Contempt of Court in India

Syllabus: Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary

Constitutional Framework

  • ‘Contempt of court’ used in Article 19(2) as ground for imposing reasonable restriction on fundamental freedoms.
  • Constitution does not give guidelines on how to initiate such proceedings requiring legislative framework.
  • Supreme Court and High Court designated as courts of record under Article 129 and 215 respectively.
  • Court of record: decisions kept in reserve for future references; inherently has power to punish for its contempt.
  • Implicit constitutional provision explained in Contempt of Court Act, 1971 providing detailed procedures comprehensively.

Types of Contempt

  • Civil Contempt
    • Section 2(b) defines civil contempt as wilful disobedience to any judgment, decree, direction, order, writ.
    • Also includes wilful breach of undertaking given to court violating court’s authority and orders.
  • Criminal Contempt
    • Section 2(c) defines criminal contempt as publication (words spoken/written, signs, visible representations) of any matter.
    • Doing any act which:
      • (i) scandalises or lowers authority of any court affecting judicial dignity.
      • (ii) prejudices or interferes with due course of any judicial proceeding obstructing justice delivery.
      • (iii) interferes with administration of justice in any other manner undermining judicial system comprehensively.
    • Contempt different from mere disrespect: beyond covering disobedience and disruption in working of justice system.

Initiation of Proceedings

  • High Court or Supreme Court may initiate contempt proceedings suo moto on their own motion.
  • May also be initiated by third party provided petition has consent from Attorney General (SC) or Advocate General (HC).

Fair Criticism vs Contempt

  • Settled principle: fair criticism of decided case not contempt; criticism transgressing limits may be considered contemptuous.
  • Ashwini Kumar Ghosh vs Arabinda Bose (1952): established distinction between fair commentary and contemptuous criticism.
  • Anil Ratan Sarkar vs Hirak Ghosh (2002): power to punish must be exercised with caution; only when clear violation of order.

Landmark Cases

  • M. V. Jayarajan vs High Court of Kerala (2015): SC upheld contempt finding for using abusive language in public speech.
  • Established such actions could be criminal contempt for undermining judiciary’s authority and disrupting administration of justice.
  • Shanmugam vs High Court of Madras (2025): SC held purpose to punish for contempt is to ensure administration of justice.

Democratic Criticism

  • Criticising Courts’ action democratically not wrong: however, judiciary plays crucial role in setting state priorities.
  • Sanctity of administration of justice must be maintained; any misrepresentation amounts to contempt and detrimental to democratic principles.

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