Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S ATLAS EXPORT INDUSTRIES
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S KOTAK & COMPANY
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/09/1999
BENCH:
S.R.Babu, R.C.Lahoti
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti,J.
The appellant, the Atlas Export Industries, Junagadh
(hereinafter ‘Atlas’, for short) entered into a contract
dated 3rd June, 1980 with M/s Oceandale Company Limited,
Hongkong ( hereinafter‘Oceandale’, for short ). The
agreement was for the supply of 200 MT of Indian groundnut
extractions of the specifications as to quantity, quality
and packages detailed in the contract and to be shipped on
or before 30th June, 1980. The price was agreed at US $200
per M.T. The goods were to be supplied through M/s Kotak
and Company, Bombay (hereinafter ‘Kotak’, for short ). M/s
Prashant Agencies, Bombay were the brokers. The existence
of the contract, to which Atlas, Oceandale and Kotak were
the parties, is not in dispute. Kotak were at all times
responsible for the performance on behalf of the final
buyers Oceandale. The letter of credit was opened by
Oceandale in favour of Kotak who then transferred it in
favour of Atlas. The letter of credit was opened at US $203
whereas Kotak’s purchase from Atlas was at US $200. It was
agreed upon between Atlas and Kotak that the difference
would be paid locally by Atlas to Kotak in Indian rupees.
The time for shipment was extended by mutual agreement
between the parties and correspondingly the period of
validity of the letter of credit was also extended.
However, still there was failure to ship the goods by the
time appointed by the contract and as extended which
resulted into a dispute arising between the parties.
The contract dated 3rd June, 1980 incorporated an
arbitration clause which is extracted and reproduced
hereunder :- "This contract is made under the terms and
conditions effective at date of the Grain and Food Trade
Association Ltd. London Contract No.15 which is hereby made
a part of this contract........ both buyers and sellers
hereby acknowledge familiarity with the text of the GAFTA
contract and agree to be bound by its terms and conditions."
‘GAFTA’ stands for the Grain and Food Trade
Association Ltd., London. Clause 27 of the Standard
Contract 15 of the GAFTA provides as under:-
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"27. ARBITRATION -
(a) Any dispute arising out of or under this contract
shall be settled by arbitration in London in accordance with
the Arbitration Rules of the Grain and Food Trade
Association Limited, No.125 such Rules forming part of this
contract and of which both parties hereto shall be deemed to
be cognisant.
(b) Neither party hereto, nor any persons claiming
under either of them, shall bring any such dispute until
such dispute shall first have been heard and determined by
the arbitrators, umpire or Board of Appeal, as the case may
be, in accordance with the Arbitration Rules and it is
expressly agreed and declared that the obtaining of the
award from the arbitration, umpire or Board of Appeal, as
the case may be, shall be a condition precedent to the right
of either party hereto or of any person claiming under
either of them to bring any action or other legal
proceedings against the other of them in respect of any such
dispute."
Kotak appointed their own arbitrator and called upon
Atlas to appoint their arbitrator. Both the parties did
appoint their respective arbitrators. The arbitrators gave
their award, published on 22nd June, 1987 as per the rules
of GAFTA. The award directed Atlas to pay Kotak a sum of US
$9600 with interest calculated thereon at the rate of 12 per
cent per annum from 26th October, 1980 until the date of the
award as also the costs of arbitration as specified. No
appeal was preferred against the award.
Kotak moved an application under Sections 5 and 6 of
the Foreign Awards (Recognition and Enforcement) Act, 1961
before the High Court of Bombay seeking enforcement of the
award by filing of the same and pronouncing judgment
according to the award. Atlas raised objections against the
prayer made by Kotak. The objections have been rejected and
the award made rule of the Court followed by decree in terms
of the award under the judgment dated 22nd September, 1992
passed by learned Single Judge of the High Court of Bombay.
A Letters Patent Appeal preferred by Atlas having been
dismissed, the present appeal by special leave has been
filed.
Having heard the learned counsel for the parties we
are of the opinion that the appeal is devoid of any merit
and hence liable to be dismissed. The only objection raised
by Atlas before the High Court of Bombay was that there was
no agreement in writing between the parties requiring the
disputes arising out of the contract being referred to
arbitration in accordance with the arbitration rules of
GAFTA. No particulars of the plea were given. As already
noticed, the existence of contract between the parties is
not denied. The arbitration clause in the contract is
incorporated by reference. The parties knew that excepting
the terms specifically set out therein in the contract dated
3rd June 1980, the rest of the terms and conditions were to
be the same as were incorporated in the Standard Contract
No.15 of GAFTA as effective on the date of the contract.
Clause 27, entitled Arbitration, and finding its place in
Standard Contract No.15 is also not in dispute. The law on
the subject is stated in Russell on Arbitration (19th
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Edition, at page 50) is under :-
"The agreement may arise by the incorporation of one
document containing an arbitration clause in another under
which the dispute arises. "Where parties by an agreement
import the terms of some other document as part of their
agreement those terms must be imported in their
entirety...but subject to this: that if any of the imported
terms in any way conflicts with the expressly agreed terms,
the latter must prevail over what would otherwise be
imported."
In Halsbury’s Law of England (4th Edition, Vol.2 Page
267, para 522), it is stated as under:-
"If the agreement is written, it may be included in a
particular contract by reference or implication. The
agreement between the parties may incorporate arbitration
provisions which are set out in some other document, but in
order to be binding the arbitration provisions must be
brought to the notice of both parties.
It is inherent in cases of incorporation by reference
that the parties are concerned not with one document alone
but with at least two, one of which contains an arbitration
clause and the other of which does not. In some cases the
one document may constitute a contract between other
parties. A common case is where the two documents concerned
are a charterparty and a bill of lading. If the relevant
contract between the relevant parties is contained in the
document which does contain the arbitration clause, no
question of incorporation arises. Where this is not the
case, the question whether the document containing the
arbitration clause is incorporated in the relevant contract
between the relevant parties is, as always, a question of
construction."
In Alimenta S.A. Vs. National Agricultural Co-
operative Marketing Federation of India Ltd. and Anr. -
AIR 1987 SC 643, the arbitration clause contained in an
earlier contract between the parties was incorporated into a
latter contract only by reference. This Court held that
such a referential incorporation was permissible and the
clause was binding between the parties unless it was
insensible, unintelligible or was inconsistent with the
terms of the present contract.
It is not the case of the appellant Atlas that they
were not aware of the terms and conditions of the Standard
Contract No.15 of GAFTA. Such a plea if at all it was
sought to be raised then should have been raised
specifically but that is not the case here. The High Court
was therefore right in rejecting the only objection which
was raised on behalf of the appellant Atlas before it.
It was however contended by the learned counsel for
the appellant that the award should have been held to be
unenforceable inasmuch as the very contract between the
parties relating to arbitration was opposed to public policy
under Section 23 read with Section 28 of the Contract Act.
It was submitted that Atlas and Kotak, the parties between
whom the dispute arose, are both Indian parties and the
contract which had the effect of compelling them to resort
to arbitration by foreign arbitrators and thereby impliedly
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excluding the remedy available to them under the ordinary
law of India should be held to be opposed to public policy.
Under Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act the
consideration or object of an agreement is unlawful if it is
opposed to public policy. Section 28 and Exception 1 to it,
( which only is relevant for the purpose of this case) are
extracted and reproduced hereunder:-
"28. Every agreement, by which any party thereto is
restricted absolutely from enforcing his rights under or in
respect of any contract, by the usual legal proceedings in
the ordinary tribunals, or which limits the time within
which he may thus enforce his rights, is void to that
extent.
Exception 1. - This section shall not render illegal
a contract by which two or more persons agree that any
dispute which may arise between them in respect of any
subject or class of subjects shall be referred to
arbitration, and that only the amount awarded in such
arbitration shall be recoverable in respect of the dispute
so referred."
The case at hand is clearly covered by Exception 1 to
Section 28. Right of the parties to have recourse to legal
action is not excluded by the agreement. The parties are
only required to have their dispute/s adjudicated by having
the same referred to arbitration. Merely because the
arbitrators are situated in a foreign country cannot by
itself be enough to nullify the arbitration agreement when
the parties have with their eyes open willingly entered into
the agreement. Moreover, in the case at hand the parties
have willingly initiated the arbitration proceedings on the
disputes having arisen between them. They have appointed
arbitrators, participated in arbitration proceedings and
suffered an award. The plea raised before us was not raised
either before or during arbitration proceedings, nor before
the learned Single Judge of the High Court in the objections
filed before him, nor in the Letters Patent Appeal filed
before the Division Bench. Such a plea is not available to
be raised by the appellant Atlas before this Court for the
first time.
For the foregoing reasons, we find no fault with the
award having been made rule of the Court by the High Court.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.