Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KAMAL PUSHP ENTERPRISES
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
D.R. CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/07/2000
BENCH:
M. Jagannadha Rao, J. & Doraiswamy Raju, J.
JUDGMENT:
Raju, J.
The above appeal has been filed against the order of a learned
Single Judge of the Madhya Pradesh High Court dated 13.10.95 in
C.R. No.561 of 1994, since reported in AIR 1996 M.P.139,
rejecting the Revision Petition filed by the appellant holding
that the provisions of Section 69 of the Partnership Act do not
stand in the way of an unregistered firm defending a proceedings
against it and it precludes only the initiation of any proceeding
by such a firm.
The Gas Authority of India Ltd., at Vijaypur, entered into a
contract with the appellant to execute certain works and the
appellant in its turn had entered into a separate contract with
the respondent, indisputably an unregistered firm for carrying
out the work, the execution of which was undertaken by the
appellant under its contract with ‘GAIL. Disputes arose between
the appellant and the respondent. Thereupon, the appellant
appears to have, invoking Section 8(2) of the Arbitration Act,
1940, served a notice on the respondent seeking for consent for
the appointment of an Arbitrator, in terms of the arbitration
clause, out of five proposed Arbitrators and the respondent gave
its consent for the appointment of a named Advocate, as the
Arbitrator. The Arbitrator entered into the reference and the
appellant filed its claim and the respondent apart from opposing
the claim of the appellant stated its own claim. The Arbitrator
passed an Award in favour of the respondent and suo moto filed
the award before the trial court under Section 14(2) of the
Arbitration Act. When the Court issued notice to both the
appellant and the respondent, it is at this stage the appellant
filed various objections, one of which was based upon Section 69
of the Partnership Act, and the trial court appears to have
framed a preliminary issue of law under Order 14 Rule 2, CPC, for
decision as follows: ‘‘Whether the proceedings regarding making
the award rule of Court are maintainable as the non-applicant
firm is not a registered partnership firm under Section 69 of the
Partnership Act?
The learned Trial Judge decided the preliminary issue against the
appellant. Thereupon, the appellant moved the High Court by way
of a revision unsuccessfully and has come before this Court with
this appeal.
The learned counsel for the appellant, initially, attempted an
argument about the propriety and illegality involved in the
Arbitrator suo moto filing the award before the Civil Court for
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passing a decree but when objected to by the respondent that the
revision before the High Court against which the present appeal
has been filed arose out of the only preliminary issue decided by
the trial court on the applicability or otherwise of Section 69
of the Partnership Act to the case on hand, the arguments were
confined to the question of disability, if any, of the
respondent, being an unregistered firm, for getting any decree on
the award of the Arbitrator, in the proceedings initiated by the
Arbitrator. Mr. Sanjay Parikh, learned counsel for the
appellant, contended that the courts below ought to have
sustained the objection of the appellant based upon Section 69 of
the Partnership Act holding the proceedings to be barred on
account of the respondent being an unregistered firm. According
to the learned counsel the proceedings arising out of an award
are certainly proceedings arising out of the agreement between
parties and would fall under the category of ‘‘other
proceedings envisaged in Section 69 of the Partnership Act.
Strong reliance was placed in this regard upon the decision of
this Court reported in Jagdish Chandra Gupta Vs. Kajaria Traders
(India) ltd. [AIR 1964 SC 1882]; Raptakos Brett & Co. Ltd.
Vs. Ganesh Property [(1998) 7 SCC 184] and Haldiram Bhujiawala &
Anr. Vs. Anand Kumar Deepak Kumar & Anr. [(2000) 3 SCC 250] in
addition to placing reliance upon some other decisions of the
High Courts, to substantiate his claim. It is unnecessary to
refer to the decisions of the various High Courts in the light of
the decisions of this Court. Per contra, Mr. Vimal Dave, while
adopting the reasoning of the courts below, contended that the
provisions of Section 69 of the Partnership Act are no impediment
to the respondent getting relief as a defendant in the hands of
the Arbitrator in a proceeding initiated by the appellant itself
and as long as the respondent was only a respondent and had not
initiated or commenced any proceedings of its own, there is no
merit in the preliminary objection raised, which, according to
the learned counsel, has been rightly overruled.
The question as to the scope and ambit of Section 69 (3) was
considered by this Court in the decision reported in Jagdish
Chandra Gupta (supra). An application filed under Section 8(2)
of the Arbitration Act for the appointment of a named person or
anyone else to go into the disputes between the parties was
objected to, among other things on the ground that Section 69(3)
of the Partnership Act afford a bar to the petition because the
partnership was not registered. As against the conclusion of the
High Court that the application was maintainable, an appeal was
filed in this Court. In construing the words, ‘‘a claim of set
off or other proceeding to enforce a right arising from a
contract .., it was held that the section thinks in terms of
(a) suits and (b) claims of set off which are in a sense of the
nature of suits and (c) other proceedings and while the section
first provides for exclusion of suits in sub-sections (1) & (2)
of Section 69 the same ban is also applied to a claim of set off
and other proceedings to enforce any right arising from a
contract. This Court ultimately construed the words ‘‘other
proceedings in sub-section (3) of Section 69 giving them their
full meaning untrammelled by the words ‘‘a claim of set off,
and held that the generality of the words ‘‘other proceedings
are not to be cut down by the latter words. The said case, being
one concerning an application before Court under Section 8(2) of
the Arbitration Act, 1940 in the light of the arbitration
agreement, this Court finally held that since the arbitration
clause formed part of the agreement constituting the partnership
the proceeding under Section 8(2) was in fact to enforce a right
which arose from a contract/agreement of parties.
The above referred to decision was adverted to and the principles
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therein were also applied in the subsequent decision reported in
Raptakos Brett & Co. Ltd. (supra) and on the facts of that case
that the cause of action for the suit was not the agreement of
tenancy which lapsed by efflux of time but really one arising
under the General Law and Transfer of Property Act it was held
that the bar of suit or other proceedings based upon the lack of
registration of the firm does not apply to the case. In yet
another decision of this Court reported in Haldiram Bhujiawala
(supra) rendered by a Bench to which one of us (M. Jagannadha
Rao, J.) was a party, following the earlier decision reported in
1998 (7) SCC 184 (supra) it was held that the bar under Section
69 (2) was not attracted to that case since the suit for
permanent injunction to restrain the defendants from using the
plaintiffs trade mark/name was based upon the statutory rights
under the Trademarks Act and on common law principles of tort
applicable to passing off actions and not under the unregistered
partnership agreement.
The persistent plea made on behalf of the appellant before us is
that the bar imposed under Section 69(3) is attracted to the case
on hand and that inasmuch as the same prohibits the enforcement
of any right arising from a contract by an unregistered firm, the
objection can be taken at any stage i.e., even post award
proceedings instituted to enforce the award. Inspiration is
drawn for this claim from the decision of a learned Single Judge
of the Madras High Court reported in J. Belli Gowder vs Joghi
Gowder and another [AIR 1951 Mad.683]. That was a case wherein
an award came to be passed by an Arbitrator on an oral reference
or submission made. Unlike the law in force prior to the
Arbitration Act, 1940, the said Act in Section 2(a) defined an
arbitration agreement to be one made in writing to submit present
or future differences to arbitration and, therefore, it was held
that after the coming into force of the Act an award passed on an
oral submission or reference can neither be filed and made a rule
of Court under the Act nor enforced apart from the provisions of
the Act. This decision which is based on the principle that the
Arbitrator is a creature of the contract between the parties and
a reference to the Arbitrator could be only by means of an
agreement in writing only indicates that such infirmity goes to
the root of the very jurisdiction of the Arbitrator to enter into
the reference and decide by passing an award and in our view the
same can be of no assistance to the case of the appellant. It is
not the case of the appellant before us that there was no
arbitration clause in writing or that the dispute is not
arbitrable but yet the Arbitrator has undertaken it for decision.
As rightly pointed out for the respondent the very reference came
to be made at the instance of the appellant and what is really
objected to in the form of a preliminary issue is only the
infirmity based upon Section 69 of the Partnership Act, 1932.
The prohibition contained in Section 69 is in respect of
instituting a proceeding to enforce a right arising from a
contract in any Court by an unregistered firm, and it had no
application to the proceedings before an Arbitrator and that too
when the reference to the Arbitrator was at the instance of the
appellant itself. If the said bar engrafted in Section 69 is
absolute in its terms and is destructive of any and every right
arising under the contract itself and not confined merely to
enforcement of a right arising from a contract by an unregistered
firm by instituting a suit or other proceedings in Court only, it
would become a jurisdictional issue in respect of the
Arbitrators power, authority and competency itself, undermining
thereby the legal efficacy of the very award, and consequently
furnish a ground by itself to challenge the award when it is
sought to be made a rule of Court. The case before us cannot be
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said to be one such and the learned counsel for the appellant
though was fully conscious of this fact, yet tried to assert that
it is open to the appellant to take up the objection based upon
Section 69 of the Partnership Act, at any stage - even during the
post award proceedings to enforce the award passed. The Award in
this case cannot either rightly or legitimately said to be
vitiated on account of the prohibition contained in Section 69 of
the partnership Act, 1932 since the same has no application to
proceedings before an Arbitrator. At the stage of enforcement of
the award by passing a decree in terms thereof what is enforced
is the award itself which crystallise the rights of parties under
the Indian Contract Act and the general law to be paid for the
work executed and not any right arising only from the
objectionable contract. It is useful in this connection to refer
to the decision of this Court in Satish Kumar & others vs
Surinder Kumar & others [AIR 1970 SC 833], wherein it has been
stated in unmistakable terms that an Award is not a mere waste
paper but does create rights and has some legal effect besides
being final and binding on the parties. It has also been held
that the award is, in fact, a final adjudication of a Court of
the parties own choice and until impeached upon sufficient
grounds in an appropriate proceedings, an award which is on the
face of it regular, is conclusive upon the merits of the
controversy submitted for arbitration. Consequently, the post
award proceedings cannot be considered by any means, to be a suit
or other proceedings to enforce any rights arising under a
contract. All the more so when, as in this case, at all stages
the respondent was only on the defence and has not itself
instituted any proceedings to enforce any rights of the nature
prohibited under Section 69 of the Partnership Act, before any
Court as such. We see no infirmity or error whatsoever in the
decision of the courts below to call for our interference in this
appeal. The appeal fails and shall stand dismissed.
We make it clear that we have decided only the point relating to
the preliminary issue raised and decided by the trial judge as
well as by the High Court, and all or any other objections and
contentions may be raised and pursued by the respective parties
in the proceedings pending before the Trial Court. The parties
will bear their respective costs.