This case involved three appellants, Shanmugam, M. Muruganandam, and S. Amal Raj, who were convicted by the High Court of Madras for committing criminal contempt of court and sentenced to six months imprisonment. The contempt stemmed from their fraudulent creation and production of fake interim orders from the High Court in 2018. These fabricated orders were used to stay a decree passed by a District Munsiff Court in 2004, which had ordered the recovery of possession and arrears of rent from some of the contemnors. Upon verification, the High Court discovered the orders were fraudulent. A complaint was filed with the police, leading to an FIR being registered for forgery and impersonation under the Indian Penal Code. The High Court subsequently initiated suo motu criminal contempt proceedings after a case bundle related to the fake orders went missing from the Registry. Investigations by the District Crime Branch and CBCID confirmed the appellants’ involvement in preparing and handling the fake orders, with one contemnor (Muruganandam) admitting to paying Rs. 15,000/- for these forged documents. The High Court, after considering the evidence, found the appellants responsible for preparing and submitting the bogus interim orders.
Law Involved:
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971: Specifically, Section 15(1) read with Section 18(1) for the initiation of criminal contempt proceedings by the High Court. Crucially, Section 20, which stipulates a one-year limitation period for initiating contempt proceedings, was a key point of contention.
Articles 129 and 215 of the Constitution of India: These articles establish the Supreme Court and High Courts, respectively, as “Courts of Record” with inherent power to punish for contempt of themselves.
Indian Penal Code (IPC): Sections 466 (forgery of record of Court or of public register), 468 (forgery for purpose of cheating), and 471 (using as genuine a forged document) were invoked in the criminal complaint.
Precedent Cases: The Court relied on previous judgments such as Viney Chandra Mishra and Pallav Sheth to clarify the inherent powers of the High Court in contempt matters and the applicability of limitation provisions.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court meticulously examined the evidence and the legal arguments, particularly the appellants’ contention that the contempt proceedings were barred by the one-year limitation period under Section 20 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971.
Factual Guilt: The Court found sufficient “cogent and reliable material” including a CBCID report, affidavits, telephonic conversation records, and the admission of one contemnor, confirming that the appellants were indeed involved in the “preparation and handling of the fake High Court orders”. This act was not a “mere probability” but a “proven case of commission of offence” and “one of the most dreaded acts of contempt of court” due to the forgery of judicial records and the clear intent to thwart the administration of justice.
Applicability of Limitation: The Supreme Court affirmed that the one-year limitation period under Section 20 of the Contempt of Courts Act does not apply to suo motu (on its own motion) contempt actions initiated by the High Court. The power of the Supreme Court and High Courts to punish for contempt is inherent, deriving directly from Articles 129 and 215 of the Constitution, which designate them as Courts of Record. Section 20 is primarily applicable when contempt proceedings are initiated by an individual’s application or when the court issues notice based on a report. In this case, the contempt was only “unearhted” later when the case bundle went missing, prompting the High Court to initiate the proceedings suo motu. Therefore, the proceedings were not barred by limitation.
Gravity of the Offence: The Court emphasized that fabricating court orders is a grave act that strikes at the “purity of administration of justice” and constitutes a “deliberate and wilfully made” attempt to interfere with judicial proceedings and obtain an “undue advantage”.
Holding: The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, thereby upholding the High Court of Madras’s finding of guilt against the appellants for criminal contempt of court. However, while confirming the conviction, the Supreme Court modified the sentence, reducing the period of simple imprisonment from six months to one month, and directed the appellants to surrender within 15 days.
Shanmugam @ Lakshminarayanan V. High Court Of Madras
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 619: (DoJ 02-05-2025)




