Legal provisions involved: Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 – Sections 2(c), 12 and 19(1)(b)
Judgement by: Supreme Court of India
Bench/Judge: Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Sandeep Mehta
Facts
A former office-bearer of a housing society issued a circular accusing a “dog mafia” of influencing High Court and Supreme Court judges. The Bombay High Court treated these remarks as criminal contempt and punished her with one week’s imprisonment and a fine. The woman admitted her mistake, apologised, and said she acted under pressure from residents. She then appealed to the Supreme Court.
Key legal provisions
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 – Sections 2(c), 12 and 19(1)(b)
Issues raised
Whether the circular amounted to contempt, and whether the High Court was right in giving a jail sentence despite her apology?
Arguments of the case
The High Court felt the circular was meant to insult and undermine the judiciary. The appellant argued that she had apologised from the beginning and deserved remission of the sentence.
Judgement
The Supreme Court agreed that the circular was contemptuous but held that her apology was genuine. It ruled that the High Court should have considered this and remitted the sentence. The court set aside the punishment but upheld the finding of contempt.
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