Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ALLEN BERRY & CO. (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA, NEW DELHI.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/01/1971
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1971 AIR 696 1971 SCR (3) 282
1971 SCC (1) 295
CITATOR INFO :
F 1973 SC 683 (10)
R 1987 SC2045 (7)
R 1988 SC1166 (7)
F 1988 SC1791 (10)
R 1988 SC2018 (9)
RF 1990 SC1340 (8)
ACT:
Arbitration Act (10 of 1940), s. 30-Setting aside
award---Error apparent on the face of award-What is.
HEADNOTE:
The Director General of Disposals, through correspondence
and sale notes, sold to the appellant-company, United States
surplus was materials consisting of vehicles and other
stores. Disputes having arisen between the parties, both as
regards the contents of and the quantity of the vehicles
deliverable under the contracts, they were referred to
arbitration as per cl. 13 of the general conditions of the
contract between the parties. The disputes consisted of
claims and counter claims and the umpire after deducting the
amount of one claim allowed to the appellant, held that the
appellant was liable to pay to the respondent Rs.
34,70,226.50 and costs amounting to Rs. 5,40,544,00.
The award was filed in the District Judge’s Court and the
appellant applied for having it set aside on various
grounds. The Court held that with respect to certain
matters claimed by the respondent the umpire had no
jurisdiction and remitted the award for reconsideration of
those items and also for readjustment of the amount of
costs. The High Court confirmed the judgment of the
District Judge.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended that the award was
liable to be set aside, because : (1) the contracts of sale
were misconstrued and the error appeared on the face of the
award; (2) several documents bearing on the scope of the
sales were not considered; (3) the umpire went beyond his
jurisdiction when he awarded compensation to the respondent
because the appellant removed certain vehicles; (4) that the
umpire acted as a conciliator deciding matters on
conjecture; (5) that the umpire fixed ground rent payable by
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the appellants without any evidence; and (6) that the costs
awarded were totally disproportionate.
HELD : (1) When parties choose their own arbitrator to be
the judge in the dispute between them, they cannot, when the
award is good on the face of it, object to the decision
either upon the law or the facts. Therefore, even when an
arbitrator commits a mistake either in law or in fact in
determining the matters referred to him. but such mistake
does not appear on the face of the award or in a document
appended to or incorporated in it so as to form part of it,
the award will neither be remitted nor set aside. Whether
the contract or a clause of it is incorporated in award is a
question of construction of the award. The test is, did the
arbitrator corn,--’ to a finding on the wording of the
contract. If be did, he can be said to have impliedly
incorporated the contract or the relevant clause but a mere
general reference to the contract in the award is not to be
held as incorporating it. [288 F-H; 289 A]
Union of India v. Bungo Steel Furniture Pvt. Ltd. [1967] 1
S.C.R. 324, followed.
283
Champsey Bhara & Co. v. Jivraj Balloo Spinning & Weaving Co.
Ltd. [1923] A.C. 480, applied.
Kelanton v. Duff Development Co. [1923] A.%’-. 395 and
Giacomo Costa Fu Andrea v. British Italian Trading Co. Ltd.
[1962] 2 All E.R. 53, 62. referred to.
2(a) The dispute in the present case being as to what was
sold and as to whether besides the sale-notes, the
subsequent clarifications or. explanations given by various
officers of the respondent formed part of the contract and
were binding on the respondent, and both the questions
having been referred to arbitration, the umpires findings on
them would bind the parties unless he laid down any legal
proposition such as a construction which is made the basis
of the award and is on the face of the award erroneous. The
award showed that the umpire had considered besides the
sale-notes the oral and documentary evidence led by the
parties as also the contentions urged by counsel. It could
not, therefore, be contended that the several documents were
not taken into consideration by the umpire. [291 E-F; 292 E-
H]
(b) The umpire laid down the legal proposition that the
clarifications or assurances given subsequent to the dates
of the sale-notes were not binding on the respondent and
could not affect the scope of the sales; but the fact that
he answered a legal point, which he had to decide while
deciding the questions referred to him, did not mean that he
incorporated into the award or made part of it a document or
documents, the construction of which was the basis of the
award. If there was an error in such a case it could not be
said to an error appearent on the face of the award
entitling the court to consider the various documents placed
before the umpire but not incorporated in the award so as to
form part of it, and then to make a search if they had been
misconstrued by him. [293 B-E]
(3) Once it was found that it was competent for the umpire
to decide that the appellant company was not entitled to
keep certain vehicles which it had removed, he must, to do
justice between the parties, order the appellant either to
return them or to pay compensation for them. Since the
first course-was not possible because of lapse of time the
second was the only obvious course. Clause 13 of the
general conditions provides for reference to arbitration of
all questions or disputes arising, under these conditions or
in connection with this co-tract, and these words are wide
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and comprehensive. Therefore, the umpire did not go beyond
his jurisdiction in accepting the respondent’s counter claim
for compensation. [295 D-E]
(4) Merely because the umpire held that even though the
appellant was not entitled to some vehicles claimed by it,
yet the authorities had delivered a substantial number of
them. without going into details, it could not be said that
he bad acted without evidence or that he behaved in the
matter as a conciliator, or gave findings on conjuncture and
surmises, especially when the appellant withheld relevant
evidence which was
in its possession. [296 E-F]
(5) Under the contracts of the sale. the appellant was
bound to pay to the respondent ground rent and other charges
which the respondent in its turn was liable to pay the
owners; and since it was not the appellant’s case that the
respondent had claimed a higher amount there was no sub-
stance in the contention that the arbitrator fixed the
ground rent without any evidence. [297 A-C]
284
(6) Considering the huge amounts claimed by the parties,
the volume of evidence, adduced and the number of days
occupied in recording that evidence and in arguing the case,
it could not be said that the discretion of the umpire
exercised in the matter of costs was exercised in breach of
any legal provision or unreasonably. [297 C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2418 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 19, 1963 of the Punjab High Court, Circuit Bench,
at Delhi in F.A.0. Appeal No. 123-D of 1961.
R. L. Agarwal, K. L. Mehta, S. K. Mehta, P. N. Chadda. M. G.,
Gupta and K. R. Nagaraja, for the appellant.
L. M. Singhvi, Badri Dass Sharma and S. P. Nayar, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court has delivered by
Shelat, J. By this appeal, under special leave, the
appellantcompany challenges the correctness of the judgment
of the High Court of Punjab, dated February 19, 1963
refusing to set aside an umpire’s award, dated March 22,
1958. The award was in respect of certain disputes between
the company and the Union of India in the matter of
disposals of the United States surplus war materials left by
the Government of the U.S.A. at the end of the last World
War. These surplus materials, called the U.S. Surplus
Stores, consisted of vehicles and other stores. It was said
that these were sold to the company by the Director-General,
Disposals through correspondence and sale-notes. These
contracts of sale were subject to the General Conditions of
Contract (Form Con. 117). Cl. 13 of these General Condi-
tions provided that
"In the event of any question or dispute
arising under these conditions or any special
conditions of contract or in connection with
this contract-the same shall be referred to
the award of an arbitrator to be nominated by
the Director General and an arbitrator to be
nominated by the contractor, or in the case of
the said arbitrators not agreeing then to the
award of an Umpire to be appointed by the
arbitrators in writing before proceeding on
the reference----.
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Upon every and any such reference, the
assessment of the costs incidental to the
reference and award respectively shall be in
the discretion of the arbitrators, or in the
event of their not agreeing, of the Umpire
appointed by them."
285
Disputes having arisen between the parties both as regards
the contents and the quantity of the vehicles delivered
under the contracts, they were referred, in the first
instance, to two arbitrators nominated by the parties, and
ultimately to an umpire. The disputes were crystallized
into nine claims by the appellant company totalling Ks.
6,73,34,500/-, and several counterclaims by the Government
of India. At the end of the arbitration, the umpire, by his
said award, disallowed all the claims made by the company,
except one for which he awarded RS. 6,94,000/- and held, in
respect of the counter-claims filed by the Government of
India, that the appellant-company was liable to pay to the
Government in all Rs. 36,23,682.50 P. and costs amounting
to Rs. 5,40,544/-. In the result, after deducting the claim
allowed to the appellant-company, the company was held
liable to pay to the Government Rs. 34,70,226.50 P.
The award having been filed by the umpire in the Court of
the, District Judge, Delhi and the Government of India
having thereupon applied for a decree in term of the award,
the company applied to the Court for setting aside the award
urging several grounds for so doing. The District Judge by
an elaborate judgment declined to set aside the award. He,
however, held that the award suffered from an error apparent
on the face of the award in respect of the appellant’s claim
No. 111(a), and further held that the counter-claims 11, IV,
V and VI made by the Government were not covered by the
reference, and consequently, the umpire had no jurisdiction
to go into them. Declining, however, to set aside the
award, he remitted it for reconsideration of the aforesaid
items and also for readjustment of the amount of costs in
the evert of enhanced compensation being awarded to the
company in respect of its claim No. 111(a). Dissatisfied
with the judgment of the court the company filed an appeal
before the High Court. The Union of India also filed
certain coss-objections. The High Court heard the appeal
and the cross-objections together and by its aforesaid
juggment dismissed both the anneal and the cross-objections
and upheld the judgment of the District Judge.
In support of the claim that the award was liable to be set
aside, counsel for the company submitted the following six
propositions for our acceptance :
1. that the contracts of sale entered into
by the company were misconstrued by the umpire
and such misconstruction appears on the face
of the award:
2. that the umpire. as also the High Court,
failed to take into consideration several
documents while deciding the scope of the
sales;
286
3. that in respect of claim No. VI and
counter-claim No. VI of the Government, the
umpire acted beyond his jurisdiction as those
question,,; did not fall within the scope of
the reference;
4. that the umpire did not act according to
law but acted as a conciliator and based his
award on mere conjectures and surmises;
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5. that his conclusion on ground rent awarded
to the Government was based on no evidence;
and
6. that the costs awarded to the Government
were altogether disproportionate.
Before we proceed to consider these propositions, it is
necessary to ascertain the scope of, S. 30 of the
Arbitration Act 1940 and the principles underlying that
section. The general rule in matters of arbitration awards
is that where parties have agreed upon an arbitrator,
thereby displacing a court of law for a domestic forum, they
must accept the award as final for good or ill. In such
cases the discretion of the court either for remission or
for setting aside the award will not be readily exercised
and will be strictly confined to the specific grounds set
out in ss. 16 and 30 of the Act. In Hodgkinson vs.
Fernie,(1) Williams, J. stated the principle as follows :-
"where a cause or matters in difference are
referred to an arbitrator, whether a lawyer or
a layman, he is constituted the sole and final
judge of all questions both of law and
fact .... The only exceptions to that rule
are, cases where the award is the result of
corruption or fraud, and one other, which
though it is to be regretted, is now, I think,
firmly established, viz., where the question
of law necessarily arises on the face of the
award, or upon some paper accompanying and
forming part of,-the award."
This observation was recently cited with approval in Union
of India v. Bungo Steel Furniture Pvt. Ltd. (2)
The principle is that the Court, while examining an award-,
will look at documents accompanying and forming part of the
award. Thus, if an arbitrator were to refer to the
pleadings of the parties so as to incorporate them into the
award, the Court can look at them. In some cases, however,
courts extended the principle and set aside the award on a
finding that the contract, though only referred to but not
incorporated into the award as part of it, had been
misconstrued and such misconstruction had
(1) (1857)(3)C.B.(N.S.)189, 202.
(2) [1967] 1 S.C.R.324.
287
been the basis of the award. Thus, in Landauer v. Asser(1)
the dispute between buyers and sellers of goods was as to
who was entitled to certain sums paid upon a policy of
insurance upon the goods. This was referred to arbitration
and the umpire made his award basing it on the construction
he placed on the contract, namely, that as the parties to
the contract were "by the terms thereof" principals, their
interest and liability in insurance was defined to be the
value of the invoice plus 5 per cent. On an application to
set aside the award, the Court of Appeal held that inasmuch
as the umpire had referred to the contract and the terms
thereof, it was justified in looking at the contract, and
having done so, found that he had based his decision
entirely upon the terms of the contract. It also found that
since the contract, if properly construed, did not justify
the decision, the award was bad on the face of it and was
liable to be set aside. A similar view appears also to have
been taken in F.R. Absalom Ltd. v. Great Western (London)
Garden Village Society Ltd . (2 ) where the award set out
the relevant words and cl. 30 of the contract and also the
conclusion of law on the meaning of those words. Lord
Russel said that since the award recited the contract and
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referred in terms to the provisions of cl. 30, thereby
incorporating it into the award, and then stated the
construction which the arbitrator placed upon that clause,
the Court was entitled to look at that clause to ascertain
if the construction placed by the arbitrator was erroneous.
The correctness of the decision in Landauer v. Asser(1) was
challenged before the Privy Council in Chempsey Bhara & Co.
v. Jivraj Balloo Spinning and Weaving Co. Ltd.(2) Lord Dune-
din,, however, did not expressly overrule it but rested
content by observing that that decision was not binding on
the Board. But he formulated the principle thus :
.LM15
" An error in law on the face of the award means, that you
can find in the award or a document actually incorporated
thereto, as for instance, a note appended by the arbitrator
stating the reasons for his judgment, some legal proposition
which is the basis of the award and which you can then say
is erroneous. It does not mean that if in a narrative a
reference is made to a contention of one party that opens
the door to seeing first what that contention is, and then
going to the contract on which the parties’ rights depend to
see if that contention is sound."
(1) [1905](2) K.B. 184.
(2) 1933 A.C. 592.
(3) [1923] A.C.480.
288
The Privy Council upheld the award. stating that it was
impossible to say what was the mistake on the face of the
award which the arbitrators had made as they had not tied
themselves down to any legal principle which was unsound.
The mere fact that the court would have construed a document
differently than the arbitrator would not induce the court
to interfere unless the construction given by the arbitrator
is such that it is against the well-established principles
of construction. see Kelanton v. Duff Development Co.(1) I
In an illuminating analysis of a large number of earlier
decisions, including Landauer(2) and F. R. Absalom Ltd.(3)
Diplock, L.J., in Giacomo Costa Fu Andrea v. British Italian
Trading Co. Ltd. (4 ) recorded his conclusion thus
"It seems to me, therefore, that, on the
cases, there is none which compels us to hold
that a mere reference to the contract in the
award entitles us to look at the contract. It
may be that in particular cases a specific
reference to a particular clause of a contract
may incorporate the contract, or that clause
of it, in the award. I think that we are
driven back to first principles in this
matter, namely, that an award can only be set
aside for error which is on its face. It is
true that an award can incorporate another
document so as to entitle one to read that
document as part of the award and, by reading
them together, find an error on the face of
the award."
The question whether a contract or a clause of it is
incorporated in the award is a question of construction of
the award. The test is, does the arbitrator come to a
finding on the wording of the contract. If he does, he can
be said to have impliedly incorporated the contract or a
clause in it whichever be the case. But a mere general
reference to the contract in the award is not to be held as
incorporating it. The principle of reading contracts or
other documents into the award is not to be encouraged or
extender. (see Babu Ram v. Nanhemal &
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The rule thus is that as the parties choose their own
arbitrator to be the judge in the dispute between them, they
cannot, when the award is good on the face of it, object to
the decision either upon the law or the facts. Therefore.
even when an arbitrator commits a mistanke either in law or
in fact in determining the matters referred to him, but such
mistake does not appear on the face of the
(1) [1] 1923 A.C.395 (2) [1905] 2 K.B.184
(3) [1933] A.C. 592. (4) [1962]2 All E.R. 53, 62
(5) C. A. NO. 1 07 of 1966, Decided on 5-12-1968.
289
award or in a document appended to or incorporated in it so
as to form part of it, the award will neither be remitted
nor set aside notwithstanding the mistake.
In the light of the principle above stated, the first
question calling for determination is, is there an error
apparent on the award, in the sense that the umpire
misconstrued the contracts of sale inasmuch as though those
contracts were contained ’in sale-notes as well as in
several letters, he considered the sale-notes only as
containing the contracts of sale disregarding the corres-
pondence which had taken place between the company and the
Director-General, Disposals and his officers ? Such a
question would undoubtedly be one of law. But the disputes
referred to the umpire contained disputes both of fact and
law. Ordinarily the decision of the umpire, even though it
be on a question of law, would be binding on the parties.
The court would only interfere if the case falls within the
exceptions mentioned by Williams, J. in Hodgkinson v.
Fernie(1) and reaffirmed by Diplock L. J., in Giacomo Costa
Fu Andrea’ v. British Italian Trading Co. Ltd.(2).
There were in all three separate sales to the appellant-
company,, which according to the respondents were
incorporated in sale notes Nos. 160,. 161 and 197. Before
the sale-note 160 was issued on July 11, 1946, it is a fact
that the company had written a letter dated July 10, 1946
which was also endorsed by two officers of the Director-
General, Disposals. The letter contained three clauses, the
first of which stated that "M/s. Allen Berry will buy the
Moran Vehicles Depot ’as is where is for Rs. 1,80,00,000/".
The two other clauses provided the manner and time of
payment of the sale price. But the letter commenced. with
the following words:
"Pending detailed record of terms tomorrow the
following are the broad heads of agreement,
which will form the-basis of sale of surplus
vehicles."
The next day, i.e., July 11, 1946, the Department issued
sale note 160, which in clear terms stated that what was
purchased were "all vehicles and trailers lying in Moran
Depot", which meant that the vehicles sold were only those
that were actually lying in that depot on July 11, 1946, and
not those outside it or those borne on the records of that
depot, as contended by the company. It, however, appears
from the judgment of the Trial Court (para 206) that on
receipt of sale-note 160, the company wrote a letter on July
11, 1946 in which it contended that "We have purchased the
entire vehicle depot of Moran".
(1) [1857] 3 C.B. (N.S. 189,202. 57)
(2) [1962] 2 All ER-53, 68.
7SupCI/71
290
It appears that in view of this difference of opinion, a
meeting ,of representatives of the parties, was held on July
23, 1946, the minutes of which, as recorded by the Assam
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Controller, U.S.A.S.S., read as follows:
(2) (a) The vehicles and trailers sold to
Messrs. Allen Berry and Co. Ltd., are deemed
to, include all vehicles which were or should
have been held in Moran Depot on the 10th
July, also those which have ’been issued on a
Memorandum Receipt as follows :-
(i) To the Americans, left behind by them in
various camps and depots and not yet turned in
by us.
(ii) Vehicles issued on Memorandum Receipt to
military units assisting the U.S.A.S.S.
Organisation.
(iii) Any surplus vehicles originally allotted
to U.S.A.S.S. Units-for operational purposes
and now no longer required by them."
On September 17, 1946, a secraphone message was sent from
New Delhi to Calcutta which stated "We have sold U.S. Army
surplus vehicles presumed to be borne on Moran list, that is
those actually in Moran Vehicle Depot or those that were
intended to be moved to that depot, which was meant to be
parking depot for surplus U.S. vehicles in Assam area." On
September 26 1946, the Director-General,’Disposals, wrote to
the company that "The vehicles sold to you in Assam are
those U.S. Army surplus. vehicles actually in Moran Vehicle
Depot or those that were intended to be moved to Moran
Vehicle Depot. Any mobile engineering equipment, such as
mobile cranes, tracked tractors are, excluded from the sale
to you." On December 10, 1946, the Controller issued a
release order in respect of
1. All vehicles and trailers lying in Moran Depot on 10th
July 1946 including all United States Army Surplus Stores,
excluding land and buildings lying within Moran Depot and
transferred to the Government of India from the Government
of the United States.
2. Vehicles in operational use in Calcutta and Assam as
and when no longer required by the U.S.A.S.S. Organisation."
291
The question raised by counsel is that the umpire failed to
consider all these documents while considering the scope and
content of the contract of sale and relied on only sale-note
No. 160, dated July 11, 1946, that the contract was not
contained in the said note 160 alone, and that therefore, he
misconstrued the contract, and that that misconstruction,
which is a point of law, is apparent on the face of the
award, as it was made the very basis of the award.
The first three issues raised by the umpire were
(1) whether the appellant was entitled to
prove that any vehicles, stores etc. other
than those mentioned in the sale-notes were
sold to it;
(2) whether the Government was bound by the
clarifications, representation, explanations
or assurances made or given by any officer or
officers of the Department regarding the
subjectmatter of the contracts of sale except
those necessarily implicit in the sale-notes;
and
(3) whether the Government sold any vehicles
except those lying in Moran Depot on July 11,
1946, or those intended to be moved thereto.
The dispute between the parties, thus, clearly was that
whereas the company claimed that the, sale was of all
vehicles borne on the records of Moran Depot, irrespective
of whether they were actually lying there on July 11., 1946
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or not, the Government claimed that the company was entitled
to those actually lying in the Depot. According to the
respondents, the contract of sale was to be found in the
sale-note, and therefore, any subsequent explanations or
assurances given by any officer or officers of the
Department could not vary or alter the terms of the
contract. These expanations and assurances were given, only
to remove the misunderstanding of the company over the
question of the scope and extent of the sale made to it.
The umpire set out part of the sale-notes 160 and 197 in the
award and then observed
"the language used in these sale letters is to
my mind perfectly clear, explicit and
unambiguous and excludes the possibility of
any vehicles, trailers or stores lying on the
dates in question outside the locations
specified in the sale letters having been
included in the two sales. The contention
that they in fact include all vehicular stores
in Assam in one case and in Bengal area in the
other has been made in all seriousness and a
good deal
292
of evidence both oral and documentary has been
produced in support of or against such
contention. The point has also been argued at
great length by learned counsel for the
parties. I have given the whole matter my
most serious and earnest consideration and my
view is that apart from the language of the
two saledeeds’ being against such a
contention, the evidence too considered as a
whole does not support it. Accordingly, I
hold that the stores sold to the claimants in
the case of Assam were those actually located
in Moran Depot on July 10,1946 and in the case
of Bengal those actually located in Jodhpur
and other depots specified in the sale letter
on July 31, 1946."
He next held :
"The alleged clarifications or representations
made or explantions or assurances given by any
officer or officers of the Disposals
Department either verbally or in writing have
been very carefully examined by me and I am of
opinion that neither are they, considered as
whole, capable of the interpretation sought to
be put upon them by the claimants nor are the
respondents bound by them. They are not in
accordance with law and do not amount to legal
contracts binding the respondents."
These passages clearly show that the umpire had considered,
besides the sale-notes, the oral and documentary evidence
led by the parties as also the contentions urged on and as
regards them by counsel for the company. It is impossible,
therefore, to uphold the contention that the various
documents, i.e., the letter of the company dated July 10,
1946, ’the subsequent correspondence, minutes of the
meetings which too place after the salenote 160 was issued
etc. were not taken into consideration by the umpire while
coming to his conclusion as to what actually was sold to
the company.
The dispute, amongst other disputes, referred to the umpire
and crystallized by him in the form of issues on the
pleadings of the parties involved, as already stated, the
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question first as to what was sold, and secondly, arising
out of that, the question whether besides the said sale-
notes 160 and 197, the subsequent clarifications or
explanations were binding on the Government. These were, no
doubt, questions partly of fact and partly of law. But
questions both of fact and law were referred to the umpire
and prima facie his findings on them would bind the parties
unless, as explained earlier, the umpire has laid down any
legal proposition, such as a construction which is made the
basis of the award and is on the face of the award an error.
293
The point is, is this such a case ? True it is that this is
not ,a case where a question of law is specifically referred
to. It is clearly a case falling in the category of cases,
like Kalanton v. Du# Development Co. Ltd. (1) wherein
deciding the questions referred to him the umpire has to
decide a point of law. In doing so, the umpire no doubt,
laid down the legal propsition that the clarifications or
assurances given subsequent to the dates of the said sale-
notes by an officer or officers of the department were not
binding on the respondents nor could they affect the scope
of the sales. That answer the umpire, was entitled to give.
But the fact that he answered a legal point does not mean
that he has incorporated into the award or made part of the
award a document or documents, the construction of which,
right or wrong, is the basis of the award. The error, if
any, in such a case cannot be said to be an error apparent
on the face of the award entitling the court to consider the
various documents placed in evidence before the umpire but
not incorporated in the award so as to form part of it and
then to make a search if they have been misconstrued by him.
This, in our understanding, is the correct principle
emerging from the decisions which counsel placed before us.
In any event, this is not a case where the umpire, in the
words of Lord Dunedin, "tied himself down to a legal
proposition" which on the face of the award was unsound.
The award ,makes it clear in so many words that he took
into. account the entire evidence, including the documents
relied on by counsel and then only came to the conclusion
that it did not assist the company in its contention as to
the scope of the sales. Contentions 1 and 2 raised by Mr.
Agarwal, therefore, cannot be upheld.
Contention No. 3 relates to 547 vehicles said’ to have been
sold to the company under sale:-note 197, dated August 2,/6,
1946. There is no dispute that out of these vehicles the
company removed 291 vehicles alleging that the delivery of
the balance of 256 vehicles was withheld. The company made
a claim being claim No. VI for the price of these 256
undelivered vehicles. The respondents contention was that
the sale to the company was confined only to the U.S.A.
Surplus Stores, that these vehicles did not fall within that
category, but were Reverse Land Lease vehicles belonging to
the Government of India under an agreement between the
U.S.A. and India. On these allegations the respondents laid
counter-claim No. VI claiming the price of the 291 vehicles
admittedly removed by the company when they were lying in
Jodhpur Depot, Calcutta.
The umpire found that the expression "Reverse Land Lease"
related to the reciprocal aid articles referred to in the
said agreement. A reciprocal aid article, according to
that agreement,
(1) [1923] A.C. 395.
294
meant an article transferred by the India Government to the
U.S. Government under reciprocal aid under para 4-C of that
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agreement’. The U.S.A. Government was deemed to have
acquired as on September 2, 1945 full title over such
articles except that such reciprocal aid articles
incorporated into installations in India were deemed to have
been returned to India Government from the date when the
U.S.A. forces relinquished possession of such installations.
From the inventories produced before him, the umpire held
that these 547 vehicles were incorporated into installations
in India, and therefore, ownership in them vested in India
Government on and after the U.S.A. forces relinquished
possession of those installations. They could not,
therefore, be regarded ,is U.S. Surplus Stores which alone
were and could be the subject-matter of sale-note 197.
Consequently, the company was not entitled to remove the
said 291 vehicles which it did, much less could the company
claim compensation for 256 vehicles which it alleged were
not delivered to it. In the result, the umpire allowed the
Government’s counter-claim No. VI, which was for the price
of 291 vehicles unauthorisedly removed by the company from
Jodhpur Depot.
The argument in connection with this part of the award was,
firstly, that the findings of the umpire were vitiated as
there was total lack of evidence on which they could be
based, and secondly that in any event, the umpire had no
jurisdiction to award compensation to the Government in
respect of counterclaim No. VI. The first part of the
argument need not detain us as the finding that these
vehicles formed part of reciprocal aid articles, the
ownership in which vested in the Government of India and
were therefore not U.S.A.S.S. was based on the agreement
between the two Governments and the inventories produced
before the umpire from which he could hold that they
belonged to the Government of India from the date when the
installations in which they were incorporated were
relinquished by the U.S. forces, and that therefore, they
could not form the subject-matter of sale-note 197 which
related only to the U.S. Surplus St-ores.
The second part of the argument, however, requires conside-
ration. The question is whether the arbitration clause
included. a dispute relating to compensation in respect of
the said 291 vehicles unauthorisedly removed by the company.
Cl. 13 of the General Conditions of Contract, quoted
earlier, provides for reference to arbitration of all
questions or disputes "arising under these conditions" or
"in connection with this, contract".
Dr. Singhvi referred us to cl. 10 of these Conditions also
but it is clear that it can in no sense apply to the dispute
relating to, compensation. But the words "arising under
these conditions"’
295
and "in connection. with this contract" are undoubtedly wide
and comprehensive. it is, nonetheless, a question whether
the dispute as to compensation on the ground of unauthorised
appropriation of these vehicles by the company falls within
cl. 13. In Vidya Sagar- Joshi v. Surinder Nath Gautam(1)
the words "expenditure, in connection with election" used in
s. 77 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 were
construed to mean "having to do, with". An arbitration
clause wherein the words "in relation to or in connection
with the contract" were construed not to contemplate a
dispute raised by a contractor that he could avoid the-
contract on the ground that it was obtained by a fradulent
misrepresentation. (see Monro v. Bognor Urban District Coun-
cil(2). But a claim for damages on the ground of negligence
on. the part of the defendant in re-moving the plaintiff’s
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furniture against a clause for due diligence in removing it
was held to fall, within the arbitration clause. Woolf v.
Collis Remo val Service (3)
Counsel conceded that a dispute as to the interpretation of
sale-note 197 would fall under the arbitration clause.. If
that is so, it must follow that the umpire was competent to
decide whether the said 547 vehicles fell within the purview
of the sale-note or not. If in determining that question he
came to the conclusion that they did not, the obvious
conclusion would be that the company was not entitled to
take away 291 vehicles admittedly removed by it from the
Depot. If the company did that, would the question as to
the return or of compensation in lieu of such vehicles, to
which it was not entitled under the sale, be a question
which arises out of or in connection with the contract ?
Counsel went as far as to say that the umpire in deciding
the company’s claim No. VI and the Government’s counter-
claim No. VI could decide that the company was not entitled
to those vehicles, but could not take the next step either
to direct the return of them or payment of compensation in
lieu of those vehicles. In our view, such an argument
cannot be accepted. The reason is that once it is found
that he was competent to decide the dispute as to whether
the said 547 vehicles were not the subject-matter of the
sale and 291 of them were removed unauthorisedly, he must,
to do justice between the parties in respect of disputes
referred to him, order the company either to return them or
to pay compensation for them. Since the first course was
not possible after all these years, the second was the only
and the obvious course. The dispute raised by the
respondents that 291 vehicles were not included in the sale
was: co-extensive with and connected with the dispute that
the com--
(1) A.I.R. 1969 S.C. 288.
(3) [1947]2AllE.R.260.
(2) [1915] (3) K.B.167.
296
pany was bound to return them if it was found that they were
not covered by the sale. On this reasoning it is not
possible to say that the umpire went beyond his jurisdiction
either in rejecting the company’s claim No. VI or in
accepting the corresponding counter-claim No. VI of the
respondents.
Contention 4 relates to 600 vehicles which had been taken
out of Moran Depot for operational purposes, but which the
company claimed were part of the sale under sale-note 160.
The umpire held (I that those vehicles having been taken out
of the Depot for operational purposes did not fall within
the sale, and (2) in the alternative, that the evidence
disclosed that a substantial number of vehicles in
operational use were delivered to the company even though
strictly speaking it was not entitled to them as they were
not lying in the, Depot on. July 10, 1946. The umpire
further held that if some of them per chance were not handed
over, the respondents had sufficiently compensated the
company by handing over several non-operational vehicles
from outside the depot to which the company-was not
entitled. Counsel argued that this part of the award was
vague and without any evidence to support it, and therefore,
the umpire behaved in this respect more like aconcilliator
than as an arbitrator.
Having held that sale-note 160 covered only those vehicles
which were actually lying in Moran Depot on July 10, 1946,
it was not incumbent on the umpire to decide the number of
operational vehicles outside the depot. Consequently, if he
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was satisfied that even though the company was not entitled
to the said 600 vehicles claimed by it, yet the authorities
had delivered a substantial number of them, and for any
deficiency, had also delivered non-operational vehicles,
there would be no purpose in going into the details of
vehicles delivered to the company. Even though, as the
judgment of the Trial Court discloses (para 223), there was
evidence, both oral and documentary, that the company had
collected a number of vehicles lying at places outside the
Depot, and the vehicles so collected were recorded by the
company, yet the company had withheld the production of
those records. In view of these facts it is impossible to
say that the umpire had acted without evidence, or that he
behaved in the manner of a conciliator, or gave findings on
conjectures and surmises.
Our interference was invited next on the question of ground
rent on the ground that the amount of such rent was fixed by
the umpire without any evidence. There is hardly any
substance in this contention. The sites, on which the
various depots were situated, were requisitioned by the
Government under the
297
Defence of India Rules. The Government had a statutory
obligation, therefore, to pay to the owners of those sites
compensation as provided by those Rules. Under the
contracts of sale the company was, bound to pay to the
Government ground rent and other charges which the
Government in its turn was liable to pay. It is, therefore,
not correct to say that the umpire could award only that
amount which the Government had actually paid and that the
umpire should, therefore, have taken an account from the
Government. It was never the case of the company that the
Government had claimed ground rent higher than the
compensation it was liable to pay.
The last objection was that the amount of costs awarded by
the umpire to the respondents was disproportionate. It
appears from the award-that the umpire fixed the amount of
costs after considering the statements of expenses incurred
by the parties for the hearing before him tendered by the
respective counsel for the parties. Considering the huge
amounts claimed by the parties, the volume of evidence, both
oral and documentary, adduced by them, the number of days
occupied in recording that evidence and in arguing the case,
we are not prepared to say that the discretion which the
umpire. exercised in the matter of costs was exercised in
breach of any legal provision or unreasonably which can
justify the Court’s intervention.
In our view, none of the six contentions urged by counsel
can be upheld. The result is that the appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal
dismissed.
298