"Courts of a State," and in relation to contempts of the character H- C. or A.
indicated, the Supreme Court of the State and, in the absence of as
express Federal legislation, the Supreme Court alone, possesses the Tue Kise
appropriate jurisdiction. ioe
In relation to the second and main ground of the present case, Px™*T
the legal position may be thus stated : - prea
(1) The High Court has ample jurisdiction to punish summarily
those responsible for publications calculated to obstruct or interfere
with the administration of justice, whether such publications take
the form of comment referring to proceedings pending in the Court
or that of unjustified attacks upon the members of the Court in their
public capacity (Porter v. The King ; Ex parte Yee (1), per Isaacs J.).
The origin of the present law and procedure is explained by Sir
John Fox in his History of Contempt of Court (1927). The present
English law in relation to newspapers is closely analyzed by Pro-
fessor 4. L. Goodhart in the Harvard Law Review, vol. 48, p.
885. The latter refers, at p. 900, to Lord Morris's " strange remark "
in McLeod v. St. Aubyn (2), that committals for contempt by
seandalizing have become obsolete in England.
(2) In the case of attacks upon the Court or its members, the
summary remedy of fine or imprisonment is applied only where the
Court is satisfied that it is necessary in the interests of the ordered
and fearless administration of justice and where the attacks are
unwarrantable (Bell v. Stewart (3), per Isaacs and Rich JJ.).
(3) All the recent decisions show that it is the duty of the Court
to protect the public against every attempt to overawe or intimidate
the Court by insult or defamation, or to deter actual and prospective
litigants from complete reliance upon the Court's administration of
justice (In re Sarbadhicary (4); R. v. Gray (5); Attorney-General
of the Irish Free State v. O'Kelly (6); and R. v. Editor of the New
Statesman; Ex parte Director of Public Prosecutions (7); R. v.
Colsey (8) ).
_ (4) Fair criticism of the decisions of the Court is not only lawful,
but regarded as being for the public good ; but the facts forming