Case Background & Jurisdictional Clarity
In a significant ruling that redefines the interface between freedom of speech and protection of reputation, the Delhi High Court (Division Bench) partly allowed the appeal by TV Today Network Ltd (Aaj Tak, India Today) against digital media platform News Laundry. The court directed removal of specific highly derogatory remarks while rejecting a blanket ban on content, safeguarding legitimate media criticism.
TV Today filed a commercial suit alleging defamation, commercial disparagement, and copyright infringement over News Laundry’s satirical reviews that used broadcast clips. The Single Judge had initially found a prima facie case but refused injunction. The Division Bench reversed the refusal for defamatory parts, emphasizing that reputation injury can be irreparable.
Derogatory Remarks Ordered to be Removed
The court identified statements that crossed the line from fair criticism to malicious disparagement. These remarks were found to be prima facie defamatory and commercially disparaging:
- “shit reporters”
- “shit show”
- “high on weed or opium” (referring to anchors)
- “Your punctuation is as bad as your journalism”
While News Laundry argued that the videos were fair reviews under fair dealing and public interest satire, the court held that these specific expressions were not protected by free speech — they constituted commercial disparagement harming rival media’s reputation to gain competitive advantage.
Notably, the court observed that even if business models differ (advertisement vs subscription), modern media houses compete for the same digital audience, making disparagement relevant.
The Triple Test Revisited: Balance of Convenience & Irreparable Injury
| Test | Single Judge's Finding | Division Bench Clarification |
|---|---|---|
| Prima Facie Case | Established for defamation | Upheld — remarks were clearly insulting |
| Balance of Convenience | Favoured News Laundry (free speech) | Reversed: Protection of reputation outweighs retaining clearly defamatory content; removing few remarks causes no hardship to defendant |
| Irreparable Injury | Damages could compensate later | Reversed: Reputational harm cannot always be undone by money; immediate protection justified |
Precedents & Legal Principles Applied
The court relied on landmark cases to shape its reasoning, ensuring the delicate balance between free speech and reputation:
- Wander Ltd v Antox India (1990 Supp SCC 727): Appellate interference limited to when Single Judge acts arbitrarily — here the Single Judge misapplied balance of convenience.
- Super Cassettes Industries v Chintamani Rao (2012): Fair dealing in copyright permits only minimal necessary clips for genuine criticism — no “piggybacking”.
- Dabur India Ltd v Patanjali Ayurved (2025 DHC 5232): Defined commercial disparagement as false/misleading statements harming rival’s product or reputation for commercial gain.
- Bonnard v Perryman (1891) 2 Ch 269: English law principle (adopted in India) cautioning courts against prior restraint, but not applicable when remarks are malicious and clearly defamatory.
- Dalpat Kumar v Prahlad Singh (1992 1 SCC 719): Injury that cannot be adequately compensated by damages justifies injunction.
The judgment harmonizes these authorities: free speech must yield when statements are unsubstantiated personal insults rather than genuine public-interest critique.
Final Decision & Point of Law Settled
Outcome: TV Today’s appeal partly allowed; News Laundry’s cross-appeal dismissed. The court ordered immediate removal of the four specified derogatory remarks from all videos and social media platforms until final trial. No injunction on copyright claims or other general content — preserving free expression.
✓ In media disparagement cases, once certain statements are prima facie defamatory, the existence of a justification defense does not automatically defeat interim relief.
✓ Balance of convenience must be weighed independently: protection of reputation from malicious attacks can outweigh free speech concerns in the interim stage.
✓ Different revenue models do not preclude two media entities from being “competitors” in the digital market.
✓ Commercial courts can adjudicate composite suits combining copyright, defamation, and disparagement.
The case sets a crucial precedent for media review culture in India: satire and criticism are protected, but using derogatory slurs and baseless personal attacks invites legal consequences. The ruling also clarifies that interim injunctions can protect reputation without imposing blanket censorship.
Expert Analysis & Future Implications
Legal scholars view this judgment as a calibrated approach to Article 19(1)(a) and reasonable restrictions under Article 19(2). By refusing a blanket ban on News Laundry’s videos, the Delhi High Court reinforces that media critique — even if scathing — remains vital for democracy. However, the removal of personally abusive remarks signals that free speech does not extend to reckless name-calling disguised as journalism.
For digital media platforms, the ruling emphasizes using minimal excerpts under fair dealing and avoiding personal vilification of rival journalists. The case is likely to influence pending defamation suits involving online creators and legacy media.