Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2789-2790 of 1997
PETITIONER:
M/S SIKKIM SUBBA ASSOCIATES
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF SIKKIM
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/05/2001
BENCH:
CJI, R.C. Lahoti & Doraiswamy Raju
JUDGMENT:
RAJU, J.
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A skeletal reference to the facts, without much emphasis
on the details of merits of the case, would help to
appreciate certain submissions, at the time of actual
consideration of the claims projected before us.
The respondent, State of Sikkim, and the appellant, M/s
Sikkim Subba Associates (referred throughout as appellants),
claimed to be a firm of Partnership, entered into an
agreement on 22.1.1991 under which the appellants have been
appointed as the organising agents for its lotteries
enumerated therein subject to the terms and conditions more
fully set out therein regulating the rights and obligations
of the parties. It needs to be kept in view that since
running of private lotteries would constitute a criminal
offence, some of the States have allowed parties to put on
the apparel of the State in return for a stipulated fee to
mobilise funds, in public interest to undertake public
works. Disputes and misunderstanding arose which led to the
termination of the agreement resulting in the appellants
seeking recourse to litigation by getting an Arbitrator
appointed invoking the powers under Section 8 of the
Arbitration Act, 1940 (hereinafter referred to as the
‘Act).
As against the order dated 24.10.1992 of the District
Judge, Gangtok (Sikkim), appointing the sole Arbitrator, the
respondent challenged the same before the High Court by
filing an appeal which came to be dismissed on 23.11.1992.
The matter was pursued further before this Court in SLP (C)
No.26 of 1993 and by an order dated 26.4.1993 the same was,
by the agreement of parties, dismissed subject to the
observation that the Arbitrator shall give a speaking order
and, therefore, there was no need to go into the controversy
raised. The appellants filed their statement of claim
before the Arbitrator for a sum of Rs.81,84,679.45 with
further relief for the refund of Rs.76 lacs, said to have
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been realised by the State by encashing two bank guarantees,
with interest at 18% p.a. from 23.9.1992, the date of
encashment. The respondent-State filed its reply opposing
the claims made by the appellants and asserted a counter
claim against the appellants for a sum of Rs.8,64,81,445/-
with future interest and costs. Both parties marked
documents and adduced oral evidence. Thereupon, the
Arbitrator made an Award on 8.2.1994 determining the amount
payable by the State to the appellants at Rs.37,75,00,000/-
and the amount payable by the appellants to the State by way
of counter claim at Rs.4,61,35,242/- and after adjusting the
amounts due to the State towards its counter claim,
determined the net amount payable to the appellants by the
State at Rs.33,13,54,758/-. Proportionate costs were
awarded and future interest was also granted at the rate of
12% p.a. on the sum of Rs.33,13,54,758/-.
Aggrieved, the State filed an application under Section
30 of the Act to set aside the Award. The District Judge by
his decision dated 27.10.94 overruled the objections of the
State and made the Award the rule of court by passing a
decree in terms of the Award. The State challenged the same
before the High Court by filing an appeal under Section 39
of the Act. The matter was heard in the High Court by a
Division Bench consisting of the learned Chief Justice
(Justice S.N. Bhargava) and Justice R. Dayal. In a
judgment dated 29.9.1995 the learned Chief Justice agreed
with the contentions raised on behalf of the State and
sustained the challenge made to the Award by setting aside
the Award as well as the Judgement of the learned District
Judge, thereby allowing the appeal with costs. Dayal, J.
rendered a separate dissenting judgment by coming to the
ultimate conclusion that the quantum of damages arrived at
by the Arbitrator suffered an illegality apparent on its
face and, therefore, in his view the matter required to be
remitted for reconsideration of the matter afresh to the
Arbitrator. In view of the above, the Court passed the
following order :-
There is a difference of opinion between us. Chief
Justice has come to the conclusion that the appeal should be
allowed with costs whereas Justice Dayal has come to the
conclusion that the matter may be remitted back to the
Arbitrator for determining quantum of damages. As such, the
matter may be placed before the Honble Chief Justice/Judge
as soon as he assumes charge.
Sd/- Sd/-
(Ripusudan Dayal) (S.N. Bhargava)
Judge
Chief Justice
29/09/1995
29/09/1995
Thereafter, Dayal, J. ceased to be Judge of the Sikkim
High Court and was transferred to the Allahabad High Court
and in his place Justice M. Sengupta assumed office.
Though the date for hearing of the matter was fixed by the
said learned Judge, on the said date it was mentioned that
Sikkim Subba Associates, the appellants, has filed an
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application in CMA No.11/96 invoking powers under Sections
98 and 151,CPC, opposing the hearing of the appeal in view
of Section 98(2). The State also filed CMA No.15/96
invoking Sections 11, 98 and 151, CPC, questioning the very
maintainability of the application filed by Sikkim Subba
Associates. The said applications though initially were
before Sengupta, J., due to inadvertence came to be listed
before the new Chief Justice (Justice K.M. Agarwal) and
when the learned Chief Justice asked the counsel as to
whether they wanted the case to be made over to Sengupta,
J., both sides wanted the same to be heard by the Chief
Justice himself. The learned Chief Justice was of the view
that the order of reference made on the judicial side by the
Division Bench cannot be upset either on the administrative
side or on the judicial side while hearing the appeal as a
third Judge pursuant to the order of reference.
Consequently, by an order dated 14.8.96 the application
filed by the appellants came to be dismissed and the one
filed by the State came to be allowed to the extent of
challenge made to the maintainability of the application
filed by the appellants. These appeals came to be filed in
this Court challenging those orders.
On 3.3.1997 when SLP (C) Nos.3232-3233 of 1997 came up
for hearing, this Court (Honble the Chief Justice and
Honble Mrs. Justice Sujata V. Manohar) passed the
following order, after briefly noticing the circumstances in
which the appeals have been filed :-
Against the said order of 14.8.96 made by Agarwal Chief
Justice, the petitioners filed the present Special Leave
Petitions. When these petitions were came up for hearing on
the last occasion a technical objection was raised that the
per Court order of 29.9.95 had not been challenged by the
petitioners and, therefore, the petitions were not
maintainable. To overcome this technical objection by way
of abundant caution the petitioners have sought amendment of
the petition with a view to challenging the said per Court
order of 29.9.95. The amendment is opposed on the ground
that it is barred by 400 days. However, in the
aforementioned circumstances, we conclude that there was no
deliberate delay on the part of the petitioners, but it was
only because they thought that it was not necessary to
challenge the order of 29.9.95 as they had challenged the
subsequent order of 14.8.96. We, therefore, condone the
delay and allow the amendment.
We would also like to make it clear that we do not
propose to go into the merits of the matter except to
consider whether in the aforesaid factual background was it
permissible to the learned Chief Justice to hear and pass
the order of 14.8.96. In other words, was the learned Chief
Justice entitled to hear the matter in view of the per Court
order passed on 29.9.95. If yes, the question is whether
the per Court order of 29.9.95 itself was a correct order.
If no, what order this Court should pass in the matter.
This is the limited question which we may be required to
consider at the initial stage unless we find it necessary to
enter into the merits of the matter.
We direct the learned counsel appearing for the
contesting parties to file their brief written submissions
within two weeks from today. The matters may thereafter be
fixed for final disposal. Permitted to mention before the
learned Chief Justice.
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On 11.4.1997 when the SLPs came up once again before the
very Bench of this Court, it was ordered as follows :-
In order to avoid multiplicity of the proceedings which
may be the consequence if this Court first decides only the
legality of the order dated 14.8.1996 passed by the learned
third Judge in the High Court, we consider it appropriate to
treat these special leave petitions as ones against the
judgment of the High Court even on merits. Irrespective of
the view taken by this Court on the question of the legality
of the order of the learned third Judge, these matters would
be heard as appeals even on merits of the case. This is
clarified in view of the earlier order dated 3.3.1997 which
had indicated that this Court did not propose then to go
into the merits of these matters. Learned counsel for both
sides agree that this would be the more appropriate course
to avoid any further delay in the decision of the matters on
merits and it would also avoid multiplicity of proceedings
because in either view taken on the question of legality of
the learned third Judges order, the aggrieved party would
be required to then challenge the decision on merits. It is
clarified accordingly.
Leave granted.
No stay.
Shri B. Sen, learned senior counsel for the appellants,
submitted that having regard to the fact that the Sikkim
High Court, at the relevant point of time, had only two
judges, inclusive of the Chief Justice, and they have chosen
to differ from each other - the learned Chief Justice taking
the view that the appeal of the State has to be allowed and
the Award of damages in favour of the appellants was
unwarranted as well as unsustainable in law and the other
learned Judge (R. Dayal J.,) expressing the view that the
award suffered from an error of law apparent only in the
manner of determination of the quantum of damages and that
for purposes of re-determination afresh of the quantum of
damages alone, the matter has to be remitted to the
Arbitrator, the Award ought to have been confirmed under
Section 98 (2) C.P.C., particularly when rules 149 & 150 of
the Sikkim High Court (Practice & Procedure) Rules, 1991
came to be deleted with effect from 12.3.92, the date of
enforcement of the original rules. Reliance has been placed
in this regard on the decision of this Court reported in Tej
Kaur & another vs Kirpal Singh & Another (1995 (5) SCC 119)
and that of the Assam High Court in Abdul Latif vs Abdul
Samad (AIR 1950 Assam 80). In traversing the said claim,
Shri V.A. Bobde, learned senior counsel for the Sikkim
State, contended that the words Court consisting of in
juxtaposition to the words Constituting the Bench, in
proviso to sub-Section (2) of Section 98 will only have
relevance and has to be construed with reference to the
sanctioned strength alone - which at all relevant points of
time was only three so far as Sikkim High Court is concerned
and whenever there is a third judge, even on the vacancy
being filled up on such vacancy arising for any reason in
respect of any one of the two, the matter should be referred
to and heard by the third judge and neither any exception
could be taken for the same nor could it be claimed that the
judgement under appeal before the High Court should only be
confirmed. Since retrospective deletion of a statutory rule
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could not have been legitimately made by a notification by
the rule-making authority in the absence of a specific
statutory provision conferring any such power in this case,
it is contended that the deletion could be only of
prospective effect and the case before us would be governed
by those rules, as if it existed.
In our view, the decision in AIR 1950 Assam 80 (Supra)
has no application to this case where unlike the Assam Case,
the very Division Bench, as part of their judicial order
also made a consequential order of reference to a third
judge and inasmuch as there was no appeal challenging the
same. We are of the view that rules 149 & 150 of the Sikkim
High Court (Practice & Procedure) Rules, 1991, which
governed the situation, were very much in force on the date
when the Division Bench exercised their power and the order
of reference passed in this case could not therefore be said
to be bad in law. Apart from the axiomatic principle of law
that a subordinate legislation in the form of Rule or
Notification could not be made/unmade retrospectively unless
any power in that regard has been specifically conferred
upon the Rule-making Authority , a mere retrospective
deletion could not per se have the effect of nullifying or
destroying orders passed or acts already performed, when
such powers were available in the absence of any specific
statutory provision enacted to destroy all such rights
already acquired or obligations and liabilities incurred.
The decision in 1995 (5) SCC 119 (supra) will have no
application to this case, in view of rules 149 & 150 noticed
above and also for the reason that unlike in the present
case, the case considered therein, concedingly involved only
a question of fact over which the dissenting views came to
be expressed. That apart, the words Consisting of shall
mean and also considered to have relevance only to the
sanctioned strength. Therefore, taking into account the
fact that for the time being, there were only two Judges in
position and that the learned judges, who constituted the
Division Bench, expressed different views and at the same
time thought fit to refer the matter to the opinion of a
third judge, the matter should await till the arrival of a
third judge. Not only such a contingency also fructified in
this case but the matter also came to be actually posted
before the third judge for hearing. The amplitude of powers
of this Court under Articles 136 and 142 of the Constitution
of India for doing complete justice in any cause or matter
brought before it, cannot also be otherwise disputed. As a
matter of fact, in the teeth of the Orders passed by this
Court on 11.4.97 to treat the appeals as having been filed
even on the merits of the case and be heard as such, and
that too, on the agreement expressed by the counsel on both
sides, to be also the appropriate course, in these matters,
it is not permissible for the appellants to take a stand to
the contrary to avoid or stall an hearing and disposal of
these appeals on the merits of the matters involved therein.
The respondent-State, though at some point of time,
seems to have pressed into service Article 299 of the
Constitution of India, to contend that no valid contract
between parties came into existence as envisaged therein and
consequently neither the Arbitrator could have entered upon
reference nor can the State be held bound by such an
agreement, the same was not pursued before us realising the
futility of the same, having regard to the peculiar facts of
this case. We are not called upon, in such circumstances,
to decide this issue and the parties have also proceeded on
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the footing that there was a valid and binding contract
between the appellants and the State, in this case, without
prejudice to their contentions in respect of their rights
under the agreement.
On behalf of the appellants, it has been strenuously
contended that the Arbitrators award cannot be challenged
in proceedings under Section 30 of the Act, as if on an
appeal and that the Award in this case has been rightly
upheld by the District Judge, since it did not disclose any
misconduct on the part of the Arbitrator and no other
ground for any such an interference within the parameters of
Section 30, having also been substantiated by the
respondent-State. It is, therefore, contended that the
decision of Chief Justice Bhargava, for the same reason,
could not be sustained and that the learned Chief Justice
committed an error in directing the Award, as affirmed by
the District Judge, to be set aside for any one or other of
the reasons assigned by him. At the same time, while
strongly defending the decision of the learned Chief
Justice, it was urged for the respondent- State that the
numerous errors apparent ex facie on the Award have been not
only meticulously enumerated but found to have been
substantiated succinctly, by adverting to the materials in
support thereof for justifying Courts interference. It was
also submitted for the respondents that Dayal J., having
found the Award to suffer from serious infirmities in
awarding damages, erred in directing a remand to the very
Arbitrator for consideration afresh, to re-determinate the
damages and instead there should have been only a
supersession of the arbitration agreement itself under
Section 19 read with Section 16 (c) of the Act. The learned
senior counsel on either side invited our attention to
voluminous case law on the scope and ambit of powers of
Courts exercising jurisdiction under Section 30 as well as
Section 39 of the Act for interference with the award of an
Arbitrator, which, on a closer scrutiny, would disclose that
the observations in each of such cases came to be made,
invariably and ultimately in the context of the peculiar
facts and circumstances of the cases dealt with therein and
having regard to the particular class or category of
mistakes or nature of errors found highlighted in those
cases. It is appropriate, before undertaking an
adjudication on the merits of the claims of parties, to
advert to the salient and overall peripheral parameters,
repeatedly re- emphasised by this Court, in justification of
interference with an Award of the Arbitrator by different
Courts at various levels exercising powers under the Act as
well as by this Court, without unnecessarily multiplying the
number of authorities by making reference to only some
relevant out of the same, for our purpose.
Relying upon the ratio in Champsey Bhara & Company vs
Jivraj Balloo Spinning & Weaving Company Ltd. (AIR 1923
P.C. 66) this Court in M/s Alopi Parshad & Sons Ltd. vs
Union of India (AIR 1960 SC 588) observed that the award may
be set aside on the ground of an error on the face thereof,
when in the award or in any document incorporated with it,
as for instance, a note appended by the Arbitrator(s)
stating the reasons for the decision wherein the legal
propositions which are the basis of the award are found to
be erroneous. A specific question submitted to the
Arbitrator for his decision, even if found answered wrongly
involving an erroneous decision in point of law also, was
considered not to make the award bad on its face so as to
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call for interference. While emphasising the position that
misconduct in Section 30 (a) of the Act comprises legal
misconduct, this Court held it to be complete in itself when
the Arbitrator was found to have, on the face of the award,
arrived at a decision by ignoring very material and relevant
documents which throw abundant light on the controversy to
help a just and fair decision or arrived at an inconsistent
conclusion on his own finding (K.P Poulose vs State of
Kerala & Anr. - AIR 1975 SC 1259). In M/s Chahal
Engineering and Construction Company vs Irrigation
Deptartment., Punjab, Sirsa, (1993 (4) SCC 186), this Court
held that the words is otherwise invalid in clause (c) of
Section 30 of the Act would include an error apparent on the
face of the record. In Trustees of the Port of Madras vs
Engineering Constructions Corporation Ltd., (1995 (5) SCC
531) after adverting to the ratio of the Constitution Bench
of this Court in Raipur Development Authority & Ors. vs M/s
Chokhamal Contractors & others (1989 (2) SCC 721), this
Court held that the error apparent on the face of the award
contemplated by Section 16 (1) (c) and Section 30 (c) of the
Act is an error of law apparent on the face of the award
and not an error of fact and that the Arbitrator cannot
ignore the law or misapply it in order to do what he thinks
is just and reasonable. In The President, Union of India &
Another vs Kalinga Construction Co. (P) Ltd. (AIR 1971 SC
1646), it was held that the Court, in a proceeding to set
aside the award cannot exercise jurisdiction, as if on an
appeal by re- examining and re-appraising the evidence
considered by the Arbitrator and come to the decision that
the Arbitrator was wrong (See also AIR 1989 SC 268; 1989 SC
777 and 1989 SC 890).
In Union of India vs M/s Jain Associates & Another (JT
1994 (3) SC 303), this Court held as follows:
7. In K.P. Poulose vs State of Kerala & Anr. [(1975)
Supp. SCR 214)], this Court held that misconduct under
Section 30(a) does not connote a moral lapse. It comprises
of legal misconduct which is complete if the arbitrator, on
the face of the award, arrives at an inconsistent conclusion
even on his own finding, by ignoring material documents
which would throw abundant light on the controversy and help
in arriving at a just and fair decision. It is in this
sense that the arbitrator has misconducted the proceedings
in the case. In that case the omission to consider the
material documents to resolve the controversy was held to
suffer from manifest error apparent ex facie. The award was
accordingly quashed. In Dandasi Sahu vs State of Orissa
(1990 (1) SCC 214), this Court held that the arbitrator need
not give any reasons. The award could be impeached only in
limited circumstances as provided under Section 16 and 30 of
the Act. If the award is disproportionately high having
regard to the original claim made and the totality of the
circumstances it would certainly be a case of non
application of mind amounting to legal misconduct and it is
not possible to set aside only invalid party while retaining
the valid part. In other words the doctrine of severability
was held inapplicable in such a situation. It is,
therefore, clear that the word misconduct in Section 30(a)
does not necessarily comprehend or include misconduct of
fraudulent or improper conduct or moral lapse but does
comprehend and include actions on the part of the
arbitrator, which on the face of the award, are opposed to
all rational and reasonable principles resulting in
excessive award or unjust result or the like circumstances
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which tend to show non application of the mind to the
material facts placed before the arbitrator or umpire. In
truth it points to fact that the arbitrator or umpire had
not applied his mind and not adjudicated upon the matter,
although the award professes to determine them. Such
situation would amount to misconduct. In other words, if
the arbitrator or umpire is found to have not applied his
mind to the matters in controversy and yet, has adjudicated
upon those matters in law, there can be no adjudication made
on them. The arbitrator/umpire may not be guilty of any act
which can possibly be construed as indicative or partiality
or unfairness. Misconduct is often used, in a technical
sense denoting irregularity and not guilt of any moral
turpitude, that is, in the sense of non-application of the
mind to the relevant aspects of the dispute in its
adjudication. In K.V. George vs Secretary to Government,
Water & Power Department, Trivandrum & Anr. [(1989) 4 SCC
595], this Court held that the arbitrator had committed
misconduct in the proceedings by making an award without
adjudicating the counter claim made by the respondent. In
Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. vs Amritsar Gas Service and
Ors. [(1991) 1 SCC 533 & 544], the counter claim was
rejected on the ground of delay and non consideration of the
claim, it was held, constituted an error on the face of the
award.
It is also, by now, well settled that an Arbitrator is
not a conciliator and his duty is to decide the disputes
submitted to him according to the legal rights of the
parties and not according to what he may consider it to be
fair and reasonable. Arbitrator was held not entitled to
ignore the law or misapply it and cannot also act
arbitrarily, irrationally, capriciously or independently of
the contract (See 1999 (9) SCC 283 : Rajasthan State Mines
and Minerals Ltd. vs Eastern Engineering Enterprises &
Anr.). If there are two equally possible or plausible views
or interpretations, it was considered to be legitimate for
the Arbitrator to accept one or the other of the available
interpretations. It would be difficult for the Courts to
either exhaustively define the word misconduct or likewise
enumerate the line of cases in which alone interference
either could or could not be made. Courts of Law have a
duty and obligation in order to maintain purity of standards
and preserve full faith and credit as well as to inspire
confidence in alternate dispute redressal method of
Arbitration, when on the face of the Award it is shown to be
based upon a proposition of law which is unsound or findings
recorded which are absurd or so unreasonable and irrational
that no reasonable or right thinking person or authority
could have reasonably come to such a conclusion on the basis
of the materials on record or the governing position of law
to interfere. So far as the case before us is concerned,
the reference to the Arbitrator is found to be a general
reference to adjudicate upon the disputes relating to the
alleged termination of the agreement by the State and not a
specific reference on any particular question and
consequently, if it is shown or substantiated to be
erroneous on the face of it, the award must be set aside.
The Award under challenge, in our view, stands vitiated
on account of several serious errors of law, apparent on the
face of it and such infirmities go to substantiate the claim
of the State that not only the Arbitrator acted arbitrarily
and irrationally on a perverse understanding or misreading
of the materials but also found to have misdirected himself
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on the vital issues before him so as to render the award to
be one in utter disregard of law and the precedents.
Although the award purports to determine the claims of
parties, a careful scrutiny of the same discloses total
non-application of mind to the actual, relevant and vital
aspects and issues in their proper perspective. Had there
been such a prudent and judicious approach, the Arbitrator
could not have awarded any damage whatsoever and, at any
rate, such a fabulous and astronomical sum on mere
conjectures and pure hypothetical exercises, absolutely
divorced from rationality and realities, inevitably making
law, equity and justice, in the process, a casualty. The
Arbitrator has acknowledged when recording a finding on the
basis of indisputable facts that except for the first set of
draws in respect of eight lotteries in groups A & B, the
prize money obliged to be deposited seven days before the
draw (since the winners have to be paid only out of such
deposits, after draw) as well as the agency fee running to
crores was not deposited/remitted in time constraining
thereby the State to mobilise funds to distribute prize
money from State funds in order to preserve and protect the
fair name and reputation of the State, the lotteries being
run as that of and for and on behalf of the State. Even, as
late as 8.2.94 when the award came to be passed the
appellants were in arrears, due to non-deposit of prize
money within the stipulated time, a sum of Rs.1,37,47,026/-
besides non-remittance of agency fee of Rs.3,72,87,884/-.
Despite this, the Arbitrator tried to find an alibi for the
defaulter appellants in the fact that the State, in spite of
warnings and threats, did not actually stop either those
draws or the further subsequent draws and allowed the
lotteries to go on without any break. From the above, the
Arbitrator as well as the learned District Judge chose to
infer that the respondent-State had condoned or waived the
lapses and defaults completely overlooking the vital fact
that the Arbitrator is not dealing with any claim for
damages from the respondent-State against the appellants who
defaulted in respect of such defaults but on the other hand
a claim from the defaulter appellants itself for damages
against the State for not willing to put up any longer with
a recurrent and recalcitrant defaulter. The Arbitrator,
grossly omitted to give due weight to such defaults
committed by the appellants and further misdirected himself
in not drawing the legal inferences necessarily flowing from
them. Even if it is assumed for purposes of consideration
that the State had waived past lapses, it cannot be
compelled to condone the persistent and continuous wrongs
and defaults and continue to perform their part of the
contract to their disadvantage and detriment and also
further penalise them with damages for not doing so, when
even dictates of common sense, reason and ordinary prudence
would commend for rejecting the claim of the appellants as
nothing but a gamble and vexatious. The Arbitrator, who is
obliged to apply law and adjudicate claims according to law,
is found to have thrown to winds all such basic and
fundamental principles and chosen to award an astronomical
sum as damages without any basis or concrete proof of such
damages, as required in law.
Though the entire award bristles with numerous
infirmities and errors of very serious nature undermining
the very credibility and objectivity of the reasoning as
well as the ultimate conclusions arrived at by the
Arbitrator, it would suffice to point out a few of them with
necessary and relevant materials on record in support
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thereof to warrant and justify the interference of this
Court with the award allowing damages of such a fabulous
sum, as a windfall in favour of the appellants, more as a
premium for their own defaults and breaches :-
a) The conclusions in the award are found seriously
vitiated on account of gross misreading of the materials on
record as well as due to conspicuous omission to draw
necessary and lawful inferences, inevitably flowing from the
indisputable materials as well as findings recorded by the
Arbitrator himself. Conclusions directly contrary to the
indisputable facts placed on record are shown to have been
drawn on the question of alleged waiver throwing over board
the well-settled norms and criteria to be satisfied and
proved before the plea of waiver, can ever be countenanced
leave alone, the basic and fundamental principle that a
violator of reciprocal promises cannot be crowned with a
prize for his defaults. Chief Justice Bhargava has taken
great pains to enumerate them. Neither the Arbitrator, nor
the District Judge or even the learned Judge who has chosen
to differ from the view of the Chief Justice appear to have
applied their mind judiciously or judicially to these
aspects before countenancing the claim of damages made by
the appellants. Even a cursory reading of the contents of
Ex. R-14, R- 16 to R-19, R-21, R-22 to R-25 and R-26 to
R-34 as well as R-80 would belie the claims based upon the
plea of condonation or waiver forever so as to entitle the
appellants to still insist upon the State alone,
notwithstanding its own continuing wrongs, to perform its
part of the obligations under the contract or to claim
damages from the respondent for not doing so. To illustrate
R-25 dated 7.8.91 written to the appellants may be usefully
extracted :-
I have been repeatedly reminding you for sending
Government dues of Agency fees and prize money but it seems
that you are not bothering to care for it. Since three
months have passed you have not yet paid any instalments of
Agency fees. As regards prize money you have paid only for
the five draws and remaining ten draws are still
outstanding. Now Govt. has taken a very serious view for
the lapses on your part. I am, therefore, directed to
inform you that if we do not receive Agency fees together
with 18% interest and prize money by the end of the next
week, we shall be constrained to stop all your lottery draws
without any further notice which may please note:
This may be treated as our final reminder and we shall
not be held responsible if any thing goes wrong against you.
R-39 dated 12.2.92 also reads as follows :
In continuation of our Telegram dated
8.2.92, a detailed statement of Agency fee due
upto 31st January, 1992 is enclosed herewith:-
1st. lot of eight lotteries -
Agency Fee - 1,09,36,924
Interest - 10,64,272
2nd. lot of eight lotteries -
Agency fee - 1,15,09,517
Interest - 5,25,534
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3rd. lot of eight lotteries -
Agency fee - 48,46,154
Interest - 1,15,324
__________
Total Rs. :- 2,89,97,725
(Rupees two crores eighty nine lakhs
ninety seven thousand seven hundred twenty
five only).
Please clear the dues before 25th of Feb
92 positively so that money could be credited
in time in the Govt. A/c.
Besides this, draw expenses of
Rs.6,00,000/- in respect of 3rd. lot of eight
lotteries may be sent expeditiously and prize
money in respect of all the 24 lotteries should
be cleared immediately so that all the pending
claims could be settled early in order to keep
the prestige of the Sikkim State Lotteries.
R-45 dated 31.3.92 addressed to the appellants reads
thus :
Please refer to our various letters and
telegrams requesting you to settle the dues as
mentioned below :-
(1) Telegram No.452/Fin./Lott. Dated 28.10.91
(2) Telegram No.572/Fin/Lott. Dated 19/11/91
(3) Letter No.484/Fin/Lott. Dated 27/11/91
(4) Letter No.902/Fin/Lott. Dated 17/1/92
(5) Telegram No.1062/Fin/Lott. Dated 8/2/92
(6) Letter No.1066/Fin/Lott. Dated 12/2/91
As per your requests we have given sufficient
time to settle the dues but because of your failure we
have been compelled to stop printings of Tickets
from 16/4/1992 onwards to avoid further liabilities.
Further you have also failed to give assurance or
proper response to our various letters. In view of
your failure to settle the huge amount of dues your
request to continue Seven Weekly Lotteries from
16/4/92 onward has not been considered by the
Government.
The dues based on draws upto 15/4/92 works
out as under :-
1. Agency Fees - Rs.3,72,87,824/-
2. Interest - Rs. 28,80,621/-
Total Rs.4,01,68,505/-
Besides above you have also failed to deposit
the prize money from time to time as a result of
which we have not been able to settle the claim.
I am therefore directed to give you this notice
to settle the entire dues before 15th April, 1992 failing
which Government will be compelled to take action
and also invoke the guarantees.
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Waiver involves a conscious, voluntary and intentional
relinquishment or abandonment of a known, existing legal
right, advantage, benefit, claim or privilege, which except
for such a waiver, the party would have enjoyed. The
agreement between parties in this case is such that its
fulfilment depends upon the mutual performance of reciprocal
promises constituting the consideration for one another and
the reciprocity envisaged and engrafted is such that one
party who fails to perform his own reciprocal promise cannot
assert a claim for performance of the other party and go to
the extent of claiming even damages for non-performance by
the other party. He who seeks equity must do equity and
when the condonation or acceptance of belated performance
was conditional upon the future good conduct and adherence
to the promises of the defaulter, the so-called waiver
cannot be considered to be forever and complete in itself so
as to deprive the State, in this case, of its power to
legitimately repudiate and refuse to perform its part on the
admitted fact that the default of the appellants continued
till even the passing of the Award in this case. So far as
the defaults and consequent entitlement or right of the
State to have had the lotteries either foreclosed or stopped
further, the State in order to safeguard its own stakes and
reputation has continued the operation of lotteries even
undergoing the miseries arising out of the persistent
defaults of the appellants. The same cannot be availed of
by the appellants or used as a ground by the Arbitrator to
claim any immunity permanently for being pardoned, condoned
and waived of their subsequent recurring and persistent
defaults so as to deny or denude forever the power of the
State as other party to the contract to put an end to the
agreement and thereby relieve themselves of the misfortunes
they were made to suffer due to such defaults. Once the
appellants failed to deposit the prize money in advance
within the stipulated time, the time being essence since the
prizes announced after the draw have to be paid from out of
only the prize money deposited, the State was well within
its rights to repudiate not only due to continuing wrongs or
defaults but taking into account the past conduct and
violations also despite the fact that those draws have been
completed by declaration or disbursement of prize amounts by
the State from out of its own funds. The conclusion to the
contrary that the State has committed breach of the contract
is nothing but sheer perversity and contradiction in terms.
b) The mere reference to the documents or material on
record, or a cryptic observation that all those materials
have been considered is no substitute by itself for proof of
such positive consideration, which should otherwise be
apparent from only the manner of consideration disclosed
from the award and reasonableness of the conclusions arrived
at by the Arbitrator. That the contents of Ex. R-52 and
R-43 have been patently misread is obvious from the fact
that the Arbitrator has merely chosen to fall back on the
word postpone totally ignoring the following words there
will be no draw of these weekly lotteries w.e.f. 16.4.1992
and onwards, taking together with the further fact that no
re-scheduled date on which they propose to hold the draw for
the so-called postponed lotteries have been given.
Likewise, Ex.C-3 another vital document has also been
misconstrued by ignoring the vital and relevant portions
contained therein. Similar instances in respect of other
relevant documents also are rampant, as could be seen from
the award, appropriately pointed out by the Chief Justice in
his judgment.
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c) The manner in which the Arbitrator has chosen to
arrive at the quantum of damages alleged to have been
sustained by the appellants not only demonstrates perversity
of approach, but per se proves flagrant violation of the
principles of law governing the very award of damages. The
principles enshrined in Section 54 in adjudicating the
question of breach and Section 73 of the Contract Act
incorporating the principles for the determination of the
damages, are found to have been observed more in their
breach. Despite the fact that M.K. Subba, who had been all
along corresponding and dealing with the matter directly,
has without any justification whatsoever, not only been
withheld from the witness box but despite the oral evidence
of RW-1, facts which could only be denied or proved by M.K.
Subba have been taken for granted. No one from the
appellants side who could speak for as to what is the usual
course of things in lotteries was examined and no material
about similar lotteries making consistent profit at 7.51%
throughout all years regardless even of stoppage of lots and
absence of sale of all the tickets and other relevant
factors highlighted in the course of cross examination of
CW-1 and CW-2 were produced to prove the profit range
claimed. Merely relying upon CW-1, the Chartered
Accountant, who, admittedly, was unaware of the actual
functioning of the business and who had not looked into or
shown any accounts, records or was in the knowledge of the
state of affairs of the lottery business in question, the
Arbitrator appears to have relied upon some hypothetical
calculations worked out on mere surmises and conjectures as
though it constituted substantive evidence even in utter
disregard of the specific admissions contained in the letter
of the appellants marked as R-46, against the very claims
now put forward on behalf of the appellants. The Award also
suffers from obvious and patent errors of law in calculating
damages on the footing that all the lotteries continued for
their full term, ignoring the real facts.
d) Clause 2 of the Agreement reads as follows:-
2. Except on the detection of the default or
fraudulent conduct in lotteries or of any act of malfeasance
or misfeasance on the part of the Organising Agents, the
Government shall not rescind or modify this agreement.
Provided that the Organising Agents shall be given an
opportunity of being heard in person before any decision
regarding rescission or modification is taken.
Even a cursory reading of the clause would show that the
Arbitrator has adopted a narrow, pedantic and perfidious
construction of the clause not only doing violence to the
language but defeating the very object of introducing such a
clause reducing it to a mere dead letter by holding that
apparent, obvious and admitted defaults of the nature will
not fall within the said clause, but instead only defaults
which are and could be found out or unearthed after
detection alone would answer the situation envisaged
therein. By such construction, the Arbitrator has chosen to
deny the powers of the State to put an end to the contract
on account of the defaults of the appellants, which as
observed by the Arbitrator himself could have under general
law of the contract provided grounds for the respondent
(meaning thereby the State) to terminate the contract.
This misconstruction and misdirection alone is sufficient to
scrap the Award of the Arbitrator.
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e) The Award of an Arbitrator cannot be opposed to law
and what is not permissible in law cannot be granted or even
approved by Courts merely because it was an Arbitrator who
granted it. Section 54 of the Contract Act is a complete
answer to the claim at the instance of the appellants for
either performance of the contract or for asserting a claim
for compensation/damages for the alleged non-performance
arising out of repudiation by the State. The Arbitrator
could not have been oblivious of the fact that it was the
defaults, violations and breaches committed by the
appellants that necessitated the termination of the contract
by the State, left with no other option for it, in law.
Even a cursory reading of the Award in the light of the
materials on record, as rightly pointed out in the judgment
of Chief Justice Bhargava, with particular reference to the
indisputable facts disclosed on the basis of the
correspondence between parties would disclose that no
reasonable or prudent person could have ever either
reasonably, fairly or justly arrived at such findings as
have been recorded by the Arbitrator in this case by any
known or proclaimed process of consideration and judicious
reasoning. The errors which could be noticed in the form of
obvious and conspicuous mistake of facts vital and essential
aspects and misapplication of law are found to so
extensively and deeply pervade the entire adjudicatory
process undertaken by the Arbitrator as to render it
impossible to save the Award except at the expense rendering
the ends of justice, a casualty. It would be no
exaggeration or meaning any disrespect to place on record as
to how appropriately the following observations of Lord
Halsbury, L.C. in Andrews Vs. Mitchell (1904-7 All E R 599
at 600 E) fits in with the manner of disposal given by the
Arbitrator :
I should be anxious myself, as I have no doubt that all
your Lordships would be, to give every effect to their
decisions. On the other hand, there are some principles
which it is impossible to disregard, and, after giving every
credit to the desire on the part of this arbitration court
to do justice, I think it manifest that they proceeded far
too hastily in this case; and without imputing to them any
prejudice or any desire to do wrong, I think that the mode
in which the whole question was raised and was disposed of,
was so slipshod and irregular that it might lead to
injustice.
Consequently, we have no hesitation to set aside the
Award of the Arbitrator, as affirmed by the District Judge,
insofar as it purports to award damages to the tune of
Rs.37,75,00,000/- in favour of the appellants, as wholly
uncalled for and illegal.
On behalf of the State of Sikkim, a strong plea has been
made in pursuit of its counter-claim by contending that it
is always permissible for this Court to set aside the bad or
vitiating part of the Award and retain and affirm the valid
portion, alone and, therefore, the Award to that extent may
be allowed to stand and the same be made a rule of Court.
No doubt this Court in M. Chelamayya Vs. M. Venkataraman
(AIR 1972 SC 1121); Upper Ganges Valley Electricity Supply
Co. Ltd. Vs. U.P. Electiricty Board (1973(3) SCR 107)
and Union of India Vs. M/s Jain Associates & Anr. (JT
1994(3) SC 303) has held so. The Arbitrator has allowed a
sum of Rs.5,39,15,531/- in favour of the State and after
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adjusting against the same, the sum admittedly due to the
appellants, the counter-claim to the tune of
Rs.4,61,35,242/- was awarded to them. The various facts
adverted to supra would go to show that though the initial
default was committed by the appellants, the
respondent-State was also not adhering strictly to the time
schedule and other stipulations contained in the agreement.
The lotteries agreed to be run through the appellants have
since been closed, once and for all. Due to certain
supervening difficulties said to have been encountered by
the appellants, their business adventure did not proceed on
the expected lines and it is not also the case of the State
that the appellants have made any undue profit or enriched
themselves at the expense of the State. We cannot
completely ignore the fact that the initial preparations to
float and publicise the scheme of lotteries in question
involving considerable expenditure did not bring to them the
expected returns, on account of the premature termination of
the Agency agreement and the encashment and appropriation of
the bank guarantees. The appellants could not have reaped
the full benefit of those business ventures. There seem to
be no proper rendition of accounts at the proper time and
the finalisation came only at a much later stage. Keeping
in view all these practicalities and realities of the
situation, we are convinced, on the peculiar facts and
circumstances of this case, that equities have to be
properly worked out between parties to ensure that no one is
allowed to have their pound of flesh unjustly against the
other. Since this Court has chosen to take up for
consideration the merits of the claims of the respective
parties in these appeals filed by the appellants, in order
to do substantial justice between parties in exercise of its
powers under Article 142 of the Constitution of India, we
consider it not only appropriate but just and necessary as
well, on an overall consideration of the matter, to reject
the counter-claim made by the State.
The challenge to the orders of the High Court dated
11.8.96 fails and shall stand rejected. Consequently, we
set aside the Award of the Arbitrator, as affirmed by the
learned District Judge. The judgment of the High Court
rendered on 29.9.1995 shall stand modified, accordingly.
The appeals shall stand finally disposed of on the above
terms. The parties will bear their respective costs.
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