Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJINDER KRISHAN KHANNA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/10/1998
BENCH:
S.P. BHARUCHA, V.N. KHARE
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
The appellants and others filed a writ petition the
High Court of Punjab and Haryana against the respondents.
The case in the write petition, briefly stated, was that the
writ petitioners were owners of agricultural lands,
residential buildings, tubewells, etc. at Gaddiwara within
the municipal limits of Panipat. The second respondent, the
National Fertilizer Limited, had installed a plant for the
manufacture of fertilisers in the vicinity. The second
respondent had constructed a ’kucha’ bund around the original
pond and was using it for depositing effluents. The bund was
made of earth which breached due to the excessive pressure of
the effluents and the accumulation of burnt ash. The result
was that water and ask had escaped from the pond and had
damaged the writ petitioners’ standing crops, mango gardens
and residential properties. There had been a loss of soil
from 6 inches to 2 feet, on their lands which had made them
unfit for cultivation untill such time as they were
reclaimed. The second respondent had not done anything to
redress the grievancees of the writ petitioners. The writ
petition, therefore, prayed for a direction to the second
respondents to close its plant until effluent disposal
arrangements were made and "to pay the damages of Rs. one
crore for the destruction of residential houses, crops and
Mango Garden. The respondent No.2 may also be directed to
reclaim the agricultural land of the petitioners which has
been rendered unfit for cultivation. The respondents No. 1
and 3 may be directed to take steps for civil and criminal
(action) against the respondent No.2".
The writ petition was dismissed by a learned single
Judge because it raised disputed questions of fact which
could not be resolved in proceedings under Article 226. The
order of the learned Single Judge was upheld by a Division
Bench, the appeal being summarily dismissed.
The appellants (being five of the writ petitioners)
filed a petition for special leave to appeal against the
order of the Division Bench. Notice thereon was issued to
the respondents.
Learned counsel appearing for the parties informed
this Court on 15th July, 1997 that they had agreed to go to
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arbitration to settle their disputes and an adjournment was
granted for one week to file the arbitration agreement. On
21st July, 1997 the following order was passed :
"Pursuant to our order dated
15.7.1997, the contestants have filed an
Agreement whereby, they have referred
their disputes to the two named
Arbitrators therein. Therefore, we grant
leave and keep the matter pending till
the arrival of the arbitration award. Let
the Arbitrators be informed so that they
enter upon the reference.
The arbitration agreement stated, in
clause 1, thus :
|That the disputes and
differences arising between the parties
hereto in S.L.P. (Civil) No.17106 of
1996 shall stand referred to the
arbitration of Mr. Justice K.S Tiwana
and Mr. Justice G.R. Majithia, the
retired Judges of the Hon’ble Punjab &
Haryana High Court at Chandigarh, who
shall resolve and decide the aforesaid
disputes between the parties."
T
he agreement required the tow learned arbitrators to appoint
an umpire before entering upon the reference and provided for
the modalities thereof. Pursuant thereto, Mr. S.S.Dewan, a
retired Chief Justice, was appointed the umpire. On 20th
September, 1997 the learned arbitrators, sitting with the
learned umpire, entered upon the reference.
The appellants filed a statement of claim dated 27th
September, 1997 before the learned arbitrators. They
contended that effluents such as fly ash emitted by the
second respondent’s plant and slurry covered to the
appellants’ land because of successive breaches of the bund
and pond bad caused havoc to the agricultural land,
agricultural crops, mango orchards and fishery ponds and had
destroyed the appellant’s land. Details were stated. The
estimated value of profits lost by the appellants were set
out, aggregating to Rs.4.2 lakhs for the years 1984, 1986,
1987, 1988, 1990 and 1991. The appellants submitted that by
August, 1991 their land had become completely unfit for
cultivation because of chemical pollutants which had seeped
therein and fly ash had been deposited over the trees. etc.
"The value of the land thus totally diminished in so far as
the land was completely destroyed. ....... The land being
completely destroyed and having become worthless both for
commercial and non-commercial use, the party No.1 is claiming
the entire value of the land estimated at (Rs.)2 crores and
40 lakhs as damage of property being total loss in the year
1991." The appellants claimed interest "on the sum of entire
loss or damages incurred ever since 1984 at the rate of 18%
upto August 1991" and "interest at the rate of 18% per annum
till the date of re-payment of the entire amount". The
appellants quantified their claim at Rs.5 crores 28 lakhs,
including Rs.2 crores 40 lakhs for "total loss suffered on
account of the destruction of land making it worthless both
for agricultural use ever since the year 1991".
The respondents filed a written statement in which
they drew attention to the order of reference passed by this
court on 21st July, 1997 and the arbitration agreement and
submitted that the claim made in the statement of claim went
beyond the scope of the writ petition and therefore
.......... ............... arbitration.
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On 2nd January, 1998 the learned umpire and
arbitrators made an award. The relief given to the
appellants read thus :
"In the result, we determine the compensation as
under :-
(i) For loss of potential of land Rs.77,19,800.00
(ii)For damage to the crops other Rs.5,14,347.50
than orchard for the years, 1984
1986,1987, 1988, 1990 and 1991.
------------------
Total Rs.82,34,147.00
------------------
The demised land lost all productivity and fertility
from the year 1991. Accordingly, we allow interest on
the principal amount @ 12% per annum from January 1,
1991 till the date of award and interest @ 18% per
annum from the date of award till realisation. Party
No1. will be entitled to the cost of the arbitration
proceedings."
On 31st January, 1998 the appellants made an
application to this court to take the award on record and
dispose of the appeal in terms thereof. The second
respondent, on 30th March, 1998, filed objections to making
the award a rule of the court. This is the scope of the
controversy before us.
The learned Attorney General, appearing for the
second respondent, submitted that the award fell outside the
ambit of the reference to arbitration made by this Court. It
also went far beyond the terms of the arbitration agreement.
This was because it awarded to the appellants compensation
for loss of potential of the land, in the sum of
Rs.77,19,800/-. The learned Attorney General submitted that
the case was covered by the terms of Section 34(2)(iv) of
the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 19996 ("the Act").
Next, the learned Attorney General pointed out that the
award made copious references to an inspection report made
by the learned arbitrators consequent upon a site visit. He
submitted that in as much as a copy of the inspection report
had not been made available by the learned arbitrators to
the second respondent, the second respondent had been unable
to present its case thereon and the principles of natural
justice had been violated. In this behalf the learned
Attorney General drew our attention to Section 34(2)(iii) of
the Act. The learned Attorney General submitted, lastly,
that the award of interest was without jurisdiction because
there was no claim for interest. In any event, he submitted,
the grant of pre-reference interest at the rate of 12% per
annum was without jurisdiction, and the amount of such
interest aggregated to Rs.66,45,557.96. In support of his
contention on the aspect of interest, the learned Attorney
General relied upon the judgment of this Court in State of
Orissa vs. B.N. Agarwalla, 1997 (2)S.C>C> 469, and the
provisions of Section 3(1)(b) of the Interest Act, 1978.
Mr. D.D. Thakur, learned counsel for the
appellants, drew our attention to the prayers in the writ
petition and to an application made before the High Court
pending the writ petition. It alleged that the writ
petitioners had been deprived of their livelihood, which was
dependent on the soil; the write petitioners’ lands had been
rendered unfit for cultivation and their houses had suffered
great loss on account of floods; the environment of the area
had been rendered unfair due to pollution and the residents
were living in great stress and strain, which had caused
depression, on account of the constant fear of leakage of
gas. Learned counsel drew attention to the arbitration
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agreement. He submitted that the learned arbitrators and
umpire found that the appellants’ land could not be
reclaimed; they, therefore, gave the alternate relief of
compensation for the land. He submitted that arbitrators
had in this behalf the same powers as a court of law, to
mould the relief having regard to the circumstances. It
was, learned counsel submitted, a reasonable conclusion from
what was stated in paragraph 10 of the award that the
learned arbitrators had found that the appellants’ land
could not be reclaimed. Paragraph 10 of the award reads
thus:
"10. Party No.2 contended that if the Party No.1
had drained out the water, the land could be
reclaimed and made fit for cultivation. This
assertion fails to absolve Party No.2 of its
responsibility to maintain its ash pond and the
dikes in a proper manner to avoid the breach or
leakage therein. The negligence of Party No.2 is
apparent. Their failure to keep the ash ponds
and the dykeys in a standardised form and to
prevent any leakage or breach is blame-worthy of
negligence. Their negligence has resulted in
rendering the land of Party No.1 beyond
cultivation and the garden developed thereof
deprecated in result. During our inspection. We
noted that on a part of the disputed land
residential houses belonging to people belonging
to lower strata of society, seemingly below
poverty line, have been constructed recently and
that locality is quite filthy. Foul smell
unabatedly emanated from the land, although the
ash ponds were abandoned and as alleged by Party
No.2 were to be used in the event of emergency
only."
Reference was also made by learned counsel to the findings
in paragraph 13 of the award that the appellants’ land had
"had the potentiality for developing a housing colony
thereon. In fact, a licence was granted by the Haryana Town
and Country Planning Department. The second party No.2
contended that the land for which the licence was granted
was not owned by Party No.1 Nevertheless it could not be
disputed that the land for which permission was granted was
part and parcel of the disputed land and similarly situated
in all respects. The irresistible inference is that the
demised land could be developed into a housing colony.
During our inspection we noticed that the land is hardly 3
Kms. Away form the G.T Road passing through Panipat. G.T.
Road is also called Sher Shah Suri Marg and it is agreed
over from Calcutta to Rawalpindi (now forming part of
Pakistan). C.W.1 Shri Vineet Khanna says that the Housing
colony could not be developed because of the fear of the
deluge with ash slurry water on the demised land. Thus, the
land other than the land under orchard was at one time the
most fertile land yielding considerable annual income as
depicted in the average produce statement, Exhibit TW1/1.
The land under the orchard measuring 17 acres similarly
fetched considerable income to Party No.1 as stated by Shri
Vineet Khanna. Now this land is unfit for cultivation.
However, as was notice and observed by us in our inspection
note, many residential houses belonging to people of lower
strata of society, seemingly below poverty line, have been
constructed on a part of the disputed land in the recent
years. After the agriculture and horticulture activity
stopped, part of the land other than the land under the
orchard before 1991 was sold at the rate of Rs.200/- per sq.
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yard....". In paragraph 15 of the award, to which reference
was made, the learned arbitrators were unable to agree with
"the amount of compensation claimed by the claimants as
admittedly the market value of their land in recent years
was not higher than Rs.200/- per square yard as the use of
the land, for the reasons aforesaid, is confined to job of
trivial nature or at best its use is limited for residential
purpose of the lower strata of the society. The potential
of the land considerably diminished. In the circumstances,
the claimants would be entitled only to the quantum of
compensation for loss of average potential of the land.
Keeping in view the totality of circumstances and the
material brought on record, we hold that the ends of justice
entail fixation of the quantum of compensation for loss of
potential of land at Rs.55/-per square yard. In summation,
as the average potential value of the land is taken out at
Rs.55/- per sq.yard and the total area of the damaged land
being 140360 per sq.yards, therefore, total loss under this
head comes to Rs.77,19,800/-" In learned counsel’s
submission, this, in the circumstances, was a reasonable
conclusion for the learned arbitrators to come to. Learned
counsel also submitted that the second respondent had
acquiersced in the course that the arbitration proceedings
had taken and he referred in this behalf to the points for
decision which the learned arbitrators had framed, namely,
"(1)Whether Party No.1 has suffered any damages, if so, is
entitled to any compensation ? (2) Whether the claim is
barred by acquiescence, laches, estoppel, limitation and res
judicata ?" In this context, Mr. Thakur referred to Section
16 of the Act which empowers the arbitral tribunal to rule
on its own jurisdiction. In regard to the inspection
reports, learned counsel submitted that the learned
arbitrators were under no obligation to furnish the same to
the parties to the arbitration and, in fact, the appellants
had also not received a copy thereof. He submitted that the
second respondent had not stated that any part of the
inspection report was incorrect. In the matter of interest,
learned counsel referred to the provisions of Section 31
(7)(a) of the Act. Section 31 deals with the form and
contents of and arbitral award and sub-section 7, clause (a)
states:
"Unless otherwise agreed by the
parties, where and in so far as an
arbitral award is for the payment of
money, the arbitral tribunal may include
in the sum for which the award is made
interest, at such rate as it deems
reasonable, on the whole or any part of
the money, for the whole or any part of
the period between the date on which the
cause of action arose and the date on
which the award is made."
Section 34(1) of the Act states that recourse to a
court against an arbitral award may be made only by an
application for setting aside such award in accordance with
sub-sections (2) and (3). Under sub-section (2), Clause
(iv) an award amy be set aside if it "deals with a dispute
not contemplated by or not falling within the terms of the
submission to arbitration, or it contains decisions on
matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration".
The proviso to clause (iv) says that if the decision on
matters submitted to arbitration can be separated from those
not so submitted, only that part of the award which contains
decisions on matters not submitted to arbitration may be set
aside.
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The first question, therefore, is : What were the
terms of the submission to arbitration. The order of
reference to arbitration is material in the context, it
refers to the arbitration agreement that the parties had
filed. Clause 1 thereof refers to arbitration "the disputes
and differences arising between the parties hereto in S.L.P
(Civil) No.17106 of 1996". The S.L.P. arose out of the
writ petition filed by the appellants (and others) in the
High Court. It is, therefore, reasonable to conclude that
what was referred to arbitration was the dispute in the writ
petition. This is, in fact, not contested.
The grievance in the writ petition was that the
overflow of effluents and slurry from a pond in the second
respondent’s premises due to breaches of the earthen bund
thereof had damaged the writ petitioners’ lands, crops,
mango crops, houses, etc. The reliefs the writ petition
sought, and this is most important, were : a) a direction
to the second respondent to close its plant; b) damages from
the second respondent in the sum of Rupees 1 crore for the
destruction of (i) residential houses, (ii) crops and (iii)
mango garden; c) a direction to the second respondent to
reclaim the writ petitioners’ agricultural lands that had
been rendered unfit for cultivation; and d) a direction to
the first and third respondent to take civil and criminal
action against the second respondent. This, then, was what
was referred to arbitration. There was no claim for damages
for the alleged loss of the potential of the lands and no
averments or particulars in that behalf.
There is no discussion or ruling in the award
relating to the scope of the reference; this despite the
fact that the second respondent had contended in its reply
to the appellants’ statement of claim that the claim therein
fell outside the scope of the reference. It is difficult to
see how, in the circumstances, the second respondent can be
said to have acquiesced in the determination of damages for
the alleged loss of potential of the appellants’ land. All
that was referred to by learned counsel for the appellants
in this behalf was the statement in the award of the points
for determination. That the first of the points relates to
compensation for damage suffered by the appellants does not
by itself support learned counsel’s submission for
compensation for damage to the appellants’ residential
house, crops and mango garden was within the scope of the
reference. The first point must be read in light of this
restricted claim and not as encompassing the claim for
compensation for the alleged lost potential of the land.
The argument of learned counsel for the appellants
was that the learned arbitrators had found that the
appellants’ land was beyond reclamation and, therefore, the
learned arbitrators had moulded the relief and awarded
compensation for the land’s lost potential. We do not find
in the paragraphs of the award quoted by learned counsel, or
for that matter, anywhere else in the award, a discussion or
conclusion by the learned arbitrators that the appellants’
land could not be reclaimed. In fact, the award quotes a
witness as explaining ’reclamation’ thus : "By this I mean
bringing the soil to its natural position. The natural
position of the soil can be had after the total removal of
the coal ash". A perusal of the award suggests that the
learned arbitrators did not think that they could award
compensation for the alleged lost potential of the land only
if they found that the land could not be reclaimed; there is
therefore no such evidence or discussion or finding in the
award.
In any event, we do not find it possible to accept
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learned counsel’s submission that granting compensation for
the alleged lost potential of the land was permissible
moulding of the relief. It was not the case of the
appellants in the writ petition, even in the alternative,
that the land could not be reclaimed and there was no claim
for compensation for the slleged lost potential of the land
or averments or particulars in support thereof. The relief
that was sought was direction to the second respondent to
reclaim the appellants’ land; awarding compensation for the
alleged lost potential of the land was not moulding the
relief that was sought.
We hold that the award of Rs.77,19,800 for "loss of
potential of land" and interest thereon falls outside the
scope of the reference to arbitration and is not in relation
to a dispute contemplated thereby.
The learned Attorney General did not advance an
argument specific to the award of Rs.5,14,347.5 for "damage
to crops other than orchard for the years 1984, 1986, 1987,
1988, 1990 and 1991". Even his general argument related to
the learned arbitrators’ inspection report would not really
apply to this item of the award. At the same time, learned
counsel for the appellants did not urge that the award
should not be set aside qua this item which is easily
separable and the appeal should be allowed in terms thereof.
We can understand why. The larger claim of the appellants
is in relation to the reclamation of the land; the
appellants would want to agitate that claim in the appeal
and we think that to do complete justice in the
circumstances we should permit them to do so.
In the view that we take, it is not necessary to
deal with the arguments on the aspects of the inspection
report and interest.
The award dated 2nd January, 1998 is set aside, The
appellants’ application (I.A.No.2 of 1998) to take the award
on record and dispose of the appeal in terms thereof is
dismissed. The second respondent’s application (I.A.No.3 of
1998) to set aside the award is allowed.
The appeal shall now be heard on its merits. It
shall be listed in the ordinary course.
No orders as to costs.