The court said adverse publicity against judges should be "handled with care and caution" as it may prejudice people's faith in the higher judiciary.
"The defendants (three media houses and woman law intern), their agents, assigns or any of them acting on their behalf and/or any other person, entity, in print or electronic media or internet are:
"Restrained from further publishing the write ups as mentioned ... Of the documents file or publishing any article or write up and telecast which highlights the allegations against the plaintiff in the form of headlines connecting or associating plaintiff with those allegations, particularly, without disclosing in the headlines of article that they are mere allegations against the plaintiff or any other similar nature of articles, write up and telecast," Justice Manmohan Singh, in 42-page interim order, said.
Issuing notices to two English news channels and an English daily, it asked them to delete the "offending" contents and the photograph of Justice Kumar from "internet or other electronic media" within within 24 hours and file a compliance report within a week.
The court, however, said its observations were "prima facie in nature" and did not stop the media from reporting the "court cases and happenings as facts which are covered under the ambit of fair reporting on the basis of true, correct and verified information.
