Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRI M.L. JAGGI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAHANAGAR TELEPHONES NIGAM LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/01/1995
BENCH:
K. RAMASWAMY, G.B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Leave granted.
The respondents had issued bills for Rs.50,219/- from
16.11.1982 to January 15, 1983; for Rs.20873/- for January
16, 1983 to March 15, 1983; to November 15, 1982. When the
appellant filed the suit, an objection was raised of the
availability of the remedy under Section 7B of the Indian
Telegraph Act, 1985 [for short, "the Act"]. The civil Court
referred the matter to the arbitrator. The arbitrator after
giving due consideration to the dispute made the award, Exh.
P-3 dated December 19, 1989 giving some rebate on one bill
only and confirmed the rest of the demand. When the
appellant filed the writ petition, the High Court of Delhi
in the impugned order affirmed the award of the arbitrator.
Thus this appeal by special leave against the order dated
March 13, 1991 made in W.P. No.800/91.
The only question raised in this appeal is whether the
arbitrator is enjoined to assign reasons in support of his
award. Section 7B of the Act reads thus:
"7B. Arbitration of disputes. (1) Except
as otherwise expressly provided in this
Act, if any dispute concerning any
telegraph line, appliance or apparatus
arises between the telegraph authority
and the person for whose benefit the
line, appliance or apparatus is, or has
been, provided, the dispute shall be
determined by arbitration and shall, for
the purpose of such determination, be
referred to an arbitrator appointed by
the Central Government either specially
for the determination of that dispute or
generally for the determination of
disputes under this Section.
(2) The award of the arbitrator
appointed under sub-section (1) shall be
conclusive between the parties to the
dispute and shall not be questioned in
any court".
It is a statutory remedy provided under the Act and,
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therefore, in a dispute as regards the amount claimed in the
demand raised, the only remedy provided is by way of
arbitration under Section 7B of the Act. By operation of
sub-section (2) thereof, the award of the arbitrator made
under sub-section (1) shall be conclusive between the
parties to the dispute and shall not be questioned in any
court. The statutory remedy under the Arbitration Act, 1940,
thus, has been taken away.
The question, therefore, is: whether it is incumbent
upon the arbitrator to give reasons in support of the award.
In Raipur Development Authority & Ors. v. M/s. Chokhamal
Contractors & Ors. [(1989) 2 SCC 721], in paragraph 38 at
page 753 this Court had held that "having given our careful
and anxious consideration to the contentions urged by the
parties, we feel that law should be allowed to remain as it
is until the competent legislature amends the law. In the
result, we hold that an award passed under the Arbitration
Act is not liable to be remitted or set aside merely on the
ground that no reasons have been given in its support except
where the arbitration agreement or the deed of submission or
an order made by the court such as the one under Section 20
or Section 21 or Section 34 of the Act or the statute
governing the arbitration requires that the arbitrator or
the umpire should give reasons for the award. The award need
not contain the reasons". It is seen that the decision in
that case is based on award of the arbitrator under the
Arbitration Act which itself is founded on an arbitration
agreement. So this Court had held that when the agreement in
non-statutory award between the parties voluntarily entered
into did not contain a clause to make a speaking award, the
need to make an award with reasons was not necessary. The
Court explained the position in para 35 at pages 751-52
thus:
"But at the same time it has to be borne
in mind that what applies generally to
settlement of disputes by authorities
governed by public law need not be
extended to all cases arising under
private law such as those arising under
the law of arbitration which is intended
for settlement of private disputes."
In fact the observations have been made by this Court in
regard to the arbitration of disputes concerning the claim
against the Government and this Court has emphasised the
need for recording reasons in the awards touching the public
exchequer in para 37 at pages 752-53 as under:
"But arbitral awards in dispute to which
the State and its instrumentalities are
parties affect public interest and the
matter of the manner in which government
and its instrumentalities allow their
interes to be affected by such arbitral
adjudications involve larger questions
of policy and public interest.
Government and its instrumentalities
cannot simply allow large financial
interests of the State to be
prejudicially affected by non-review,
non-speaking arbitral awards. Indeed,
this branch of the system of dispute
resolution has, of late, acquired a
certain degree of notoriety by the
manner in which in many cases the
financial interests of government have
come to suffer by awards which have
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raised eyebrows by doubts as to their
rectitude and propriety. It will not be
justifiable for governments or heir
instrumentalities to enter into
arbitration agreements which do not
expressly stipulate the rendering of
reasoned and speaking awards.
Governments and their instrumentalities
should, as a matter of policy and public
interest - if not as a compulsion of law
- ensure that wherever they enter into
agreements for resolution of disputes by
resort to private arbitrations, the
requirement of speaking awards is
expressly stipulated and ensured. It is
for governments and their
instrumentalities to ensure in future
this requirement as a matter of policy
in the larger public interest. Any lapse
in that behalf might lend itself to and
perhaps justify, the legitimate
criticism that government failed to
provide against possible prejudice to
public interest, in regard to the
arbitration of disputes concerning the
claim against the Government and this
Court has emphasised the need for
recording reasons in the awards touching
the public exchequer. In other words,
when the public law element is involved,
in a public law remedy, public interest
demands that reasons should be given
even in the award."
It is well-settled law that in public law remedy when the
order visits with civil consequences, natural justice
requires recording the reasons as they are bridge between
the order and its maker to indicate how his mind was applied
to the facts presented and the decision reached. Another
Constitution Bench of this Court in S.N. Mukherjee v. Union
of India [(1990) Supp. 1 SCR 44] considered the entire
controversy and held thus:
"This appeal, by special leave, is
directed against the order dated August
12, 1981, passed by the High Court of
Delhi dismissing the writ petition filed
by the appellant. In the writ petition
the appellant had challenged the
validity of the finding and the sentence
recorded by the General Court Martial on
November 29, 1978, the order dated May
11, 1979, passed by the Chief of Army
Staff confirming the findings and the
sentence recorded by the General Court
Martial and the order dated May 6, 1980,
passed by the Central Government
dismissing the petition filed by the
appellant under section 164(2) of the
Army Act, 1950 (hereinafter referred to
as ‘the Act’).
The appellant held a permanent
commission, as an officer, in the
regular army and was holding the
substantive rank of Captain. He was
officiating as a Major. On December 27,
1974, the appellant took over as the
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Officer Commanding of 38 Coy. ASC (Sup)
Type ‘A’ attached to the Military
Hospital, Jhansi. In August 1975, the
appellant had gone to attend a training
course and he returned in the first week
of November 1975. In his absence Captain
G.C. Chhabra was the officer commanding
the unit of the appellant. During this
period Captain Chhabra submitted a
Contingent Bill dated September 25, 1975
for Rs.16,280 for winter liveries of the
depot civilian chowkidars and sweepers.
The said Contingent Bill was returned by
the Controller of Defence Accounts (CDA)
Meerut with certain objections.
Thereupon the appellant submitted a
fresh Contingent Bill dated December 25,
1975 for a sum of Rs.7029.57. In view of
the difference in the amounts mentioned
in the two Contingent Bills, the CDA
reported the matter to the headquarters
for investigation and a Court of Enquiry
blamed the appellant for certain lapses.
The said report of the Court of Enquiry
was considered by the General Officer
Commanding, M.P., Bihar and Orissa Area,
who, on January 7, 1977 recommended that
‘severe displeasure’ (to be recorded) of
the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief
of the Central Commandk be awarded to
the appellant. The General Officer
Commanding-in-Chief, Central Command did
not agree with the said opinion and by
order dated August 26, 1977, directed
that disciplinary action taken against
the appellant for the lapses.
In view of the aforesaid order passed by
the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief,
Central Command, a charge sheet dated
July 20, 1978, containing three charges
was served on the appellant and it was
directed that he be tried by General
Court Martial. The first charge was in
respect of the offence under section
52(f) of the Act, i.e. doing a thing
with intent to defraud, the second
charge was alternative to the first
charge and was in respect of offence
under section 63 of the Act, i.e.
committing an act prejudicial to good
order and military discipline and the
third charge was also in respect of
offence under section 63 of the Act."
It is, thus, settled law that reasons are required to be
recorded when it affects the public interest. It is seen
that under Section 7B, the award is conclusive when the
citizen complains that he was not correctly put to bill of
the calls he had made and disputed the demand for payment.
The statutory remedy opened to him is one provided under
Section 7B of the Act. By necessary implication, when the
arbitrator decides the dispute under Section 7B, he is
enjoined to give reasons in support of his decision since it
is final and cannot be questioned in a court of law. The
only obvious remedy available to the aggrieved person
against the award is judicial review under Article 226 of
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the Constitution. If the reasons are not given, it would be
difficult for the High Court to adjudge as to under what
circumstances the arbitrator came to his conclusion that the
amount demanded by the Department is correct or the amount
disputed by the citizen is unjustified. The reasons would
indicate as to how the mind of the arbitrator was applied to
the dispute and how he arrived at the decision. The High
Court, though does not act in exercising judicial review as
a court of appeal but within narrow limits of judicial
review it would consider the correctness and legality of the
award. No doubt, as rightly pointed out by Mr. V.R. Reddy,
Additional Solicitor General that the questions are
technical matters. But nonetheless, the reasons in support
of his conclusion should be given. In this case, arbitrator
has not given reasons. The award of the arbitrator is set
aside and the matter is remitted to the arbitrator to make
an award and give reasons in support thereof.
Since we have decided this question for the first time,
it must be treated that any decision made prior to this day
by any arbitrator under Section 7B of the Act is not liable
to be reopened. In other words, the order is prospective in
its operation.
The appeal is accordingly allowed but, in the
circumstances, with no order as to costs.