Full Judgment Text
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REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.8720 OF 2017
(Arising out of S.L.P.(Civil) No.3576 of 2016)
| Alka Chandewar | .. Appellant(s) |
|---|
Versus
| Shamshul Ishrar Khan | .. Respondent(s) |
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J U D G M E N T
R.F. NARIMAN, J.
Leave granted.
The present appeal arises from the judgment of the
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Bombay High Court dated 27 October, 2015, in which the
High Court has construed Section 27(5) of the Arbitration
and Conciliation Act, 1996 (hereinafter referred to as “the
Act”) in a somewhat restrictive manner. The facts
necessary to appreciate the point involved in this appeal
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are that on 7 October, 2010, the sole Arbitrator appointed
by the parties passed an interim order under Section 17 of
the said Act, in which it was mentioned that no further
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by USHA
RANI BHARDWAJ
Date: 2017.07.15
12:44:44 IST
Reason:
flats were to be disposed of without the leave of the
Arbitral Tribunal. In breach of this order, it is alleged
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that on 14 October, 2010 the respondent in fact
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transferred five such flats. By the order passed on 22
March, 2012, it was held by the learned Arbitrator that the
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order of 7 October, 2010 had, in fact, been breached by
the respondent and certain other interim directions were
made by the aforesaid order. Ultimately, by an order dated
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5 May, 2014, the learned Arbitrator referred the aforesaid
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contempt of the order dated 7 October, 2010 to the High
Court to pass necessary orders thereon under Section 27(5)
of the Act.
In the judgment under appeal, the High Court held:
“In view of the above discussion, Section
27(5) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
does not empower the Tribunal to make representation
to the Court for contempt if the orders including the
interim orders passed by the Arbitrator except in
respect of taking evidence are violated by the party.
The Contempt Petition being the representation made
by the Tribunal is beyond the period of limitation
and is not maintainable in law. Moreover, the final
award of Rs.8 crores is granted in favour of the
petitioner by the Arbitrator.”
We have heard learned counsel for the parties. Shri
B.H. Marlapalle, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf
of the appellant, has argued that Sections 9 and 17 being
alternative remedies available to the parties before the
Tribunal, if orders made under Section-17 were
unenforceable, they would be mere ropes of sand as a result
of which the provision would be rendered otiose. He also
argued that Section 27 of the Act does not leave any doubt
as to the scope and ambit of the Court's power to punish
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for contempt of orders made by the Arbitral Tribunal. He
relied upon a Delhi High Court judgment, and a judgment
delivered by this Court reported in 2007 (13) SCC 220.
On the other hand, Shri Rana Mukherjee, learned
senior counsel appearing on behalf of the respondent, has
supported the High Court judgment. However, he very fairly
states before us that he does not support the High Court
judgment on the aspect of limitation. According to him,
the marginal note of Section 27 makes it clear that Section
27(5) would only apply to assistance in taking evidence and
not to any other contempt that may be committed. According
to him, this lacuna in the law has now been filled pursuant
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to the 246 Law Commission Report, which he has referred to
and relied upon, after which Section 17(2) has been
inserted by the Amendment Act of 2015.
Having heard learned counsel for the parties, we
first set out the relevant statutory provisions as under:
9. Interim measures, etc. by Court –(1) A party
may, before, or during arbitral proceedings or at any
time after the making of the arbitral award but
before it is enforced in accordance with section 36,
apply to a court:
(i) for the appointment of a guardian for a minor or
person of unsound mind for the purposes of arbitral
proceedings; or
(ii) for an interim measure of protection in respect
of any of the following matters, namely:
(a) the preservation, interim custody or sale of any
goods, which are the subject matter of the
arbitration agreement;
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(b) securing the amount in dispute in the
arbitration;
(c) the detention, preservation or inspection of any
property or thing which is the subject-matter of the
dispute in arbitration, or as to which any question
may arise therein and authorising for any of the
aforesaid purposes any person to enter upon any land
or building in the possession of any party, or
authorising any samples to be taken or any
observation to be made, or experiment to be tried,
which may be necessary or expedient for the purpose
of obtaining full information or evidence;
(d) interim injunction or the appointment of a
receiver;
(e) such other interim measure of protection as may
appear to the court to be just and convenient,
and the Court shall have the same power for making
orders as it has for the purpose of, and in relation
to, any proceedings before it.
[(2) Where, before the commencement of the arbitral
proceedings, a Court passes an order for any interim
measure of protection under sub-section (1), the
arbitral proceedings shall be commenced within a
period of ninety days from the date of such order or
within such further time as the Court may determine.
(3) Once the arbitral tribunal has been constituted,
the Court shall not entertain an application under
sub-section (1), unless the Court finds that
circumstances exists which may not render the remedy
provided under section 17 efficacious.]
17.Interim measures ordered by arbitral tribunal-
[(1) A party may, during the arbitral proceedings or
at any time after the making of the arbitral award
but before it is enforced in accordance with section
36, apply to the arbitral tribunal-
(i) for the appointment of a guardian for a minor or
person of unsound mind for the purposes of arbitral
proceedings; or
(ii) for an interim measure of protection in respect
of any of the following matters, namely:-
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(a) the preservation, interim custody or sale of any
goods which are the subject matter of the arbitration
agreement;
(b) securing the amount in dispute in the
arbitration;
(c) the detention, preservation or inspection of
any property or thing which is the subject matter of
the dispute in arbitration, or as to which any
question may arise therein and authorising for any of
the aforesaid purposes any person to enter upon any
land or building in the possession of any party, or
authorising any samples to be taken, or any
observation to be made, or experiment to be tried,
which may be necessary or expedient for the purpose
of obtaining full information or evidence;
(d) interim injunction or the appointment of a
receiver;
(e) such other interim measure of protection as may
appear to the arbitral tribunal to be just and
convenient,
and the arbitral tribunal shall have the same power
for making orders, as the court has for the purpose
of, and in relation to, any proceedings before it.
(2) Subject to any orders passed in an appeal under
section 37, any order issued by the arbitral tribunal
under this section shall be deemed to be an order of
the Court for all purposes and shall be enforceable
under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908),
in the same manner as if it were an order of the
Court.]
27. Court assistance in taking evidence –(1) The
arbitral tribunal, or a party with the approval of
the arbitral tribunal, may apply to the court for
assistance in taking evidence.
(2) the application shall specify-
(a) the names and addresses of the parties and the
arbitrators;
(b) the general nature of the claim and the relief
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sought;
(c) the evidence to be obtained, in particular, -
(i) the name and address of any person to be heard as
witness or expert witness and a statement of the
subject-matter of the testimony required;
(ii) the description of any document to be produced
or property to be inspected.
(3) The Court may, within its competence and
according to its rules on taking evidence, execute
the request by ordering that the evidence be provided
directly to the arbitral tribunal.
(4) The Court may, while making an order under
sub-section (3), issue the same processes to
witnesses as it may issue in suits tried before it.
(5) Persons failing to attend in accordance with such
process, or making any other default, or refusing to
give their evidence, or guilty of any contempt to
the arbitral tribunal during the conduct of arbitral
proceedings, shall be subject to the like
disadvantages, penalties and punishments by order of
the court on the representation of the arbitral
tribunal as they would incur for the like offences in
suits tried before the Court.
(6) In this section the expression “Processes”
includes summonses and commissions for the
examination of witnesses and summonses to produce
documents.
If Section 27(5) is read literally, there is no
difficulty in accepting the plea of learned senior advocate
for the appellant, because persons failing to attend in
accordance with the court process fall under a separate
category from “any other default”. Further, the Section is
not confined to a person being guilty of contempt only when
failing to attend in accordance with such process. The
Section specifically states that persons guilty of any
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contempt to the Arbitral Tribunal during the conduct of the
Arbitral proceedings is within its ken. The aforesaid
language is, in fact, in consonance with the Chapter
heading of Chapter V, “Conduct of arbitral proceedings”.
Further, it is well settled that a marginal note can be
used as an internal aid to interpretation of statutes only
in order to show what is the general drift of the section.
It may also be resorted to when the plain meaning of the
section is not clear. In the present case we must go by the
plain meaning of sub-section (5). This being the case, we
find it difficult to appreciate the reasoning of the High
Court. Also, in consonance with the modern rule of
interpretation of statutes, the entire object of providing
that a party may approach the Arbitral Tribunal instead of
the Court for interim reliefs would be stultified if
interim orders passed by such Tribunal are toothless. It
is to give teeth to such orders that an express provision
is made in Section 27(5) of the Act.
In fact, the Delhi High Court by the judgment dated
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18 August, 2009, reported in 2009 (112) Delhi Reported
Judgments 657, has correctly construed Section 27(5) of the
Act. Further, it must be remembered that this Court in M/s
Ambalal Sarabhai Enterprises vs. M/s Amrit Lal & Co. & Anr.
(2001) 8 SCC 397 has held that parties to arbitration
proceedings are put to an election as to whether to apply
for interim relief before the Tribunal under Section 17 or
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before the Court under Section 9. Such election would be
meaningless if interim orders passed by the Arbitral
Tribunal were to be written in water, as all parties would
then go only to the Court, which would render Section 17 a
dead letter.
Coming to Shri Rana Mukherjee's submission that
sub-section (2) of Section 17 introduced by the 2015
Amendment Act now provides for the necessary remedy against
infraction of interim orders by Tribunal, suffice it to
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state that the Law Commission itself, in its 246 report,
found the need to go one step further than what was
provided in Section 27(5) as construed by the Delhi High
Court (supra). The Commission, in its report, had this to
say:
POWERS OF TRIBUNAL TO ORDER INTERIM MEASURES
46. Under section 17, the arbitral tribunal has the power
to order interim measures of protection unless the
parties have excluded such power by agreement. Section
17 is an important provision, which is crucial to the
working of the arbitration system, since it ensures that
even for the purposes of interim measures, the parties
can approach the arbitral tribunal rather than await
orders from a Court.
The efficacy of section 17 is however,
seriously compromised given the lack of any suitable
statutory mechanism for the enforcement of such
interim orders of the arbitral tribunal.
47. In Sundaram Finance Ltd. v. NEPC India Ltd .,
(1999) 2 SCC 479, the Supreme Court observed that
though section 17 gives the arbitral tribunal the
power to pass orders, the same cannot be enforced as
orders of a court and it is for this reason only
that section 9 gives the court power to pass interim
orders during the arbitration proceedings.
Subsequently, in M.D. Army Welfare Housing
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Organisation v. Sumangal Services Pvt. Ltd. , (2004)
9 SCC 619 the Court had held that under section 17
of the Act no power is conferred on the arbitral
tribunal to enforce its order nor does it provide
for judicial enforcement thereof.
48. In the face of such categorical judicial
opinion, the Delhi High Court attempted to find a
suitable legislative basis for enforcing the orders
of the arbitral tribunal under Section 17 in the
case of Sri Krishan v. Anand , (2009) 3 Arb LR 447
(Del) (followed in Indiabulls Financial Services v.
Jubilee Plots , OMP Nos.452-453/2009 Order dated
18.08.2009). The Delhi High Court held that any
person failing to comply with the order of the
arbitral tribunal under section 17 would be deemed
to be “making any other default” or “guilty” of any
contempt to the arbitral tribunal during the conduct
of the proceedings” under section 27(5) of Act. The
remedy of the aggrieved party would then be to apply
to the arbitral tribunal for making a representation
to the Court to mete out appropriate punishment.
Once such a representation is received by the Court
from the arbitral tribunal, the Court would be
competent to deal with such party in default as if
it is in contempt of an order of the Court, i.e.,
either under the provisions of the Contempt of
Courts Act or under the provisions of Order 39 Rule
2A Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.
49. The Commission believes that while it is
important to provide teeth to the interim orders of
the arbitral tribunal as well as to provide for
their enforcement, the judgment of the Delhi High
Court in Sri Krishan v. Anand is not a complete
solution. The Commission has, therefore, recommended
amendments to section 17 of the Act which would give
teeth to the orders of the Arbitral Tribunal and the
same would be statutorily enforceable in the same
manner as the Orders of a Court. In this respect,
the views of the Commission are consistent with
(though do not go as far as) the 2006 amendments to
Article 17 of the UNCITRAL Model Law.
Pursuant to this report, sub-section(2) to Section 17
was added by the Amendment Act 2015, so that the cumbersome
procedure of an Arbitral Tribunal having to apply every
time to the High Court for contempt of its orders would no
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longer be necessary. Such orders would now be deemed to be
orders of the Court for all purposes and would be enforced
under the Civil Procedure Code, 1908 in the same manner as
if they were orders of the Court. Thus we do not find Shri
Rana Mukherjee's submission to be of any substance in view
of the fact that Section 17(2) was enacted for the purpose
of providing a “complete solution” to the problem.
Accordingly, we allow the appeal and set aside the
judgment of the Bombay High Court. The matter is remanded
to decide the alleged contempt on facts. It would be open
for the respondent to argue before the High Court that he
has, on the facts of the case, not committed any contempt.
.....................J.
[ROHINTON FALI NARIMAN]
....................J.
[SANJAY KISHAN KAUL]
NEW DELHI,
JULY 06, 2017.