In Re: S.K. Sundaram Vs.
(Suo Motu Contempt Petition under Sections 420,406, 471 Indian Penal Code)
(Suo Motu Contempt Petition under Sections 420,406, 471 Indian Penal Code)
To Assist the Court : Mr. Harish N. Salve, Solicitor General.
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971
a) Section 2(c)- Contempt – Telegram sent by advocate to Chief Justice of India to Step down on grounds of giving wrong age – Suo-motu initiation of contempt proceedings by Supreme Court – If not maintainable – Is the CJI required to initiate the proceed-ings. Held that contempt proceedings are not to protect an indi-vidual Judge but is to protect the administration of justice from being maligned. Hence, suo-motu action is maintainable. (Paras 1,7)
b) Sections 2(c), 23 and Supreme Court of India Rules to Regulate Proceedings for contempt of Supreme Court, 1975 – Rule 10 with Constitution – Article 145 – Suo-motu contempt proceedings – Solicitor General appointed amicus to assist – Objection – Ap-pointment, if can be only at stage of charge. Held that under the Rules, no stage is fixed. Power is plenary and cannot be objected by any one. Objection repelled. (Paras 8 to 10)
c) Section 2(c) – Contempt – Telegram sent to CJI – If does not amount to publication – If doesnot tend to undermine the adminis-tration of justice – Is the action of sending telegram regarding age of CJI is bona fide – Contemnor also filing a criminal com-plaint before Magistrate, with copy of telegram appended – Good faith – Connotation. Held that there was publication and act was not in good faith: Contennor was guilty of criminal contempt and liable to be punished.
The telegraphic communication sent by the contemnor contains four biddings. The first is a command hurled at the CJI to step down forthwith from the constitutional office. The second is a threat administered to him that if the command is not obeyed forthwith, the CJI would be described as an offender having committed of-fences of cheating and falsification of records and criminal breach of trust. The third is another intimidatory epithet that he would file a writ petition for a direction that Chief Justice of India should pay a sum of Rs. 3 crore. Fourth is an imputa-tion that the CJI, A.S. Anand is a usurper in the office of Chief Justice of India. Any one of those postulates would certainly scandalise and at any rate would tend to scandalise and lower the authority of the courts as a whole, and particularly the Supreme Court of India. Chief Justice of India by virtue of his constitu-tional ranking is the head of the Indian judiciary. When threats of the above nature have been hurled at him they would unmistak-ably tend to undermine the position, majesty and dignity of the courts and the law. (Para 23)
A telegraphic message can be transmitted only after the sender gives the contents of the message to the telegraph office which would invariably be manned by the staff of that office. The message after transmission reaches the destination office which also is manned by the members of the staff. From there only the message would be despatched to the sendee. At all those levels the message is open to be read by at least those who are engaged in the process of transmission. When he filed the criminal complaint in the court in implementation of the telegraphic threat hurled to the CJI, he appended a copy of the telegram therewith. Thus, he made it public at his own volition. (Paras 24, 26)
The expression “good faith” in criminal jurisprudence has a definite connotation. Before a person proposes to make an imputa-tion on another, the author must first make an enquiry into the factum of the imputation which he proposes to make. If he does not do so he cannot claim that what he did was bona fide i.e. done in good faith. A contemnor, if he is to establish “good faith” has to say that he conducted a reasonable and proper enquiry before making an imputation that Dr. Justice A.S. Anand has usurped in the office of CJI as his year of birth was defi-nitely 1934 and that was the reason which actuated him to venture for launching the acts which he perpetrated. (Paras 28, 30, 32)
The President of India in consultation with the then Chief Jus-tice of India decided the question relating to his age as early as 16.5.1991 holding that the date of birth of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand was 1.11.1936. Once the age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand was so determined by the President of India in exercise of his con-stitutional authority, in whom alone is the power reposed to determine the question of the age of a Judge of the High Court, it was not open to this contemnor to raise this question over again and again. When the President of India resolved the ques-tion of age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand in 1991 when he was the Judge of the High Court, that too pursuant to the contemnor himself raking up the question then, he should have, as a dutiful citizen of India, realised that the said decision attained final-ity so far as the question of the age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand is concerned. (Paras 33, 35, 37)
The defiant and mala fide attitude of the contemnor is apparent from the fact that despite knowing about the actual date of birth of the Chief Justice of India and the Presidential Order dated 16.5.1991 which was read over by the Solicitor General in the open Court on 21st November, 2000 in presence of the contemnor, he chose to adhere to his false claim alleging the age of the Chief Justice of India to be the year 1934. Vilification of the high personage of Chief Justice of India would undermine the majesty of the court and dignity of this institution. (Paras 39, 40)
2. Dr. D.C. Saxena v. Hon’ble the Chief Justice of India (JT 1996 (6) SC 529)
3. Delhi Judicial Service Association, Tis Hazari Court, Delhi v. State of Gujarat and ors. (JT 1991 (3) SC 617)
4. Harbhajan Singh v. State of Punjab and anr. (AIR 1966 SC 97) (Para 31)
5. Brahma Prakash Sharma & Ors. v. State of U.P. (1953 SCR 1169) (Para 14)
1. “The contempt of court jurisdiction is not exercised to pro-tect the dignity of an individual Judge, but to protect the administration of justice from being maligned.” While dealing with this contempt proceedings we remind ourselves of the said observation made by a Constitution Bench of this Court in Supreme Court Bar Association v. Union of India & Anr. (JT 1998 (3) SC 189 = 1998 (4)) SCC 409).
2. One S.K. Sundaram, Advocate (hereinafter referred to as the contemnor) sent a telegraphic communication to Dr. Justice A.S. Anand, the Hon’ble Chief Justice of India on 3.11.2000. As the present proceedings are founded on the wordings of that communi-cation we feel it necessary to extract the material portion thereof. It reads thus:
“I call upon Shriman Dr. A.S. Anand, Hon’ble Chief Justice of India to step down from the Constitutional office of Chief Jus-tice of India forthwith, failing which I will be constrained to move the criminal court for offences under Sections 420, 406, 471 Indian Penal Code for falsification of your age, without preju-dice to the right to file a writ of quo-warranto against you and for a direction to deposit a sum of Rs.3 crores for usurping to the office of Chief Justice of India even after attaining the age of superannuation.”
3. Within three days of despatch of the said telegram the contem-nor filed a criminal complaint before the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Madras (Chennai) in which he arraigned the Chief Justice of India as an accused in the case. He produced a copy of the abovequoted telegram as one of the documents appended with the complaint. He averred in the complaint, inter alia, thus:
“The accused (CJI) after attaining superannuation usurped the office of Chief Justice of India, travelled to foreign countries, taken part in many conferences, seminars inside and outside India making appointments to the Apex Court, the High Courts and other local bodies and caused loss to the Exchequer to the tune of not less than three crores of rupees, apart from drawing salary and enjoying other perquisites and the same is estimated at not less than Rs.1.50 crores which the accused is bound to indemnify to the Government of India; and the complainant reserves the right to take proceedings for recovery of the same. The complainant states that in order to squat without any legal right or justifi-cation, but solely on the basis of giving a deliberate false age, the accused is occupying the highly respected office of Chief Justice of India. The complainant charges the accused for offenc-es under Sections 420, 406, 466, 468 and 471 of the Indian Penal Code and prays that this Hon’ble Court may be pleased to issue notice against the accused and he be dealt with according to law and thus render justice.”
4. On a note put up by the Registrar-General of the Supreme Court regarding the said telegraphic communication the matter was taken up on the judicial side and we passed an order on 7.11.2000 that prima facie we are satisfied that the contents of the said tele-gram sent by S.K. Sundaram, Advocate, amount to gross contempt of court. Hence we issued notice to Mr. S.K. Sundaram, Advocate. In the same proceedings we directed the Registry to inform Mr. Harish N. Salve, Solicitor General of India to assist the Court in these proceedings.
5. The contemnor filed a written reply to the notice issued to him. Therein he said, inter-alia, that he had sent a telegram and it was followed up with the criminal complaint filed before the Magistrate concerned. The contemnor endeavoured to justify his actions by saying that he had done what he believed to be right and fair within the bounds of his knowledge of law and language. In the succeeding paragraph the contemnor tried to defend his actions stating that he had earlier filed a writ petition on behalf of his client relating to the question of age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand and that writ petition was dismissed. We reproduce here what the contemnor has stated on that aspect in his reply:
“The contemnor submits that even as on date, the age factor of the Chief Justice stands shrouded by mystery. The confusion stands further confounded due to the documents supplied to the Press. The contemnor on dismissal of the writ appeal filed on behalf of his client, came to the conclusion that it was an uphill task and the question in hand was only a controversy. But on seeing the Publication in the Hindu on 3.11.2000 the annexure found in the book “Big Ego Small Men” he was subjected to the rudest shock of his life and became agitated. It led to the strong belief that Hon’ble Mr. Chief Justice Anand is holding the post for the past one year even after reaching the age of super-annuation and was on the verge of continuing for a further spell. He felt the whole world was reeling under his feet. The contem-nor also virtually had a heart attack. Immediately prompted by the desire for bringing this constitutional crisis to an end, he had rushed and sent the telegram. The contemnor was of the opin-ion that this was a matter, which cannot brook even a moment’s delay. As he did not find any reaction to the telegram, actuat-ed by his limited knowledge, attempted to seek redress through the criminal court by filing a private complaint before the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Court at Chennai.”
6. The contemnor raised two preliminary objections. First was that the contempt proceedings were initiated under Section 2(b)of the Contempt of Courts Act 1971 (for short “the Act”) and that refers only to civil contempt and hence the present proceedings must fail. However, when it was pointed out to the learned Counsel to the contemnor that Section 2(b) was got typed in the notice due to a typographical error and that it was corrected subsequently as Section 2(c) of the Act, learned Counsel did not pursue that objection.
7. The second objection was that “hitherto all suo motu contempts were initiated by a report of the witness to the contempt, which would be the basis on which the contemnor would be charged.” In other words, he expected Hon’ble Chief Justice of India to ini-tiate the contempt proceedings against him. As mentioned by us at the very outset, the contempt of court jurisdiction is not to protect an individual Judge, it is to protect the administration of justice from being maligned. Hence, when his expectation that the Chief Justice of India himself would have personally filed a petition against the contemnor did not fructify, he cannot ques-tion the maintainability of the action which was initiated suo motu by the court.
8. The third objection relates to the appointment of Shri Harish N. Salve, learned Solicitor General of India, as Amicus, to assist the court. The said objection was elaborated by the contemnor by stating that the Rules governing contempt proceeding envisage the appointment of Solicitor General only on the court framing the charge and when the court intends to proceed with the case. He felt that the appointment of the Solicitor General to assist the court, made in these proceedings, amounted to putting the cart before the horse.
9. There is neither any substance in nor any purpose for raising such an objection. It appears to us to be a frivolous objection. When the court appoints an Advocate as Amicus it is for the court to get assistance in the proceedings. Power of the court in making such appointment is plenary and cannot be objected to by others.
10. That apart, the said objection was raised without reference to the relevant Rules. The Supreme Court formulated Rules in exercise of the powers under Section 23 of the Contempt of Courts Act read with Article 145 of the Constitution of India. It is called “Supreme Court of India Rules to Regulate Proceedings for Contempt of the Supreme Court, 1975”. Rule 10 says: “The Court may direct the Attorney General or Solicitor General to appear and assist the Court.” Nowhere in the Rules a particular stage has been fixed for the Court to make such appointment. The power of the Court to make such appointment is thus unrestricted and it can be ordered at any stage. We therefore repel the said objec-tion.
11. On the merits, Shri Karruppan, learned Counsel for the con-temnor raised mainly three lines of arguments. First is that the action initiated against the contemnor is on the telegraphic communication sent by him to the CJI and it would not amount to publication and hence no contempt action could be taken on that premise. Second is that the contemnor bona fide believed that the year of birth of Dr. Justice Anand was 1934 and hence he was actuated by good faith in resorting to the acts done by him. Third is that sending of the telegram, even if it amounts to publication, would not tend to undermine the administration of justice and hence the proceedings are liable to be dropped.
12. Dealing with the first contention we may look at the defini-tion of “criminal contempt” in the Act. Section 2(c) contains the definition of “criminal contempt” which reads thus:
“Criminal contempt” means the publication (whether by words, spoken or written, or by signs, or by visible representation, or otherwise) of any matter or the doing of any other act whatsoever which-
(i) scandalises or tends to scandalise, or lowers or tends to lower the authority of, any court; or
(ii) prejudices, or interferes or tends to interfere with, the due course of any judicial proceedings; or
(iii) interferes or tends to interfere with, or obstructs or tends to obstruct, the administration of justice in any other manner”.
13. Criminal contempt is thus vivisected into two categories. One is publication of any matter which scandalises or tends to scan-dalise the authority of any court etc. etc. Second is the doing of any act whatsoever which scandalises or tends to scandalise the authority of any court etc. etc. If an act is not a crimi-nal contempt merely because there was no publication such act would automatically fall within the purview of the other category because the latter consists of “the doing of any other act what-soever”. The latter category is thus a residuary category so wide enough from which no act of criminal contempt can possibly escape. The common denominator for both is that it scandalises or tends to scandalise etc. etc. of any court.
14. One of the earliest occasions when this Court had to deal with criminal contempt of court was when a Constitution Bench of this Court (Patanjali Sastri, CJ, B.K.Mukherjea, S.R. Das, Ghulam Hasan, and N.H.Bhagwati, JJ) decided the case of Brahma Prakash Sharma & Ors. v. State of U.P. (1953 SCR 1169). Their Lordships referred to certain decisions of English Courts including some observations of the Privy Council and pointed out that there are primarily two considerations in such matters. In the first place, the reflection on the conduct or character of a Judge in refer-ence to the discharge of his judicial duties would not be con-tempt if such reflection is made in the exercise of the right of fair and reasonable criticism which every citizen possesses in respect of public acts done in the seat of justice. In the second place, 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 a libel on the Judge and what amounts really to contempt of court.
15. The position is that a defamatory attack on a Judge may be a libel so far as the Judge is concerned and it would be open to him to proceed against the libellor in a proper action if he so chooses. The Constitution Bench laid down the ratio thus:
“If, however, the publication of the disparaging statement is calculated to interfere with the due course of justice or proper administration of law by such court, it can be punished summarily as contempt. One is a wrong done to the Judge personally while the other is a wrong done to the public. It will be an injury to the public if it tends to create an apprehension in the minds of the people regarding the integrity, ability or fairness of the Judge or to deter actual and prospective litigants from placing complete reliance upon the court’s administration of justice, or if it is likely to cause embarrassment in the mind of the Judge himself in the discharge of his judicial duties. It is well established that it is not necessary to prove affirmatively that there has been an actual interference with the administration of justice by reason of such defamatory statement; it is enough if it is likely, or tends in any way, to interfere with the proper administration of law.”
16. In Halsbury’s Laws of England, the learned author cited various decisions of courts in England, of which one at paragraph 28 in Volume 9 is worth extracting:
“It is also a contempt to write threatening or abusive letters to a Judge in relation to the exercise of his judicial functions.”
17. In Delhi Judicial Service Association, Tis Hazari Court, Delhi v. State of Gujarat and Ors. (1991 (4) SCC 406) a three Judge Bench of this Court observed thus:
“The definition of criminal contempt is wide enough to include any act by a person which would tend to interfere with the admin-istration of justice or which would lower the authority of court. The public have a vital stake in effective and orderly adminis-tration of justice. The Court has the duty of protecting the interest of 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 vindicate the right of the public so that the administration of justice is not perverted, prejudiced, obstructed or interfered with.”
18. In Dr. D.C. Saxena v. Hon’ble the Chief Justice of India (JT 1996 (6) SC 529 = 1996 (5) SCC 216) a contemnor filed a writ petition against the then Chief Justice of India and sought a declaration that the then Chief Justice of India was unfit to hold that office and hence he should be stripped of his citizenship. He also sought for a direction to register an FIR against the then Chief Justice of India under different provisions of IPC and to prosecute him under the Prevention of Corruption Act, and lastly he prayed for a direction that the Chief Justice of India should pay a sum from his personal pocket to defray the expenses incurred by the peti-tioner. Dealing with the said acts of that individual a three Judge Bench of this Court, after holding him guilty of criminal contempt, has observed thus:
“Scandalising the court, therefore, would mean hostile criticism of Judges as Judges or judiciary. Any personal attack upon a Judge in connection with the office he holds is dealt with under law of libel or slander. Yet defamatory publication concerning the Judge as a Judge brings the court or Judges into contempt, a serious impediment to justice and an inroad on the majesty of justice. Any caricature of a Judge calculated to lower the dignity of the court would destroy, undermine or tend to under-mine public confidence in the administration of justice or the majesty of justice.”
19. Dealing with the imputation that the then Chief Justice of India deliberately and willfully failed to perform his duties the three Judge Bench further observed thus:
“It tends to lower the dignity and authority of the Court and also sows seeds for persons with similar propensity to undermine the authority of the Court or the judiciary as a whole; he crossed all boundaries of recklessness and indulged in wild accusations.”
20. In Re: Ajay Kumar Pandey (JT 1991 (3) SC 617 = 1996 (6) SCC 510) the contemnor Ajay Kumar Pandey issued a notice to two Judges of this Court on 10.8.1996 containing a warning that unless those two Judges tender unconditional apology to him and pay a sum of Rs.2000/- as compensation, besides a further handsome amount towards the mental agony inflicted on him, he would initiate criminal pro-ceedings against the Judges. He also filed criminal complaint on 23.9.1996 before the Court of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, New Delhi against the two Judges alleging offences under Sections 167, 504 and 506 of the Indian Penal Code.
21. This Court after making a survey of a number of decisions including Dr. D.C. Saxena’s case, made the following observa-tions:
“We may observe that any threat of filing a complaint against the Judge in respect of the judicial proceedings conducted by him in his own court is a positive attempt to interfere with the due course of administration of justice. In order that the Judges may fearlessly and independently act in the discharge of their judicial functions, it is necessary that they should have full liberty to act within the sphere of their activity.”
22. It is unnecessary now to multiply the citations of decisions which deal with such threats and criminal complaints made against the Judges, as the legal parameters are well neigh laid down through the decisions already referred to by us. The acts, admittedly done by the contemnor and reflected poignantly in
the telegraphic communication must
be viewed from the above legal perspective.
23. The telegraphic communication sent by the contemnor contains four biddings. The first is a command hurled at the CJI to step down forthwith from the constitutional office. The second is a threat administered to him that if the command is not obeyed forthwith, the CJI would be described as an offender having committed offences of cheating and falsification of records and criminal breach of trust. The third is another intimidatory epithet that he would file a writ petition for a direction that Chief Justice of India should pay a sum of Rs. 3 crore. Fourth is an imputation that the CJI A.S. Anand is a usurper in the office of Chief Justice of India. Any one of those postulates would certainly scandalise and at any rate would tend to scanda-lise and lower the authority of the courts as a whole, and par-ticularly the Supreme Court of India. 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 tend to undermine the position, majesty and dignity of the courts and the law.
24. In this connection we also considered the contention of the learned Counsel for the contemnor that sending such a telegram would not amount to publication. On the legal premise the con-tention is unacceptable. A telegraphic message can be transmitted only after the sender gives the contents of the message to the telegraph office which would invariably be manned by the staff of that office. The message after transmission reaches the destina-tion office which also is manned by the members of the staff. From there only the message would be despatched to the sendee. At all those levels the message is open to be read by at least those who are engaged in the process of transmission. It must be remembered that a telegraphic message is not like a letter hand-written by the sender and enveloped in a sealed cover to be opened only by the sendee for reading.
25. In this connection a reference can be made to Gatley on “Libel and Slander” under the Chapter “Publication” (Chap.6). The learned author has stated the following:
“222. How publication is effected. Publication is effected by any act on the part of the defendant which conveys the defamatory meaning of the matter to the person to whom it is communicated.
223. If for example, a person reads a defamatory letter, knowing it is defamatory, to any person other than the person defamed, there is publication of the libel. Again, if the writer of a defamatory letter hands the letter to his clerk to be copied or typewritten before it is sent to the person defamed, and the clerk does copy or typewrite the letter, there is publication of the libel to the clerk.”
26. That apart, it is not now open to the contemnor to contend that there was no publication of the telegraphic communication despatched by him to the Chief Justice of India because when he filed the criminal complaint in the court in implementation of the telegraphic threat hurled to the CJI, he appended a copy of the telegram therewith. Thus, he made it public at his own volition.
27. Now, we will consider the alternative contention of the learned Counsel for the contemnor that it was an act done in good faith as he believed honestly that the year of birth of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand was 1934.
28. The expression “good faith” in criminal jurisprudence has a definite connotation. Its import is totally different from saying that the person concerned has honestly believed the truth of what is said. Good faith is defined in Section 52 of the Indian Penal Code thus:
“Nothing is said to be done or believed in ‘good faith’ which is done or believed without due care and attention.”
29. See the language of the law in this regard. It starts in the negative tone excluding all except what is allowed to be within its amplitude. Insistence sought to be achieved through the commencing words of the definition “nothing is said to be done or believed in good faith” is that the solitary item included within the purview of the expression “good faith” is what is done with “due care and attention”. Due care denotes the degree of reason-ableness in the care sought to be exercised. In Black’s Law Dictionary, “reasonable care” is explained as “such a degree of care, precaution, or diligence as may fairly and properly be expected or required, having regard to the nature of the action, or of the subject matter and the circumstances surrounding the transaction. It is such care as an ordinary prudent person would exercise under the conditions existing at the time he is called upon to act.”
30. So before a person proposes to make an imputation on another the author must first make an enquiry into the factum of the imputation which he proposes to make. It is not enough that he does just a make-believe show for an enquiry. The enquiry ex-pected of him is of such a depth as a reasonable and prudent man would make with the genuine intention in knowing the real truth of the imputation which is up in his sleeves. If he does not do so he cannot claim that what he did was bona fide i.e. done in good faith.
31. Dealing with the expression “good faith” in relation to the exceptions enumerated under Section 499 of the Indian Penal Code (relating to the offence of defamation) this Court in Harbhajan Singh v. State of Punjab and Anr. (AIR 1966 SC 97) has stated thus:
“The element of honesty which is introduced by the definition prescribed by the General Clauses Act is not introduced by the definition of the Penal Code; and we are governed by the defini-tion prescribed by Section 52 of that Code. So, in considering the question as to whether the appellant acted in good faith in publishing his impugned statement, we have to enquire whether he acted with due care and attention. There is no doubt that the mere plea that the accused believed that what he stated was true by itself, will not sustain his case of good faith under the Ninth Exception. Simple belief or actual belief by itself is not enough. The appellant must show that the belief in his impugned statement had a rational basis and was not just a blind simple belief. That is where the element of due care and attention plays an important role. If it appears that before making the statement the accused did not show due care and attention, that would defeat his plea of good faith.”
32. Thus, a contemnor, if he is to establish “good faith” has to say that he conducted a reasonable and proper enquiry before making an imputation that Dr. Justice A.S. Anand has usurped in the office of CJI as his year of birth was definitely 1934 and that was the reason which actuated him to venture for launching the acts which he perpetrated.
33. In the above context we may point out that the contemnor himself filed a writ petition in 1991, on behalf of his client, (one Smt. Kasturi Radhakrishnan) when Dr. Justice A. S. Anand was the Chief Justice of the High Court of Madras. The contemnor in that writ petition arrayed the President of India as respondent no.1, the then Chief Justice of India as respondent no.2 and Dr. Justice A.S. Anand as respondent no.3 and prayed for a writ of mandamus directing the President of India to decide the question of age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand in conformity with Article 217(3) of the Constitution of India. Though the said writ peti-tion was dismissed by the Single Judge and the Letters Patent Appeal filed by the contemnor against dismissal of the writ petition was also dismissed by a Division Bench of the Madras High Court on 1.8.1991 the President of India in consultation with the then Chief Justice of India decided the question relat-ing to his age as early as 16.5.1991 holding that the date of birth of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand was 1.11.1936. The documents which the President of India then considered for that purpose were (1) The certificate of matriculate examination dated 1.9.1951 issued by the University of J & K in respect of Adarsh Sen Anand (the present CJI) which showed explicitly that his date of birth was 1.11.1936. (2) The passport issued to Adarsh Sen Anand (the present CJI) on 3.8.1960, also explicitly showed that his date of birth was 1.11.1936. (3) The report prepared by the then CJI in respect of the age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand, who was then a Judge of the High Court.
34. The President’s Secretariat issued an order way back on 16.5.1991, which can be extracted below:
“The petition from Shri S.K. Sundaram, Advocate, Madras, to the President on behalf of his client Shrimati Kasturi Radhakrishnan, Chairperson, Madras Citizens Progressive Council, Madras and the records have been perused and the matter considered by the Presi-dent, in consultation with the Chief Justice of India. The President has come to the conclusion that the petitions of Shri S.K. Sundaram, Advocate, Madras, in respect of the age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand of the Madras High Court, be rejected and that no inquiry as stipulated under Article 217(3) of the Constitution need be undertaken.”
35. Once the age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand was so determined by the President of India in exercise of his constitutional authori-ty, in whom alone is the power reposed to determine the question of the age of a Judge of the High Court, it was not open to this contemnor to raise this question over again and again. When this contemnor once again raised the question of the age of Dr. Jus-tice A.S. Anand, in the year 1999, the Government of India issued a press communication which, after referring to the earlier proceedings adopted by the President of India, has stated thus: “This plea was again rejected on the ground that there was no basis for reopening the matter. The decision of the President is final under Article 217 of the Constitution.”
36. When the contemnor filed a criminal complaint before the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate against the present CJI he adverted to the following as the basis for his case:
“The complainant states that in the Hindu dated 3.11.2000 at page 13 a photostat copy of the age particulars of the accused printed which categorically states that the accused had given his date of birth as 1934. But the fact remains that the accused had not chosen to give any original date of birth from the School Cer-tificate: Municipality or from the College authorities. The date of birth published in the Hindu dated 3.11.2000 clearly reveals that the accused had already attained the age of superannuation but still he is holding the high constitutional office of the Chief Justice of India in charge of Administration of nearly 21 State High Courts.”
37. What was contained in the “Hindu” dated 3.11.2000 was a statement issued by Mr. Ram Jethmalani, former Union Minister for Law, in answer to a statement issued by Mr. K. Parasaran, former Attorney General of India, in the Hindu published on 25.10.2000. We have absolutely no doubt that when the President of India resolved the question of age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand in 1991 when he was the Judge of the High Court, that too pursuant to the contemnor himself raking up the question then, he should have, as a dutiful citizen of India, realised that the said decision attained finality so far as the question of the age of Dr. Jus-tice A.S. Anand is concerned. Such decision was based on very weighty and formidable materials available to the President of India then. Thus the telegraphic communication and the criminal complaint launched by him smacks of utter lack of bona fides.
38. Well, if he is determined to feign that he would not look at any one of those materials as well as the final decision rendered by the President of India regarding the age of Dr. Justice A.S. Anand, and then decided to persistently jump into the foray with the tirade, putting himself into the outfit and chasuble of his professional insignia, it is only reminiscent of the Spanish hero Don Quixote 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 it as a case of ranting gibberish. But when he followed it up with lodging of a criminal complaint before a criminal court in which CJI was arraigned as an accused having committed offences of cheating, criminal breach of trust and falsification of records, we realised that he seriously meant to malign and undermine the dignity and authority of this Court.
39. It may be relevant to point out that the note of the Regis-trar, on the basis of which suo motu contempt was initiated against the contemnor specifically referred to and reproduced the Presidential Order dated 16.5.1991 issued under Article 217(3) of the Constitution. The defiant and mala fide attitude of the con-temnor is apparent from the fact that despite knowing about the actual date of birth of the Chief Justice of India and the Presi-dential Order dated 16.5.1991 which was read over by the Solici-tor General in the open Court on 21st November, 2000 in presence of the contemnor, he chose to adhere to his false claim alleging the age of the Chief Justice of India to be the year 1934.
40. We have, therefore, not a speck of doubt in our mind that the impugned action of the contemnor is a case of gross criminal contempt of court. It is a serious matter for this Court because vilification of the high personage of Chief Justice of India would undermine the majesty of the court and dignity of this institution. We, therefore, hold him guilty of criminal contempt and convict him thereunder. We sentence him to undergo imprison-ment for six months.
41. But then, we consider another aspect. The contemnor said that he is a heart patient. Mr. Harish N. Salve, learned Solici-tor General pleaded with us that the said statement of the con-temnor may be considered as a ground in deciding how to inflict the punishment. We therefore order that the sentence of impris-onment for six months will stand suspended for a period of one month from today. If the contemnor would give an undertaking in this Court, in the form of an affidavit, to the effect that he would not commit or even attempt to commit any act of criminal contempt, then the sentence now imposed by us would remain sus-pended for a further period of five years. But if the contemnor commits any act of criminal contempt during the said period of five years, the suspension of the sentence will stand revoked and then he will have to undergo the sentence of imprisonment for six months. Otherwise the question of revival of the sentence would depend upon the order which this Court would pass on the expiry of five years. Ordered accordingly.
42. We place on record our gratitude to Shri Harish N. Salve, learned Solicitor General of India, for the assistance he ren-dered to us in these proceedings.
43. A copy of this judgment will be forwarded to the Bar Council of Tamil Nadu and also to the Bar Council of India, for informa-tion.