Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1953 of 2006
PETITIONER:
National Thermal Power Corporation Ltd
RESPONDENT:
Siemens Atkeingesellschaft
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/02/2007
BENCH:
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. I respectfully agree with the reasoning and
conclusion of my learned brother. I am inclined to add a few
words in view of the significance of the question and the
frequency with which it may arise.
2. Before the Arbitral Tribunal, Seimens, the
contractor, made a claim for compensation for the delay on the
part of the N.T.P.C. for whom a works contract was executed
by Seimens. N.T.P.C. not only resisted the claim but also
made a counter claim. The counter claim was sought to be
resisted by Seimens by contending that all outstanding claims
between the parties other than the one it had put forward in
the claim before the Arbitral Tribunal had been settled
between the parties as evidenced by a Memorandum of
Understanding arrived at between them described in the
proceedings as Minutes of the Meeting (M.O.M.). Seimens,
therefore, contended that the claims made by N.T.P.C. before
the Arbitral Tribunal by way of counter claim was not
maintainable or did not survive the M.O.M. They had also
raised a contention that N.T.P.C. not having acted in terms of
the arbitration clause by first raising the claim before the
Engineer, it could not straightaway raise the claim before the
Arbitral Tribunal. That part of the objection was given up at
the stage of arguments. Therefore, what survived for decision
before the Arbitral Tribunal was the effect of the M.O.M. on the
claims of N.T.P.C. in the counter claim filed by it. The Arbitral
Tribunal thought it appropriate to dispose of certain
preliminary questions including the question whether N.T.P.C.
could pursue its counter claim in the light of the M.O.M. The
Tribunal held that other than claims 1 and 7 in the counter-
claim, the other claims had already been settled as evidenced
by the M.O.M. and the said claims did not survive for
adjudication by the Arbitral Tribunal. It held that claim No. 7
was not really a claim since what N.T.P.C. had done was to
reserve its right to make a claim on that score. As regards
claim No. 1, the Tribunal held that it was barred by limitation.
Thus, in what was called a partial award, the claim of Seimens
was found to be in time and the counter claim made by
N.T.P.C. was found to be unsustainable.
3. N.T.P.C. sought to file an appeal against the partial
award of the Arbitral Tribunal by resort to Section 37(2)(a) of
the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (for short, ’the Act’).
It was the contention of N.T.P.C. that when the arbitrators
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refused to go into the merits of its counter claim, they were
really declining jurisdiction in terms of sub-section (2) of
Section 16 of the Act and in such a situation, an appeal was
clearly maintainable under Section 37(2)(a) of the Act. This
was sought to be met by Seimens by pointing out that it was
not a case of declining of jurisdiction by the Arbitral Tribunal
to entertain the counter claim made by N.T.P.C., but it was
really a case of the counter claim being found unsustainable
for the reasons stated in the award. The partial award thus
made by the Arbitral Tribunal was an award on the counter
claim of N.T.P.C. and it was not a case which fell within either
sub-section (2) or sub-section (3) of Section 16 of the Act
attracting Section 37(2)(a) of the Act.
4. What is sought to be argued on behalf of N.T.P.C.,
the appellant, is that the Arbitral Tribunal had intended to
deal with the question of jurisdiction and limitation in the first
instance and it was during the course of deciding those
questions that the counter claim had been rejected and this
amounted to a declining of jurisdiction by the Arbitral
Tribunal in dealing with the counter claim of N.T.P.C. The
partial award was therefore a decision on a plea under Section
16(2) of the Act and consequently appealable under Section
37(2)(a) of the Act.
5. In the larger sense, any refusal to go into the merits
of a claim may be in the realm of jurisdiction. Even the
dismissal of the claim as barred by limitation may in a sense
touch on the jurisdiction of the court or Tribunal. When a
claim is dismissed on the ground of it being barred by
limitation, it will be, in a sense, a case of the court or Tribunal
refusing to exercise jurisdiction to go into the merits of the
claim. In Pandurang Dhoni Chougule Vs Maruti Hari
Jadhav [(1966) 1 S.C.R. 102], this Court observed that:
"It is well-settled that a plea of limitation or a
plea of res judicata is a plea of law which
concerns the jurisdiction of the court which
tries the proceedings. A finding on these pleas
in favour of the party raising them would oust
the jurisdiction of the court, and so, an
erroneous decision on these pleas can be said
to be concerned with questions of jurisdiction
which fall within the purview of S. 115 of the
Code."
In a particular sense, therefore, any declining to go into the
merits of a claim could be said to be a case of refusal to
exercise jurisdiction.
6. The expression ’jurisdiction’ is a word of many hues.
Its colour is to be discerned from the setting in which it is
used. When we look at Section 16 of the Act, we find that the
said provision is one, which deals with the competence of the
Arbitral Tribunal to rule on its own jurisdiction. SBP & Co.
Vs. Patel Engineering Ltd. & Anr. [(2005) 8 S.C.C. 618] in a
sense confined the operation of Section 16 to cases where the
Arbitral Tribunal was constituted at the instance of the parties
to the contract, without reference to the Chief Justice under
Section 11(6) of the Act. In a case where the parties had thus
constituted the Arbitral Tribunal without recourse to Section
11(6) of the Act, they still have the right to question the
jurisdiction of the Arbitral Tribunal including the right to
invite a ruling on any objection with respect to the existence or
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validity of the arbitration agreement. It could therefore rule
that there existed no arbitration agreement, that the
arbitration agreement was not valid, or that the arbitration
agreement did not confer jurisdiction on the Tribunal to
adjudicate upon the particular claim that is put forward before
it. Under sub-section (5), it has the obligation to decide the
plea and where it rejects the plea, it could continue with the
arbitral proceedings and make the award. Under sub-
section(6), a party aggrieved by such an arbitral award may
make an application for setting aside such arbitral award in
accordance with Section 34. In other words, in the challenge
to the award, the party aggrieved could raise the contention
that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to pass it or that it had
exceeded its authority, in passing it. This happens when the
Tribunal proceeds to pass an award. It is in the context of the
various sub-sections of Section 16 that one has to understand
the content of the expression ’jurisdiction’ and the scope of the
appeal provision. In a case where the Arbitral Tribunal
proceeds to pass an award after overruling the objection
relating to jurisdiction, it is clear from sub-section (6) of
Section 16 that the parties have to resort to Section 34 of the
Act to get rid of that award, if possible. But, if the Tribunal
declines jurisdiction or declines to pass an award and
dismisses the arbitral proceedings, the party aggrieved is not
without a remedy. Section 37 (2) deals with such a situation.
Where the plea of absence of jurisdiction or a claim being in
excess of jurisdiction is accepted by the Arbitral Tribunal and
it refuses to go into the merits of the claim by declining
jurisdiction, a direct appeal is provided. In the context of
Section 16 and the specific wording of Section 37(2)(a) of the
Act, it would be appropriate to hold that what is made directly
appealable by Section 37(2)(a) of the Act is only an acceptance
of a plea of absence of jurisdiction, or of excessive exercise of
jurisdiction and the refusal to proceed further either wholly or
partly.
7. In a case where a counter claim is referred to and
dealt with and a plea that the counter claim does not survive
in view of the settlement of disputes between the parties
earlier arrived at is accepted, it could not be held to be a case
of refusal to exercise jurisdiction by the Arbitral Tribunal.
Same is the position when an Arbitral Tribunal finds that a
claim was dead and was not available to be made at the
relevant time or that the claim was not maintainable for other
valid reasons or that the claim was barred by limitation. They
are all adjudications by the Tribunal on the merits of the claim
and in such a case the aggrieved party can have recourse only
to Section 34 of the Act and will have to succeed on
establishing any of the grounds available under that provision.
It would not be open to that party to take up the position that
by refusing to go into the merits of his claim, the Arbitral
Tribunal had upheld a plea that it does not have jurisdiction
to entertain the claim and hence the award or order made by
it, comes within the purview of Section 16(2) of the Act and
consequently is appealable under Section 37(2)(a) of the Act.
8. In the case on hand, what the Tribunal has found is
that in view of the M.O.M. wherein the various claims of either
party were thrashed out and settled, N.T.P.C. could not
pursue most of the claims set out in the counter claim. This is
a finding on the merits of the claim of N.T.P.C. It is not a
decision by the Arbitral Tribunal either under Section 16(2) or
Section 16(3) of the Act. Consequently, the High Court was
right in holding that the appeal filed by N.T.P.C. under Section
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37(2)(a) was not maintainable.