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Content having profanities, swear words cannot be regulated by criminalising it: SC

The Supreme Court has dismissed a criminal case of obscenity filed against the actors and creators of the web series 'College Romance'.
Last Updated 19 March 2024, 16:41 IST

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday held that the availability of content that contains profanities and swear words cannot be regulated by criminalising the same as obscene.

The top court quashed a criminal case of obscenity lodged against actors and makers of a web series named 'College Romance'.

A bench of Justices A S Bopanna and P S Narasimha said it is well-established from the precedents that vulgarity and profanities do not per se amount to obscenity and if the matter has a preponderating social purpose and gain that overweighs the obscenity of the content (such as medical textbooks), then such material is constitutionally protected by freedom of speech and cannot be criminalised as obscene.

The apex court set aside the Delhi High Court's order, which refused to quash the obscenity case against the lead casts and makers of the web series.

“No offence of publication or transmission of any material in electronic form, which is obscene, lascivious, or appealing to prurient interest, and/or having the effect of tending to deprave and corrupt persons, as provided under Section 67 of the IT act (Information Technology Act, 2000), is made out," the bench said.

The court stated that the metric for assessing obscenity and legality of any content cannot be based on whether it would be appropriate to play in the courtroom while maintaining the court’s decorum and integrity.

“Such an approach unduly curtails the freedom of expression that can be exercised and compels the maker of the content to meet the requirements of judicial propriety, formality, and official language. Here again, the High Court committed a serious error in decision-making,” the bench said.

The bench said while a person may find vulgar and expletive-filled language to be distasteful, unpalatable, uncivil, and improper, that by itself is not sufficient to make it ‘obscene’.

“Obscenity relates to material that arouses sexual and lustful thoughts, which is not at all the effect of the abusive language or profanities that have been employed in the episode,” the bench said.

The bench said by taking the literal meaning of these words, the High Court failed to consider the specific material (profane language) in the context of the larger web series and by the standard of an “ordinary man of common sense and prudence”.

The court noted that when considering the context of the plot and theme of the web series, which portrays the light-hearted aspects of college life for young students, it becomes evident that the use of such language is unrelated to sex and lacks any sexual connotation.

“Neither did the creator of the web series intend for the language to be taken in its literal sense nor is that the impact on a reasonable viewer who will watch the material. Therefore, there is a clear error in the legal approach adopted by the High Court in analysing and examining the material to determine obscenity,” the court said.

The High Court made several remarks on the need to maintain linguistic purity, civility, and morality by retaining the purity of language and deprecating the representation of expletives-filled language as the “new normal”.

“The real test is to examine if the language is in any way obscene under Section 67 of the IT Act. The approach adopted by the High Court, as explained earlier, is based on irrelevant considerations," the bench said.

The bench said the High Court has equated profanities and vulgarity with obscenity, without undertaking a proper or detailed analysis into how such language, by itself, could be sexual, lascivious, prurient, or depraving and corrupting.

The bench emphasised on maintaining a delicate balance between protecting freedom of speech and artistic freedom on the one hand, and public decency and morality on the other.

The bench noted that when art and obscenity are mixed, the art must be so preponderating that the obscenity is pushed into the shadows or is trivial and insignificant and can be overlooked.

“Similarly, if the matter has a preponderating social purpose and gain that overweighs the obscenity of the content (such as medical textbooks), then such material is constitutionally protected by freedom of speech and cannot be criminalised as obscene,” the bench said.

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(Published 19 March 2024, 16:41 IST)

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