincerely thought he was, was entitled to
his opinion. He also added “But if they (the Editor and Publisher) – had said we were dishonest
or not true to our conscience, I would have promptly hauled them up”.
Here is a judge who was so conscious of his enormous power that he knew when not to use it: a
self-restraining quality which greatly enhances the prestige of all judicial power.
There is another disturbing aspect of this branch of the law. Unlike defamation truth, is not
considered to be a defence. Does the 39law of contempt then impose reasonable restrictions on
freedom of speech – if you are not permitted to speak and establish the truth? India’s note
constitutional historian H.M. Seervai had no doubt on the point. This is what he had to say in the
Fourth Edition of his famous book on the Constitution of India:
“a law relating to defamation, which provided that truth, spoken or written, for the public good
shall not be defence in a libel action would impose restrictions which would be unreasonable .
…….the position would be no different if a law were to enact that truth should not be a defence
to a charge of contempt of court, if it consists in scandalizing a judge.”
“In a criminal prosecution for libel, the prosecution would fail if it were shown that specific
charges were true and it was for the public good that they should be made. But is there one law
for a corrupt Minister and another for a corrupt Judge?” The author then boldly says that no court
in India would say that there was one law for a corrupt Minister and another for a corrupt Judge,
and says quite confidently that no court would by any process of reasoning punish for contempt
the writer of an article who, in sober language sets out specific acts of bribery and is able to
successfully prove them.
38
https://www.scribd.com/doc/54059162/Contempt-of-Courts-Act
39
http://research.lawyers.com/contempt-of-court.html
34
For this view the author relies on a judgment of a Constitutional Bench of the Supreme Court
itself – in B. Ramakrishna Reddy v. State of Madras 1952 SCR 425 where Justice B.K.
Mukherjea said:
“The article in question is a scurrilous attack on the integrity and honesty of a judicial office.
Specific instances have been given where the officer is alleged to have taken bribes or behaved
with impropriety to litigants who did not satisfy his dishonest demands. If the allegations were
true, obviously it would be to the benefit of the public to bring these matters into light. But if
they were false, they cannot but undermine the confidence of the public in the administration of
justice and bring the judiciary into disrepute.”
Unfortunately these observations were read in a later case in Perspective Publications Pvt. Ltd.,
& anr. V. State of Maharashtra as not 40laying down affirmatively that truth and good faith could
be set up as a defence in contempt proceedings; and ever since then the law in Perspective
Publications Case is the law that is followed. Wrongly, I would submit. Particularly since years
after the Perspective Publications Case another Bench of three Hon’ble Justices of the Supreme
Court (in August 1976) set aside a Full Bench decision of the High Court of Punjab, which held
that a prima facie case for contempt was made out. In that case 15 members of a Bar Association
made a complaint about observations of a High Court judge made during an inspection at the
District Court Bar the judge had said 41nasty things about politicians and the lawyers felt that the
judge was wrong to talk politics and they said so in the letter. The letter was addressed to the
Chief Justice but it was placed for consideration of a Bench of the Court and on perusal of the
contents the Bench that a prima facie of criminal contempt was made out. None of the
allegations in the matter against the judge were disputed or challenged.
Yet the High Court proceeded on the basis that even though the letters written correctly recorded
what had happened and commented adversely on the judge’s conduct, the authors were guilty of
contempt. The Supreme Court overruled and by so overruling emphasized that allegations when
true were not capable of sustaining a charge of contempt.
The most recent endorsement of this view is the decision of the Privy Council (March 1999) in
which Lord Slynn (in an appeal from the Republic of Mauritius), whilst upholding the
constitutionality of the offence of scandalizing the court, under the Constitution of Mauritius,
emphasized two things: first, that the cope of offence was a narrow one and second, that
exposure and criticism of judicial misconduct plainly in the public interest would not necessarily
constitute contempt: that is to say truth and good faith would trump the Contempt law, which is
as it should be.
Our Constitution makes freedom of speech and expression a fundamental right, and the
exception to it is the law of contempt- not any law of contempt – but reasonable restrictions in
the law. The Contempt of Courts Act does not say that truth cannot be a defence and it is for the
Courts to interpret the meaning of the word “scandalize”.
40
http://www.nalsarpro.org/ML/Presentations/ML259.pdf
41
http://bvpnlcpune.org/Article/Tribunals%20and%20Contempt%20of%20Court-Prof_Dr_%20Mukund
%20Sarda.pdf
35
If it is part of the law as understood that a person commits contempt if he truthfully publishes as
a fact that a particular Judge has accepted a bribe for giving a judgment in a party’s favour – then
such a law would be void as imposing unreasonable restrictions on the freedom of speech and
expression: the judge who took the bribe would be false to his oath, to do justice without fear or
favour; and it would be absurd to say that 42although Article 124(4) provides for the removal of a
judge for proved misbehaviour, no one can offer proof for such misbehaviour except on pain of
being sent to jail for contempt of court.
This is a glaring defect in our judge-made law that needs to be remedied- hopefully by the
Judges themselves; if not, reluctantly then by Parliament. It is interesting to notice that when the
Ontario Court of Appeal some years ago considered the offence of scandalizing the Court in the
light of the Canadian Charter of Human Rights. The majority in the Court concluded that
scandalizing the court was no longer compatible with the fundamental freedom of speech and
expression. The dictionary meaning of the word “scandalize” is “to utter false or malicious report
of a person’s conduct”. Therefore truth can never scandalize.
In Bhattacharji’s case our courts quoted from an article by Harry Edwards in which he had said:
“Ideal of judicial independence is not compromised when judges are monitored and regulated by
their own peers. This limited system of judicial self-regulation present no constitutional dilemma
as long as the removal power remains with Congress. I argue that the judiciary alone should
monitor this bad behaviour through a system of self-regulation.
42
https://www.jstor.org/stable/4505267
36
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Articles & Journals
1. G. Noorani, “A Disturbing Judgment”, Frontline, March 29 2002 at 34.
2. Floyd Abrams, “Fair Trial- Free Press: A Legal overview”, Address before Connecticut
Bar Association, 1979
3. K. K. Mathew, Chief Editor, Malayalam Manorama, A Talk on All India Radio on “ The
Freedom of Press”, Vidura, Vol. 15, No. 5, October 1978 at 280.
4. Madhavi Divan, The Law of criminal Contempt: time to move on, The Lawyers
Collective, March 2002 at 8.
5. R. Dhavan, “The Press and the Constitutional Guarantee of Free Speech and Expression”,
28 Journal of Indian Law Institute 292.
6. Raju Z Moray, “Conversation in a Court Room”, The Lawyers Collective, July-August
1994 at 53.
7. S. P Sathe, “Freedom of Speech and Contempt of Court”, Economic and Political
Weekly, 17- October 1970 at 1749.
8. Upendra Baxi, “In an interview on the Freedom of Press,” Vidura, Journal of the Press
Institute of India, Vol. 12, No. 6, December 1974 at 4.
9. Usha Kamath, “Of Judicial Power”, Frontline, March 29 2002.
10. Z. Chafee, Book Review, “Free Speech: And its Relition to Self-Government by
Alexander Meiklojohn,” 62 Harvard Law Review, 1949 at 891 (898).
Books
1. E.S. Venkataramaih, Freedom of Press- Some recent Trends, 1st Edn., B.R. Publishing
Corp, New Delhi, 1987.
2. H M Seervai, Constitutional Law of India, Vol. I, 4th Edn., Universal Book Publishers,
New Delhi, 1999.
3. J. Milton, “Aeropagiticia”, 1st Edn., 1644 at 23 as Cited in D. S. Bogen, First Amendment
Ancillary Doctrines, Maryland Law Review, Vol. 37, No. 4, 1978.
4. James Francis Oswald, Contempt of Court, 3rd Edn., Hindustan Law Books, Calcutta,
1993.
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