Judgment Case ID: 1179

Judgment:
iminal Appeal No. 58 of 1959. Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated November 7	 1958	 of the orissa High Court in Original Criminal Misc. Case No. 8 of 1958. A.V. Viswanatha Sastri	 H. B. Khanna and T. M. Sea	 for the appellant. H. N. Sanual	 Additional Solicitor General of India	 B. M. Patnaik	 ;section N. Andley	 J. B. Dadachanji and Ramewar Nath	 for respondent No. 1. 1961. March 14. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by MUDHOLKAR	 J. In this appeal by special leave	 the appellant who has been found guilty of contempt of court by the High Court of Orissa is challenging his conviction. To this appeal	 as well as to criminal appeal 2 of 1960 in which another person is challenging his conviction for contempt of court by the same High Court	 the Chief Justice and the Judges of the High Court have been made parties. The learned Additional Solicitor General who has put in an appearance for a limited purpose has raised a point that in such matters it is not at all necessary to make the Chief Justice and the Judges of the High Court parties. He points out that in England in all contempt matters the usual title of the proceeding is "in re. . . . (so and so)"	 that is the person who is proceeded against for contempt. The same practice	 according to him	 is followed in appeals. We must	 however	 point out that in appeals preferred to 321 the Privy Council from convictions for contempt by the High Courts in India as well as in appeals before this Court	 the Chief Justice and the Judges of the High Court concerned have been made respondents. In Ambard vs Attorney General for Trinidad& Tobago (1) we find that the Attorney General was made a party to the appeal. The question raised by the learned Additional Solicitor General is of some importance and we think it desirable to decide it. In every suit or appeal persons who claim relief or against whom relief has been given or persons who have or who claim the right to be heard must undoubtedly be made parties. That is because they have an interest in the decision or the result of that case. But where Judges of a High Court try a person for contempt and convict him they merely decide a matter and cannot be said to be interested in any way in the ultimate result in the sense in which a litigant is interested. The decision of Judges given in a contempt matter is like any other decision of those Judges	 that is	 in matters which come up before them by way of suit	 petition	 appeal or reference. Since this is the real position we think that there is no warrant for the practice which is in vogue in India today	 and which has been in vogue for over a century	 of	 making the Chief Justice and Judges parties to an appeal against the decision of a High Court in a contempt matter. We may point out that it is neither necessary nor appropriate to make the Chief Justice and the Judges of a High Court parties to a legal proceeding unless some relief is claimed against them. In a contempt matter there is no Question of a relief being claimed against the Chief Justice and the Judges of the High Court. The present practice should	 therefore	 be discontinued and instead	 as in England	 the title of such proceedings should be "in re. . (the alleged contemner)". Now we address ourselves to the merits of this case. The appellant was a Sub Divisional Magistrate at Dhenkanal in the year 1957. In a criminal matter (1)(1936) A.C. 322. 41 322 before him a Magistrate III class	 Dhenkanal passed an order under section 522	 Criminal Procedure Code putting the complainant	 one Golam Mohammed in possession of some property. The order was actually executed Pion October 14	 1955. It was also confirmed by the Additional District Magistrate in appeal. It was	 however	 set aside by the High Court in revision on August 27	 1957. The opposite party	 one Sarif Beg	 thereupon made an application on November 20	1957 before the appellant for redelivery of possession. This application was opposed by Golam Mohammed. It was heard by the appellant on November 21	 1957	 and order was reserved till November 23	 1957. Apparently the order was not ready and so the matter was adjourned to November 27	 1957. That day the application was allowed and compliance was directed by December 2	 1957. While these proceedings were going on	 an application was made by the complainant to the High Court apparently for a review of its previous order. By order dated November 25	 1957 this application was admitted by P. V. Balakrishna Rao J. He also granted an interim stay of the proceedings in the case before the Sub Divisional Magistrate	 Dhenkanal but did not direct that the said order should be communicated to the Sub Divisional Magistrate by telegram. On November 26	 1957 an application bearing an illegible signature was made to the Magistrate in which	 amongst other things	 it was stated "that the petition being not maintainable the opposite party has once more moved the Hon 'ble High Court in the matter and it has been ordered that further proceedings should be stayed until the disposal of the opposite party 's revision". Evidently	 by "opposite party" the applicant meant himself and by "revision" he meant the review application made by him. Along with this application the complainant filed a telegram addressed to Mr. Neelakanth Misra	 Pleader	 Dhenkanal saying "Golam Mohammad 's case further proceedings stayed	 Ram". It does not appear from the order sheet of the Magistrate that in the proceedings before him Mr. Neelakanth Misra represented the complainant. However	 we will assume that he did so. Even then	 there 323 is nothing to indicate as to who "Ram" is. There is no suggestion that he was the Advocate who represented the complainant before the High Court in the proceeding before it. It would appear that on November 7 25	 1957 the Sub Divisional Magistrate was out of		 headquarters and	 therefore	 the second officer directed that the application be placed before the Sub Divisional Magistrate on his return. The Sub Divisional Magistrate refused to act on this telegram but made the following endorsement on November 27	 1957 on what is said to be the complainant 's application: "No action can be taken on telegram	 File." He then proceeded to deliver his/ order on the opposite party 's application for restitution. A copy of the order of the High Court was received at Dhenkanal on November 28	 1957. On that day the Sub Divisional Magistrate was absent and the second officer made the following entry in the order sheet: "Seen. A.D.M 's D.S. No. 326 dated 28 11 57. In Cr. Case No. 90/57 Hon 'ble High Court has stayed further proceedings. Stay further proceedings. Put up before S.D.M. Inform parties. " Consequent oil this endorsement no writ for re delivery of possesion was issued and thus the status quo was maintained. Upon perusal of the records on August 18	 1957 in connection with the application for review made by the complainant the High Court ordered the issue of a notice to the appellant on August 25	 1958 to show cause why he should not be committed for contempt. The appellant in a lengthily statement explained all the facts and also stated that he had not the slightest intention to disobey or go beyond the orders and directions of the High Court and that he passed the order dated November 27	 1957 because the complainant 's application for stay was not accompanied by an affidavit; nor was it signed by the complainant or his lawyer. He further stated that he should not be held liable for contempt because he had "no intention to prejudice or affect the course of justice in the disposal of the matter pending before the High 324 Court" and added that he acted in good faith in discharge of his official duties. Finally he stated that if after considering his explanation the Court found him guilty of disobeying its order he expressed his regret and tendered his apology for what he had done. This apology was regarded as merely a conditional apology and was not accepted. After an elaborate consideration of the case law on the question of disobedience of orders by subordinate courts	 the High Court found the Sub bivisional Magistrate guilty of contempt and sentenced him to pay a fine of Rs. 100. By the same order the High Court dismissed the review application preferred before it by the complainant. Before a subordinate court can be found guilty of disobeying the order of the superior court and thus to have committed contempt of court	 it is necessary to show that the disobedience was intentional. There is no room for inferring an intention to disobey an order unless the person charged had knowledge of the order. If what a subordinate court has done is in utter ignorance of an order of a superior court	 it would clearly not amount to intentional disobedience of that court 's order and would	 therefore	 not amount to a contempt of court at all. There may perhaps be a case where an order disobeyed could be reasonably construed in two ways and the subordinate court construed it in one of those ways but in a way different from that intended by the superior court. Surely	 it cannot be said that disobedience of the order by the subordinate court was contempt of the superior court. There may possibly be a case where disobedience is accidental. If that is so	 there would be no contempt. What is	 therefore	 necessary to establish in a case of this kind is that the subordinate court knew of the order of the High Court and that knowing the order it disobeyed it. The knowledge must	 however	 be obtained from a source which is either authorised or otherwise authentic. In the case before us it is not clear as to who the person who signed the application dated November 27	 1957 was because the signature is illegible. It was not countersigned by a pleader nor is there anything to show that it was presented 325 in court by a pleader authorised to appear on behalf of the complainant. Furthermore	 it was not accompanied by an affidavit. Therefore	 there could be no guarantee for the truth of the facts stated there The in. No doubt	 it was accompanied by a telegram and even though it was addressed to a pleader there is nothing to indicate that he was authorised to appear for the complainant. Further it is not possible to say as to the capacity of the sender. Had the telegram been received from the court or from an advocate appearing on behalf of the complainant before the High Court and addressed either to the court or pleader for the complainant different considerations would have arisen and it may have been possible to take the view that the information contained therein had the stamp of authenticity. Of course	 we do not want to lay it down here as law that every telegram purporting to be signed by an advocate or a pleader is per se guarantee of the truth of the facts stated therein and also of the fact that it was actually sent by the person whose name it bears. In order to assure the Court about these matters an affidavit from the party would be necessary. Upon the materials before us we are satisfied that the Sub Divisional Magistrate was entitled to ignore the telegram as well as the application. We	 therefore	 hold that his refusal to act on the telegram did not amount to contempt of court. We may add that the fact that on receiving a copy of the High Court 's order through the Additional District Magistrate not only were further proceedings stayed but a writ to redeliver possession was not permitted to issue. This would show clearly that there was no intention on the part either of the Sub Divisional Magistrate or the second officer to disobey the order of the High Court. The conviction as also the fine of the appellant is erroneous and accordingly set aside. Appeal allowed.

Summary:
Under an order passed by the appellant	 a Magistrate	 one G was put in possession of some property on October 14	 1955. in revision the order was set aside by the High Court on August 27	 1957	 and the opposite party S applied	 on November. 20	 1957	 to the appellant for redelivery of possession. G applied to the High Court for a review of its previous order and on November 25	 1957	 the application was admitted and an interim stay was granted of the proceedings before the appellant. On November 26	 1957	 an application bearing an illegible signature and not Supported by an affidavit was filed before the appellant indicating that the High Court had stayed the proceedings. A telegram addressed to a pleader	 not the Counsel for G	 was filed along with the application. The appellant refused to act on this application and telegram and on November 27	 1957	 he passed an order allowing the application of S for restitution. On November 28	 1957	 a copy of the order of the High Court was received and thereupon the writ for redelivery of possession was not issued. The High Court convicted the appellant for contempt of court for passing the order for restitution on November 27	 when the High Court had stayed the proceedings. The appellant appealed to the Supreme Court and impleaded the Chief justice and judges of the High Court as respondents. 320 Held	 that the appellant was not guilty of cortempt of court. Before a subordinate court can be held to be guilt	 of contempt of court it must be stablished that it had knowledge of the order of the High Court and intentionally disobeyed it. The knowledge must be obtained from a source which was either authorised or otherwise authentic. In the present case the appellant was entitled to ignore the application as well as the telegram. In a contempt matter the Chief justice and judges of the High Court should not be made parties and the title of such a proceeding should be "In re. . the alleged contemnor".