Wrong
news report vis-a-vis contempt of court
Justice
Mohammad Gholam Rabbani
It happened in November
1960 long before the independence of Bangladesh. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
was convicted on a false charge of corruption when he was a minister.
Preferred an appeal in the Dhaka High Court. His advocate Abdus Salam
Khan then moved an application for expedite hearing of the appeal before
a Division Bench, but the senior judge felt embarrassed to hear the
appeal. The Chief Justice sent the record to another Division Bench.
This time both the judges felt embarrassed.
Khan then moved
the application before the chief justice who directed the Bench Clerk
to place the application in his chamber for order. But Khan got the
impression that the chief justice had allowed the application and he
reported accordingly to the press. On the next day four daily national
news papers published the news.
The chief justice
issued rule against those newspapers for contempt of court. All appeared
and expressed their unconditional apology stating that advocate Khan
was their source. Thereafter rule was also issued against Khan.
Rules against the
newspapers were disposed accepting their apologies with the warning
that they should be careful in future while reporting the matters. But
the rule against Khan was disposed of with adverse remark, "So
the explanation submitted by Salam, we regret, we are unable to accept
as satisfactory one nor at the same time we say that he deliberately
caused a wrong thing reported. There is some confusion somewhere."
(Ref: PLD 1963 Dac 8).
The said report
in the newspapers did not cause any adverse impression on the public,
yet it was held as contemptuous simply because it was wrong. But in
similar cases the opinion of the judges of the Federal Supreme Court
of the United States of America is totally different and liberal. There
criterion for contempt of court is not that the news report is simply
wrong, but it has failed to pass the "clear and present danger
test."
A newspaper named
"Pennckemp" in Florida State wrote in its editorial that a
Judge had dismissed a rape case on the ground that the charge against
the accused persons were not framed properly and the courts in Florida
were intentionally releasing the criminals on technical and trifling
grounds. The editor was convicted by the State Supreme Court on the
ground that the statement in the editorial was wrong because after dismissing
the rape case, the Judge on the next date framed proper charges against
the accused persons.
On appeal the Federal
Supreme Court held that the finding of fact of the State Court was correct,
but acquitted the editor holding," the factual misstatements and
the editorial comment was not such a clear and present danger as to
impair the effectiveness or independence of the State Courts and their
Judges." Ref: (1904) 328 US 331.
Justice
Mohammad Gholam Rabbani is a Retired Judge of Appellate Division.