Hoshjar Singh Vs. Gurbachan Singh
[1962] INSC 47 (8 February 1962)
08/02/1962 DAS, S.K.
DAS, S.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION: 1962 AIR 1089 1962 SCR Supl. (3)
127
CITATOR INFO:
E 1968 SC1348 (10)
ACT:
Contempt of Court-Issue of prohibitory
order-Knowledge aliened Disobedience Absence of official communication, if a
proper defenceSentence.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants, one a Sub-Divisional Officer
and the other a Naib Tehsildar, were entrusted with the duty of allotting land
to displaced persons. The first respondent forcibly occupied the land allotted
to B. On May 9, 1958, the first appellant ordered that B and other allottees
similarly situated would be given possession of lands allotted to them on May
20, 1958. On May 16, 1958. the first respondent and others threatened with
dispossession filed petitions in the High Court under Art. 226 of the
constitution and obtained interim stay of delivery of possession till May 19,
1958, when the petitions would come up before the Division Bench for admission.
On May 19, 1958, the Division Bench extended the operation of the stay order
until May 23, 1958. The notice of the first stay order reached the appellants
on May 19, 1958, but no notice of the second order was officially communicated
to them till May 21, 1958. It was alleged that on May 20, 1938, the appellants,
although informed of the second stay order by certain interested persons and
the Advocate for one of the parties, formally dispossessed the respondent in
disobedience of the Court's order and handed over possession of the land to B.
On the complaint of the respondent the High Court field that the .appellants
were guilty of contempt of Court and, instead of committing them for contempt,
administrated a warning as the appellants honestly believed that they were not
bound to stay delivery of possession in absence of an official communication.
The appellants appealed by special leave.
Held, (per Das and Subba Rao, JJ.)that in a
case of contempt for disobedience of a prohibitive order, as distinguished from
an order of affirmative nature, it was not necessary to show that notice of the
prohibitory order was served upon the party against whom it was granted. It
would be sufficient if it was proved that the party had notice of it aliunde.
N.Baksi v. O. K. (Thosh, A. T. R. (19.)7)
Patn. 528, referred to.
128 There may be circumstances where
officials entrusted with the carrying out of a legal order might have valid
reasons to doubt The authenticity of the order conveyed to them by interested
parties. But in the present case there could hardly be any such reasons. The
appellants had really no justification for doubting the authenticity of an
order communicated to them by an Advocate.
Held, further. that in a matter relating to
contempt of court, there cannot be both justification and apology.
M.y. shareef v. The Hon'ble Judges of the
High Court of Nagpur, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 757, referred to.
Although the appellants might have honestly
believed that they were not bound to bold their band in absence of an official
communication, that would be no defence to the charge of contempt of court, but
only a relevant consideration in awarding the sentence.
Per Daval, J.--Contempt proceedings are
criminal or quasi criminal in nature and it is essential that before any action
can be taken the accusation must be specified in character. In the instant
case, the respondent did not state that he was formally dispossessed. This
would 'be for some reason if actual posssssion had been delivered. He could not
be said to have come to court with clean hands.
Further, the finding of the High Court that
the appellants delivered possession honestly believing that they were not bound
not to do so in the absence or the official communication meant that there was
no defiance of the High Court's order. There could be no willful disobedience
since there was no belief in the existence of the order.
It may not be necessary that the party
against whom a prohibitory order was made must be served with the order, but it
should have notice of the order before it could be expected to obey. Such
notice must be from sources connected with the court passing the order. The
alleged knowledge of the party cannot be made, to depend on the veracity of the
witnesses examined by the party praying for action.
In re Bryant L.R (1987 6) 4 Ch.D. 98. In Ex
Parte Langly, Exparte Smith. In re Bishop L. R. (1879) 13 Ch. D. 110 and The
Seraglio. L. R. (1885) 10 P. D. 120, discussed.
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 187 of 1959.
129 Appeal by special leave from the judgment
and order dated August 18, 1958, of the Punjab, High Court inCriminal Original
No. 20 of 1958.
Gopal Singh and P. D. Menon, for the
appellants. R. S. Gheba, for respondent No. 1.
1962. February 8. The Judgment of Das and
Subba Rao, JJ, was delivered by Das, J., Dayal, J. delivered a separate
judgment.
S.K. DAS, J.-This is an appeal by special
leave from the judgment and order of the Punjab High Court dated August 18,
1958 by which the said Court found the two appellants guilty of contempt of
court and. instead of committing them for such contempt, administered a warning
to them and directed them to pay Rs. 50/each as costs of the respondent
Gurbachan Singh.
The two appellants before us bear the same
name. One of them was the Sub Divisional Officer, Sirsa, District Hisear and
the other Naib Tehsildarcum-Managing Officer, Sirsa, same district at the
relevant time. In this judgment we shall call the Sub Divisional Officer as the
first appellant and the Naib Tehsildar as the second appellant. The facts
alleged against the appellants were these. One Budh Singh, a displaced person,
was allotted some land in village Jagmalera, Tehsil Sirsa, District Hissar. The
land allotted to Budh Singh was, it was stated by the appellants, forcibly
occupied by the respondent Gurbachan Singh. The respondent was not a legitimate
allottee and the appellants, who were concerned in their official capacity with
the allotment and management of land for displaced persons, were naturally anxious
to oust the respondent and deliver possession to Budh Singh of the land
allotted to him. On May 9. 1958 appellant No. 1 made an order that Budh Singh
and other allottees like him would be given possession' of the land, allotted
to them. The date fixed for such 130 delivery of possession was May 20, 1958.
On May 16, 1958 Gurbachan Singh and a number of other persons who were
similarly threatened with dispossession filed petitions to the High Court under
Art. 226 of the Constitution challenging the legality of the action threatened
against them. These petitions were put up before the learned Chief Justice on
that very day, namely, May 16, 1958, when he issued an order staying delivery
of possession till May 19, 1958, when the petitions were to come up for admission
before a Division Bench, On May 19, 1958, the Division Bench extended the
operation of the stay order until May 23, 1958.
In the High Court the appellants did not
dispute that the first order staying delivery of possession up to May 19, 1958
was communicated to them on May 19, 1958 on which date the notice from the High
Court reached Sirsa. It appears that a notice of the second order extending the
stay of delivery possession till May 23, 1958, was not officially communicated
to the appellants till May 21, 1958. The allegation on behalf of the respondent
was that on May 20, 1958, which was the relevant date, the two appellants were
informed by certain interested persons, to whom we shall presently refer, that
in extension of the stay order up to May 23, 1958, had been granted by the High
Court' In spite of this information, however, the second appellant, in
consultation with and under instruction, of the first appellants formally
dispossessed the respondent and handed over possession of the land to Budh
Singh.
In these circumstances the allegation on
behalf of the respondent was that the two appellants bad committed contempt of
court by disobeying the order of the, High Court staving delivery of possession
till May 23. 1958. The respondent made an application, to the High (court, for
taking suitable action against the two appellants. This application was made,
oil May 27, 1958. On this application the High Court 131 issued notice and
after hearing the parties, Falshaw, J. (as he then was) who dealt with the
application came to the conclusion that the two appellants were aware of the
order of the High Court extending the operation of the stay order and yet they
disobeyed the said order by dispossessing the respondent and handing over
possession to Budh Singh. He held them guilty of contempt of court, but at the
same time expressed the opinion that the appellants honestly believed that they
were not bound to hold their hands in the absence of an official communication
of the 'High Court's order extending the operation of the stay order. In this
view of the matter, the learned Judge instead of committing the two appellants
for contempt of court merely administered a warning to them and directed them
to pay the costs of the respondent.
On behalf of the, appellants several points
have been urged in support of their contention that they were not guilty of
contempt of court. Firstly, it has been contended that on the materials on the
record, the High Court was wrong in proceeding on the footing that the two appellants
were informed by the interested parties that an extension of the stay order up
to May 23, 1958, had been granted in the case of the respondent. It has been
argued before us that on May 20, 1958, the appellants did not know that the
stay order had been extended till May 23, 1958, in the writ petition filed on
behalf of the respondent Gurbachan Singh, though in another case of Didar Singh
relating to allotted land in the same village, the appellants were informed by
an advocate that the stay order had been extended till May 23, 1958. It has
been contended before us that in the absence of positive evidence fixing the
two appellants with knowledge of the extension of the stay order in the
particular case of the respondent, the High Court was wrong in finding that the
two appellants had willfully disobeyed the order of the High Court.
132 In order to appreciate this argument
urged on behalf of the appellants it is necessary to state some more facts. In
para. 17 of the application which the respondent made to the High Court for
taking necessary action against the appellants for alleged contempt of court,
it was stated that at 6-30 a.m. on May 20, 1958, two persons named Bir Singh
and Avtar Singh went personally to the house of appellant No. 2 and told him that
the stay order had been extended by the High Court and that they had been
informed by the advocate on telephone. This allegation was supported by an
affidavit made on behalf of the respondent. Appellant No.
2, however, denied this allegation in his counter
affidavit.
In paras. 18, 19 and 20 of his petition the
respondent stated that at about 7-40 a.m. on May 20, 1958 a written application
was filed before appellant No. 2 in which it was stated that the High Court had
stayed delivery of possession till May 23, 1958; this application was drafted
by an advocate named Ganga Bishan, who acted on behalf of Didar Singh.
The application was presented to appellant
No. 2 in presence of two other persons named Mastan Singh and Teja Singh.
Thereafter, an affidavit was also made on
behalf of Didar Singh. This affidavit was presented to appellant No. 2 'at
about 8.15 a.m. Thereafter, appellant No. 2 went in a 'jeep' to appellant No. 1
in order to consult the latter.
Appellant No. 2 saw appellant No. 1 in the
latter's court room. He came out within a few minutes, and told Ganga Bishan
that the affidavit should be presented to appellant No. 1. Thereupon, another
application was written on behalf of Didar Singh and this was presented to
appellant No. 1 supported by the affidavit already made on behalf of Didar
Singh. Appellant No. 1 did not, however, pass necessary orders on the
application till about 10 a.m., when he made an endorsement to the effect that
the Tehsildar, Sirsa, should take 133 necessary action, When the application
was taken to the Tehsildar, he noted on it that the Naib Tehsildar, namely,
appellant No. 2 had already left for the village to deliver possession.
Thereupon Avtar Singh, Bir Singh, Didar Singh and Mastan Singh went to village
Jagmalera where the lands lay and again met appellant No. 2. The application
made to appellant No. 1 with his orders thereon was shown to appellant No. 2.
It was alleged that appellant No.2 was also shown the wording of the stay order
as received by_ the party through a special messenger. Appellant No. 2,
however, replied that he had been ordered to dispossess the respondent and
insisted on his proceeding with the dispossession.
In his counter-affidavit appellant No. 2
admitted that on May 20, 1958 an application was presented to him by Didar
Singh at about 7-40 a.m. He further admitted that an affidavit in support of
the application was also presented to him. Appellant No. 2 then made the
following significant statements.
"On receipt of these documents I told
Shri Didar Singh that I could not act on the application and suspend the
proceedings for dispossession unless I was shown the order of stay alleged to
have been made by the High Court." Appellant No. 2 explained his conduct
by referring to the background of quarrel and enmity between the parties which
had led to several criminal cases between them. Appellant No. 2 said in his
counter affidavit that with this background of enmity he felt that though Didar
Singh was an interested party, it would not be safe to accept the statements of
facts contained in the application or affidavit made on behalf of Didar Singh
at their face value.
Appellant No. 2 also admitted that he
consulted appellant No. 1, who also advised that it would not 134 be safe, to
act on the statements made in the application or affidavit. Appellant No. 2
also admitted that Ganga Bishan Advocate, presented the applications to him. He
also admitted that the application which was filed by Ganga Bishan to appellant
No. 1 was received back with the orders of appellant No. 1 thereon at about 6
p.m. on May 20, 1958, while appellant No. 2 was returning from the village.
Appellant No. 2 denied that he was shown the
wording of the stay order of the High Court. He admitted, however, that he was
asked not to proceed with delivery of possession on account of the High Court.
Appellant No. 1. also made similar statements in his counter-affidavit. He
admitted that at about 9 a. m. on May 20, 1958 an application supported by
affidavit was made to him on behalf of Didar Singh and be then endorsed the
application to the Tehsildar for necessary action.
Unfortunately, the applications which were
made to appellants 1 and 2 have not been filed and we do not know the precise
contents of the two applications. We have, however, affidavits made on behalf
of Didar Singh, Teja Singh, Ganga Bisban and Avtar Singh. The learned Advocate
for the parties have taken us through those affidavits. The argument presented
on behalf of the appellants is that though they knew of the extension of the
stay order in Didar Singh's case by reason of the application and affidavit
filed on his behalf before them, they did not know that a similar extension of
the stay order had been granted by the High Court in the other cases as well.
This argument has been pressed before us with some vehemence and we proceed now
to consider it. It is worthy of note that such an argument which goes to the
very root of the matter was not presented to the High Court. It is not disputed
that ",disobedience of a judgment or order requiring a person to do any
act other than the payment of money, or to 135 abstain from doing anything is a
contempt of court punishable by attachment or committal" ; but
disobedience, it is argued, if it is to be punishable as a contempt, must be willful
; in other words, the party against whom a proceeding by way of contempt is
taken must know that order before, it can be said that he has disobeyed it. It
is somewhat surprising that if the stand of the appellants was that they did
not know of the order made by the High Court on May 19, 1958, in the
respondent's case, such a point was not urged in the High Court. Falshaw, J.,
(as he then was) said in his judgement that it was not in dispute before him
that on the morning of May 20, 1958, both the appellants were informed that an
extension of the stay order upto May, 23, 1958, had been granted by the High
Court. This statement of the learned Judge must have reference to the case of
the respondent which he was considering. Apart, however, from the point that,
such an argument on behalf of the two appellants was not presented in the High
Court, it appears to us that on the affidavits made available to the Court, the
only reasonable inference is that though the application and the affidavit were
made on behalf of Didar Singh, both the appellants were informed that the High
Court had granted an extension of the stay order in all 4 he cases. It is
admitted on both sides that there were three cases in which delivery of
possession had to be given of lands in village Jagmalera. It is also not
seriously in dispute that on May 9, 1958, appellant No. 1 made an order
directing that delivery of possession should be given to the allottees of their
respective areas and persons in unauthorised occupation would be dispossessed.
On May 16, 1958 three writ petitions were made which were placed before the
Chief Justice who made an interim order of stay lasting for three days. On May
19, 1958 the writ petitions were placed before a Division Bench for admission
and that Bench 136 extended the stay order till May 23, 1958. These are the
admitted facts. It is also, admitted that the respondent Gurbachan Singh did
not appear before the appellants on May 20, 1958, a fact which has been
emphasised by the learned Advocate for the appellants. Lot us, however, see
what the affidavits filed in the case show. Teja Singh said in his affidavit
that Harbans Singh Gujral, who was the advocate acting on behalf of the
petitioners in all the, cases, told him on the telephone on May 19, 1958 that
the High Court had extended the stay order in all the cases upto May 23, 1958.
Teja Singh accompanied Didar Singh, Ganga
Bishan, Mastan Singh and others to the village on May 20, 1958, and he said
that an application was made to appellant No. 2 in which it was stated that the
stay order had been extended by the High Court. The affidavit of Ganga Bishan
is very significant in this connection. He said that on May 20, 1958, he
drafted the application which was later made to appellant No. 2.
Ganga Bishan said that it was stated to
appellant No. 2 that the stay order made by the High Court related to all the
cases of village Jagmalera. He further said that appellant No. 2 was informed
that stay of delivery of possession had been extended by the High Court upto
May 23, 1958 ; appellant No. 2, however, wanted to be ,shown the order of the
High Court ; thereupon an affidavit of Didar Singh to the effect that the stay
order had been extended by the High Court upto May 23, 1958, was filed. Ganga
Bishan also said that appellant No. 1 was also informed that the High Court had
extended the stay order upto May 23, 1958.
The affidavits made on behalf of Didar Singh
and Avtar Singh were also to the same effect. In view of these affidavits we
find it very difficult to hold that the. appellants knew of the stay 'order
only in Didar Singh's case but did not know of the stay order in the other
oases. It is worthy of note here that 137 in the counter-affidavits filed on
behalf of the appellants the point was made on their behalf was that they
considered it unsafe to rely on the applications and affidavits made, in view
of the background of enmity between the parties.
The two appellants did not say in their
counter affidavits that they came to know of the stay order only in one case
and not in the others such a point does not appear to have been specifically
made on behalf of the appellants at any stage of the proceedings in the High
Court. Therefore, we have come to the conclusion that the appellants knew of
the order of the High Court in all the cases and it is not correct to say that
the appellants knew of the order of the High Court only in one case and not in
the others. We find it difficult to believe that Ganga Bishan would not tell
the appellants that the High Court had extended the stay order in all the three
cases of the village Ganga Bishan says in his affidavit that he did tell the
appellants of the extension of the stay order in all the three cases and there
was no counter-affidavits on behalf of the appellants traversing the statements
made by Ganga Bishan. We must, therefore, overrule the first point urged on
behalf of the appellants.
The second point which has been urged on
behalf of the appellants is that in the absence of an official communication of
the order, they were justified in not acting on what they came to know from
interested parties and their advocate. The learned Advocate for the appellants
has submitted that in a case of this nature, before willful disobedience of the
order of the High Court could be imputed against the appellants, it was legally
essential that the order should be officially communicated or served on the
appellants and in the absence of such communication or service, the proceeding
for contempt must fail. We are unable to accept this contention as correct.
138 The legal position has been very
succinctly put by Oswald:
"The judgment or order should be served
on the party personally, except in the following cases: (1) prohibitive orders,
the drawing up of which is not completed; (2) orders embodying an undertaking
to do an act by a named day; (3) orders to answer interrogatories or for
discovery or inspection of documents: (4) where an order for substituted
service has been made; (5) where the respondent has evaded service of the order......
In order to justify committal for breach of a
prohibitive order it is not necessary that the order should have been served
upon the party against whom it has been 'granted, if it be proved that he had
notice of the order aliunde, as by telegram. or newspaper report, or otherwise,
and knew that it was intended to be enforced, or if he consented to the order,
or if he was present in Court when the order was pronounced., or when the
motion was made, although he left before the order was pronounced." (Oswald's
Contempt of Court, 3rd Edn. pp. 199 and 203). The order in the present case was
a prohibitory order and if the appellants knew that the High Court had
prohibited delivery of possession till May 23, 1958, it was undoubtedly the
duty of the appellants to carry out that order. We do not think that the
appellants can take up the plea that as the order had not been officially
communicated to them, they were at liberty to ignore it. The appellants were
officers whose duty it was to uphold the law and if they knew that a valid
order had been made by the High Court staying delivery of possession, they
disobeyed that order at their peril. There may be circumstances where officials
139 entrusted with the duty of carrying out a legal order may have valid reasons
to doubt the authenticity of the order conveyed to them by interested parties
and in those circumstances it may be said that there was no willful
disobedience of the order made. We do not, however, think that the appellants
in the present case had any real justification for doubting the authenticity of
the order made by the High Court, even though the order had not been officially
communicated to them. The appellants knew-that an interim order of stay had
been made by the High Court on May 16, 1958; that order was in force till May
19, 1958.
Thereafter the appellants were informed not
merely by interested parties but by an Advocate, who was an officer of the
Court, that the High Court had extended the stay order upto May 23, 1958. A
formal application supported by an affidavit was made to that effect. Despite
the reason alleged by the appellants that there was a background of enmity
between the parties, we do not think that the appellants have given any good
reasons on which they were entitled to doubt the authenticity of the order
communicated to them by Ganga Bishan, an Advocate acting on behalf of Didar
Singh. It is worthy of note that the appellants did not deliver possession in
Didar Singh's case. They were content with delivering possession in the case of
the respondent only. Taking into considerations all these, circumstances we are
satisfied that there was in this case in the eye of the law, a willful
disobedience of the order of the High Court staying delivery of possession,
even though the appellants might have wrongly but honestly believed that it was
not safe to act on the information given to them by Ganga Bishan.
The learned Advocate for the appellants has
referred us to a number of decisions, English and Indian, relating to mandatory
orders, or 140 orders for the payment of money, or orders which require under
the rules of the Court to be served in particular manner. In re: Holt (an
Infant)(1); Ex-parte Lingley (2);
In re: Tuck March v. Loosemore (3); Dwijendra
Krishan Datta v. Surendra, Nath Nag Choudhury (4): and Gordon v. Gordon (5). In
those decisions it was held that it was necessary to have the order properly
served before charging a person with disobedience of it. We do not think that
those decisions are in point, because we are dealing with a prohibitory order
and in the matter of a prohibitory order it is well-settled that it is not
necessary that the order should have been served upon the party against whom it
has been granted in order to justify committal for breach of such an order, provided
it is proved that the person complained against had notice of the order
aliunde. The distinction between prohibitory orders and orders of an
affirmative nature was adverted to in N. Baksi v. O. K. Ghosh (6) and a large
number of decisions were referred to in support of the rule that in respect of
a prohibitory order, service of the order was not essential for founding an
action in contempt. We do not think that any useful purpose will be served by
examining those decisions over again. We are content to adopt for the purposes
of this case the rule as succinctly put by Oswald and quoted earlier in this
judgment.
Lastly our attention has been, drawn to the
statements made by the respondent in para. 22 of his petition to the effect
that though appellant No. 2 made a report about delivery of possession in
respect of the land of the respondent, no actual dispossession could be made
because cotton crop was standing on the land and a large number of persons had
gathered there. The argument before us is that if, according to the respondent
(1) (1879) 11 Ch. D. 168.
(3) (1906) 1 Ch. 692.
(5), (1946) 1 AU E.R. 246.
(2) (1879) 13 Ch. D. 110.
(4) A.I.R. 1927 Calcutta 548.
(6) A.I.R. 1957 Patna 528, 141 himself, no
actual dispossession took place then this is not a fit case in which action for
contempt should be taken against the appellants. It has been submitted on
behalf of the appellants that contempt proceedings are of an extraordinary
nature and the Court should be reluctant to exercise its extraordinary power if
the action complained of is of a slight or trifling nature and does not cause
any substantial loss or prejudice to the complainant. It has been argued that
if the respondent himself said that-he had not been actually dispossessed, then
there was no reason for proceeding against the appellants for contempt of
court.
Secondly, it is pointed out that the
appellants offered an apology in case the High Court held that they should have
taken action on the information given to them by Ganga Bishan. As to the second
submission, it is enough to point out that in a matter relating to contempt of
court, there cannotbe both justification and apology, (See M. Y.Shareef v. The
Hon'ble Judges of the High Courtof Nagpur (1). As to the first submission wemay
draw attention to the statements of appellant No. 2 in para. 21 of his
affidavit in which he said that so far as the respondent's land was concerned,
possession was delivered to Budh Singh.
This statement of appellant No. 2 clearly
shows that the two appellants took the very action which was prohibited by the
High Court by its order dated May 19, 1958. We are, therefore, unable to accept
the submission that there was no foundation for taking action against the
appellants for contempt of court. This disposes of all the points urged on
behalf of the appellants.
As to the punishment imposed, the learned
Judge took into consideration that the appellants wrongly but honestly might
have believed that they were not bound to hold their hands in the absence of an
official communication of the order (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 757.
142 of the High Court. That belief afforded
no defence to the charge of contempt of court, but was a consideration relevant
to the sentence.. In our opinion, there are no grounds for interference with
the order of the High Court.
The appeal accordingly fails and is
dismissed.
RAGHUBAR DAYAL, J.-I have bad the privilege
of perusing the, Judgment of my learned brother S. K. Das, J., but regret My
inability to hold that the appellants committed contempt of Court.
I need not repeat the facts set out in the
majority judgment.
No conviction for committing contempt of
Court can be based on the finding of the High Court that the appellants
delivered possession believing that they were not bound to hold their hands in
the absence of the official communication of the High Court's order. The
finding means that they delivered possession not in defiance of the High
Court's order, but because they honestly thought that in the absence of the
official communication of the order, they could not act on the supposition that
the original stay order, which was to be effective up to May 19, 1958,
continued to be effective. If in their honest opinion no stay order existed at
the time, their conduct cannot be said to amount to willful disobedience of the
High Court's order extending the stay order up to May 23, 1958. No question of
willful disobedience can arise when the very existence of the order is not
believed. The question of obedience or disobedience arises only after the party
knows of the order and if the party does not know the order, no such question
can arise.
The allegations in the petition by the first
respondents filed in the High Court, did not make out that the appellants
delivered possession, the 143 delivery of which had been stayed upto May 23,
1958, by the High Court by its order dated May 19, 1958. This is clear from the
statements in paragraphs 21 and 22 of the petition.
They are :
" 21. However when actually he attempted
to start the work of dispossession, he found that a large number of people were
collected at the spot and apprehending that the police force already taken to
the spot might not be sufficient to cope up with the situation if some trouble
arose, he withdrew from the spot.
22.That although inthe land possessed by the
petitioner in Jag Malera, cotton crop was standing in some of the fields and no
proceedings for dispossession of the petitioner could be taken by respondent
No. 2 on account of the presence of a large number of persons at the spot,
respondent No. 2, however, madesome report later on that the petitioner hadbeen
actuary dispossessed of his lands and the same was given over to Budh Singh at
the spot. In the other cases, however, he made a report that be could not
deliver possession on account of the presence of a mob at the spot and that the
police force with him being too small, was not sure to cope up with the
situation." These paragraphs can only mean that appellant No. 2 attempted
to start the work of dispossession, but did not proceed further, and withdrew
from the spot in view of an apprehension of breach of peace and that be made
some report of a fictitious kind to the effect that the petitioner had been
actually dispossessed of his land and possession had been given over to Budh
Singh at the spot. It Was emphasized that actual possession could not have be
on delivered on account of the standing cotton crop. It follows that even on
the statements 144 of the first respondent in his petition for action against
the appellants for contempt of Court, there was no assertion that they had
disobeyed the stay order by delivering possession to Budh Singh. In the absence
of such an assertion, no action could have been taken or ought to have been
taken against the appellants.
Contempt proceedings are criminal or
quasi-criminal proceedings. It is essential that the accusation made against
the opposite party by the petitioner for taking action against him should be
precise and should ,clearly make out that the opposite party had, by some
specific act, committed contempt of Court. the conviction of the opposite party
must rest on the facts alleged and proved by the petitioner. A conviction may
also rest on the sole admission of the alleged condemner if that establishes
his committing contempt of Court, but, in that case, his admission should be
taken as a whole and not that its incriminating part be taken out of the
context and made the basis for conviction.
It is immaterial that appellant No. 2 stated
in his reply that actual possession of the land in the unauthorised possession
of the first respondent was delivered to Budh Singh and that at the time no
cotton crop was standing and that the respondent was adopting a contradictory
position.
The High Court did not give any finding on
this question.
It simply said in its judgment, due to the
misreading of the allegations in the petition.
"In spite of this fact it is alleged
that in the village the Naib Tehsildar formally dispossessed' the present
petitioner and handed over his land to one Budh Singh..." The respondent
made no statement about the Naib Tehsildar formally dispossessing him and
banding over the land to Budh Singh.
145 A clear-cut finding on the disputed fact
whether actual possession had been delivered or not is not to be given in
summery proceedings for contempt of Court.
If actual possession had been delivered to
Budh Singh, there must have been some good reason for the respondent not to
admit it in his petition and that can only be that in any future dispute where
the question of possession of the respondent or of the Budh Singh be in
question, the respondent be not confronted with his own admission-in his
petition and affidavit accompanying it. It may be mentioned that identical
statements where made in paragaraphs 21 and 22 of the affidavit. There might be
some other reason for the respondent not to admit the delivery of possession,
but it is clear that the respondent did not come to Court with clean hands and,
in the circumstances, proceedings for contempt of Court on his application was
wrong exercise of discretion. However, the main fact remains that no allegation
was made in the petition that the respondents had delivered possession.
The appellants were not served, by the time
the delivery of possession may be supposed to have taken place, with the order
of the High Court extending the stay, order up to May 23, 1958. The telegram
sent by the counsel of Gurbachan Singh from Chandigarh, reached the first
appellant, the Sub Divisional Officer, at 1-30 p.m., on May 10, 1958, and any
order of his on it did not reach appellant No. 2 till 6 p.m., by which time,
according to him, possession had been delivered. The formal stay order from the
High Court reached much later.
It may not be necessary to serve prohibitive
order on the party against whom it is granted, but that party must have notice
of the order before it can be expected to obey it can be committed for contempt
of Court for disobeying it. This is what 146 Oswald states at page 203 of his
book on 'Contempt of Court', III Edition. He says:
"In order to justify committal for
breach of a prohibitive order it is not necessary that the order should have
been server upon the party against whom it has been granted, if it be proved
that he had notice of the order aliunde, as by telegram, or newspaper report,
or otherwise,...." It would appear from the later part of the observation
that it was sufficient that the party concerned gets notice of the prohibitive
order by any means, specially by telegram or newspaper report. is however not
what was held in the cases referred to by Oswald in support of his statement.
Notice to the party concerned, of the prohibitive order, in those cases was
communicated by the Court through its regular procedure or by a Solicitor of
the Court.
In re Bryant (1) the parties concerned wet,(,
informed by the solicitor of the judgment-debtor that the debtor had filed a
liquidation petition in the London Bankruptcy Court and that application would
be made at the next sitting of the Court to restrain further proceedings under
the execution. The auctioneer concerned received a telegram from Bryant's
solicitors referring to the parties to the case and stating that injunction
staying sale and further proceedings Lad been granted that morning and that the
order would be served as soon as possible. The auctioneer, how ever, proceeded
with the sale. It was in these circumstances that the parties concerned were
held to have disobeyed the order of the Court and to have committed its
contempt. The solicitor was an officer of the Court.
This case is no authority for the proposition
that information conveyed to the party concerned (1) I.R. (1876) 4 Ch. D. 98
147 by telegram from a person who is not an officer of the Court would amount
to the requisite notice of the prohibitive order by the party concerned.
In Ex parte Langley, Ex parte Smith, In re
Bishop (1) the facts were as follows. Bishop filed a liquidation petition in
the London Bankruptcy Court on August 6, 1879. The same day the Court passed an
order restraining until the 8th of September, further proceedings in several
actions which had been commenced against the debtor and, inter alia restraining
the sheriff of Kent, his officers and servants, from taking any further
proceedings in an action which had been brought against the debtor by Messrs.
Wade and Thurston. The sheriff had fixed the sale of the attached furniture of
the debtor on the 6th of August, having adjourned it from the 5th in order to
afford an opportunity to the debtor to pay the debt. Smith was he sheriff's
officer who was in charge of the sale. His assistant, Emerson and Langley, an
auctioneer, were to carry out the sale. Emerson had directions to start the
sale at 11 'clock and not a moment later. Langley, however, postponed the same
to 12 o'clock, on his own responsibility, due to paucity of persons present.
Langley received a telegram from one Matthews, the manager of the hotel in
which the debtor was carrying on business as a licensed victualer, saying:
"Smith gone to Canterbury. You had better
stop Bale on your own account, as I know it is all right." The auctioneer
was also informed by the debtor's son and another person between 11 and 12
o'clock that the debtor would come down by the mid-day train from London with
the money to pay the execution debt. The sale was again put off to 1 o'clock
when it did start. After a few lots had been sold, Emmerson received a telegram
purporting to be (1) L.R. (1979) 13.Ch. D. 110 148 from Learyod & Co.,
Solicitors, London, to the sheriff's office in possession stating:
"Take notice, the London Court of
Bankruptoy has made an order restraining you from selling or taking any further
proceedings in the action against Bishop".
The telegram was shown to Lanoley who thought
it to be a ruse on the part of the debtor but was prepared to stop the sale
temporarily till instructions from Smith. Emmerson sent a telegram to Smith
saying:
"Langley just received telegram to stop
sale.
Shall we proceed? People are waiting your
reply." Smith's reply was:
"If telegram to Langley does not state
Defendant filed petition or money paid, sell at once"' The sale thereafter
proceeded. Langley and Smith were committed for contempt by Bacon C J. But on
appeal they were acquitted. James, L. J., said at page 116:
"With regard to the sheriff's office, he
does not seem to have been a party to the alleged contempt at all, because I do
not think the mere fact of the telegram is sufficient to bring home to him any
Participation in the supposed contempt." He further said at page 117, in
considering the case of the auctioneer.
"It appears. to me that he might have
taken some steps (though I do not know what steps I should have taken if I bad
been in his position) to ascertain whether an order had really been made by the
Court. Perhaps some auctioneers would have done so. But he has taken upon
himself to swear positively (and he 149 has not been cross-examined) that which
Lord Eldon, in Kimpton v. Eve (1813 2 V. & B. 349== 35 E.R. 352), field to
be sufficient. He swears that he did not believe that there had been any
proceedings whatever in the Bankruptcy Court it, or that any such order had
been made. A person in I such a position, and a sheriff's officer is placed in
great difficulty upon receiving a telegram of this kind, knowing nothing at all
of the person who may have gone to the post office and sent it, a telegram
which might just as well have been sent by the debtor or by Matthews, or anyone
else on behalf of the debtor, in the name of Messrs. Learoyd. I am very far
from saying that notice of an order cannot be given by telegram. But it is very
difficult to commit for contempt where a man says that which the auctioneer
does here, under circumstances which certainly give color to his assertion, and
there is some amount of probability that he may, having regard to what had
already taken place that way, not have believed that any order had been made by
the Court, and have had no suspicion whatever that he was disobeying any order
of the Court when he continued the sale." The singer, L. J., said at p.
119:
I in no way dissent from the proposition laid
down by him(Bacon, C.J.) in this case and also in In re Bryant (supra), that,
under certain circumstances, a telegram may constitute such a notice of an
order of a Court as to make a person who disregards the notice and acts in
contravention of the order, liable for the consequences of a contempt of
Court.....But the question in each case, and depending upon the particular
circumstances of the case must be or was there or was there not such a notice
given to the person who is charged with 150 contempt of Court that you can
infer from the facts that he had notice in fact of the order which had been
made? And, in a matter of this kind, bearing in mind that the liberty of the
subject is to-be affected, I think that those who assert that there was such a
notice ought to prove it beyond reasonable doubt." He further stated at
page 121:
"But, on the other hand, he has
positively sworn that, coupling what had happened before with the telegram, he
bona fide believed that he was not bound to act upon the telegram which he had
received, and that there had been no proceedings which would justify him in
stopping the sale. He has not been cross examined and nothing has been proved
to show that his affidavit is not true. Under such circumstances the
observations of Lord Eldon, in Kimpton v. Eve (supra) seem to me pertinent and
material, and I may add that in a case like the present the benefit of any
doubt ought to be given to the person charged with contempt." The further
remarks of James L. J., at page 122 point out the proper way of communicating a
notice about injunction orders to the parties concerned by the solicitor of the
party obtaining the order from the Court. He says:
"I wish to add this, that when parties
who .obtain an injunction wish to communicate it by telegram, there is a very
obvious mode by which they can prevent difficulties like this. If the
solicitor, instead of telegraphing to the sheriff's office, were to telegraph
to some solicitor as his agent at the place, and tell him to go and give notice
of the order, then the person affected would have the responsibility 151 of an
officer of the Court for what he was doing." This case well illustrates
the difficulties of the parties against whom a prohibitive order is made when
they are informed by a telegram about these orders having been made by the
Court oven when the telegram was from a solicitor of the Court. The
difficulties would be still greater if the telegram was one from a; person who
is not a solicitor and therefore an officer of the Court.
In The Seraglio(1) notice of the issue of
warrant which was subsequently disobeyed was sent by telegram by the marshal to
the customhouse officer at Plymouth who went on board the seraglio to inform
those in charge of the ship. The master of the Seraglio, however by the owner's
order, left Plymouth with the custom-house officer onboard. The warrant was
served on him subsequently. Sir James Hannon said at page 121.
"It must be understood that a litigant
cannot be disregard a notice sent to him by telegraph by an officer of the
Court." In none of the cases referred to, a party 1s said to have received
information of the Court's injunction order through any source having no
connection with the court Passing the order. I would not like an extension if
this, practice of holding a person guilty of contempt even though he is not
served with the order, to cases in which his alleged knowledge of the order is
dependent on the veracity of the witnesses examined by a party praying for
action against the other. Conviction for contempt of Court must depend on
unimpeachable evidence of the knowledge of the alleged contemner about the
order said to have been disobeyed.
In support of the note that it could be proved
that the party proceeded against had notice of the (1) L.R. (1885) 10 P.D. 120.
152 order by newspaper report or otherwise,
Oswald has referred to Daniell's Chancery Practice, Vol'. 1, Edition 7, page
1368. That edition is not available, but in the 8th edition of that book, Vol.
II, at page 1413, is noted the practice in urgent cases thus :
"In such (urgent) cases, the practice is
to serve the party enjoined personally with notice in writing that the
injunction has been granted, and that the order will be drawn up and served as
soon as it can be passed through the offices ; or else to procure a transcript
of the minutes of the order signed by the Registrar, and to serve the same
personally by delivering a copy of it, showing at the same time the original
transcript so signed ; and either the notice or the copy of the minutes will be
sufficient to render the defendant or other person enjoined guilty of a
contempt, if he acts in opposition to the injunction." I do not find any
reference that knowledge of the party proceeded against through a newspaper
report or otherwise, and not through Court, has been considered sufficient for
contempt proceedings.
Again, at page 1419, have been mentioned
certain other means through which the party proceeded against could have been
informed of the injunction order. They are practically those summarized in
Oswald's note.
In the appeal before us, I am not satisfied
that the appellants had been informed that the High Court had passed an order
staying the delivery of possession in proceedings on the writ petition filed by
respondent Gurbachan Singh.
The communication made to the appellants
about the stay order of the High Court is said to be through the applications
and affidavit presented by Didar Singh to the appellants on May 20, 1958, and
through a 153 chit said to have come from the advocate of the High Court
regarding the injunction order.
Didar Singh had put in another writ petition
against his threatened dispossession by appellant No. 1 through appellant No.
2. There is said to have been' a third writ petition by another person praying
for similar relief. All these petitions were separately dealt with by the High
Court. Separate stay orders were passed on them. These five affidavits, in view
of their contents, are not sufficient to prove that the appellants had been
informed through these documents that the High Court had extended the stay
orders in all the three cases. viz., the cases on the writ applications of
Gurbachan Singh, Didar Singh and another third person. No statement is made in
any of the affidavits that the applications and affidavits presented to the
appellants mentioned that the High Court had stayed the delivery of possession
in all the three cases. It is not stated by Didar Singh and Mastan Singh what
was written on the chit sent by the advocate of the High Court and whether that
chit related to the order in the case of Didar Singh alone or referred to the
orders in all the cases.
As Didar Singh claimed a receipt for the
presentation of the application and affidavit to appellant No. 2, the latter,
after consulting the prosecuting inspector, went to appellant No. 1 for
consultation and was advised to, return the application to Didar Singh if he
insisted on getting a receipt. The application and the affidavit were therefore
then returned to one Ganga Bishan.
The chit alleged to have been sent by the
High Court advocate has not been produced. The application presented to
appellant No. 2 in the village and returned by him in the Sub-Divisional
Officer's Court, though presumably in possession of Didar Singh, has not been
filed. They would have indicated what their contents were. That 154 would have
been the best evidence of what was conveyed to appellants Nos. 1 and 2. Ganga
Bishan's statement. that he had drafted the application addressed to appellant
No. 2 to the effect that the stay order issued by the High Court in Jag Malera
Namdhari cases had been extended, is not the best 'evidence of what the
application (a fair copy presumably), actually contained, an application which
is in the possession of Didar Singh. Of course, the application and affidavit
presented to the Sub-Divisional Officer, are in the possession of the State. No
attempt was made by the respondent to summon them or to file certified copies
of those documents in these proceedings in the absence of the best evidence,
the documents, I am not prepared to hold that the application and affidavit
filed by Didar Singh must have referred to all the cases. Normally, he had no
business to refer to the stay orders in the other cases and to make prayer for
the stay of delivery of possession in all the cases. He had to restrict his
application and affidavit to his own case.
Further, whatever was stated in the
application and the affidavit,, in the nature of things, was not on the basis
of personal knowledge of Didar Singh Didar Singh himself did not even have the
telephonic communication with his counsel at Chandigarh. The telephonic
communication was between Teja Singh and that counsel. Appellant No. 2 states-and
I see no reason to doubt that statement-that in the background of the facts
about the possession over the land he did not consider it advisable and safe to
accept the statement of facts contained in the application or affidavit on its
face value.
Lastly, the presence of Ganga Bishan,
Advocate, on the occasions of the presenting of the application and affidavit
to appellants Nos. 1 and 2, is 155 stated in all the affidavits. But it is only
in paragraph 5 of Didar Singh's affidavit that it is stated that Babu Ganga
Bishan, Advocate, presented the application and the affidavit to the
Sub-Divisional Officer. Ganga Bishan himself does not state so. It is not
stated anywhere that Ganga Bishan had been engaged as counsel by Didar Singh.
It would appear a bit unusual that 'in the presence of a duly appointed
advocate, applications and affidavits be presented by Didar Singh personally
and not through his counsel. On the basis of the statements and the affidavits,
I am not prepared to hold that Galiga Bishan was the duly appointed counsel for
Didar Singh. He may be accompanying Didar .Singh like other persons on account
of his interest in the matter.
Further, any request by him to the
Sub-Divisional Officer for passing the necessary orders on the application of
Didar Singh, as stated by him in paragraph 3 of his affidavit, cannot lead to
the conclusion that be professionally represented Didar Singh, as similar
requests were made, according to his own affidavit, by the other persons also,
who had accompanied Didar Singh to the Sub-Divisional Officer's Court. The
Sub-Divisional Officer, therefore, could not have treated his request to be a
statement of fact about the High Court's extending the stay order up to May 23,
1958.
Ganga Bishan does not state that he told the
Court that the High Court had extended the duration of the stay order or that
he requested the Sub-Divisional Officer, who is also the Sub-Divisional
Magistrate, to stay the delivery of possession in view of the application filed
by Didar Singh.
He simply states:
"Several requests weremade to the SubDivisional
Magistrate by us that necessary orders on the application presented to 156 him
be made and the Managing Officer be called back." Even if Ganga Bishan bad
stated that the High Court bad extended the order, his statement too, had no
better value when he could not speak about that order on the basis of personal
knowledge or on the basis of any communication to him by the Advocate of the
High Court. He has not stated in his affidavit that he was present when the
order was passed or that he had received any communication from the High Court
Advocate. I am therefore of opinion that his merely accompanying Didar Singh
and others did not invest any greater weight to the correctness of the statements
made in the application and the affidavit.
The public officers are not to blame if they
do not take at face value what is contained in deliberately prepared
applications and affidavits. I have already mentioned of the way in which the
crucial basic fact to be mentioned in the petition for contempt proceedings
against the appellants had not been mentioned and statements were made in a way
which at first sight could lead to the impression that the delivery of
possession had been made in defiance of the order of the High Court.
I am therefore of opinion that it is not
established the respondents did not rely on the statements in the application
and the affidavit mala fide because they were bent upon delivering possession
in defiance of the orders of the High Court.
I find in this case that on May 16, orders of
the High Court were obtained for serving the stay order upon the appellants
through the petitioner respondent, but no such order was obtained for serving
the order dated May 19. In view of the urgency of the matter, the respondent
and others who bad obtained extension of the stay orders on 157 the 19th could
have and should have obtained similar orders of the High Court for serving
them. If that precaution had been taken %gain on May 19, 1958, probably what
happened subsequently on the spot and thereafter, would not have taken place.
I am therefore of opinion that the appellants
committed no contempt of Court, and would allow their appeal.
By COURT : In accordance with the opinion of
the majority, the appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
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