Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 17
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4699 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
M/s Nippon Steel Corporation Ltd.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/11/2006
BENCH:
Dr. AR. Lakshmanan & Tarun Chatterjee
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP (C) No. 7294/2006)
Dr. AR. Lakshmanan, J.
Leave granted.
Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. is the appellant.
Aggrieved by the judgment and order dated 6th/8th December,
2005 passed by the High Court of Judicature at Bombay in
Appeal No. 321 of 1997 in Arbitration Petition No. 260 of 1996
in Award No. 98 of 1996, this appeal was preferred.
The question that falls for determination in this appeal is
whether the filing of the award dated 2.3.1996 by M/s Little &
Co., advocate for the Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (for
short "ONGC") in the Court on 23.3.1996 is the deemed notice
under Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act, 1940 and whether
the limitation for setting aside the said award at the instance
of ONGC shall commence from that date.
The appellant is a Public Sector Oil Company
incorporated under the Companies Act, 1956 and engaged in
the business of exploration and exploitation of Hydrocarbons.
The appellant, ONGC and the respondent M/s Nippon Steel
Corporation Ltd. entered into a contract for transportation
and installation of fabricated structures of South Basein
Platform Complex which was to be located at about 80Kms.
west of Bombay in the Arabian Sea. Disputes and difference
arose between the parties which were subsequently arbitrated
and an award was passed on 2.3.1996 under the Indian
Arbitration Act, 1940 which confers statutory jurisdiction on
courts of law either to convert a legally valid award into a rule
of the Court or set aside/remit the same on the grounds
specifically provided for that purpose in the said Act. There is
an express and well defined statutory scheme for the same in
the Act. A provision of law \026 Section 14 of the Indian
Arbitration Act, 1940, which is relevant for this appeal, reads
as under:
"14. Award to be signed and filed \026
(1) When the arbitrators or umpire have made their award,
they shall sign it and shall give notice in writing to the
parties of the making and signing thereof and of the
amount of fees and charges payable in respect of the
arbitration and award
(2) The arbitrators or umpire shall, at the request of any
party to the arbitration agreement or any person
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 17
claiming under such party or if so directed by the Court
and upon payment of the fees and charges due in
respect of the arbitration and award and of the costs
and charges of filing the award, cause the award or a
signed copy of it, together with any depositions and
documents which may have been taken and proved
before them, to be filed in Court, and the Court shall
thereupon give notice to the parties of the filing of the
award.
(3) Where the arbitrators or umpire state a special case
under Clause (b) of Section 13, the Court, after giving
notice to the parties and hearing them, shall pronounce
its opinion thereon and such opinion shall be added to,
and shall form part of, the award."
The plain and simple language of the above provision
requires firstly that the arbitrators/umpire, as the case may
be, shall:
(a) sign the award they make
(b) give notice in writing to the parties of the making and
signing of the award
(c) cause the award along with the records be filed in
Court
Thereupon the Court shall:
(d) give notice to the parties of the filing of the award
(e) if a special case is referred to court, shall pronounce
its opinion, after giving notice to the parties and
hearing them.
On 23.3.1996, M/s Little & Co., the advocates, as per the
request of the Arbitrator filed an award in the Court on behalf
of the Arbitrator. The Court, on 9.5.1996, issued a notice to
the parties about the filing of the award which was received by
the appellant on 14.6.1996. The appellant, on the receipt of
the notice from the Court, moved an application for setting
aside the award on 12.7.1996. The learned single Judge
rejected the petition of the appellant solely on the ground that
the same was time barred as the appellant had knowledge of
the filing of the award much prior to the date of notice to them
by the Court.
Aggrieved by the judgment and order as passed by the
learned single Judge, the appellant filed an appeal before the
Division Bench of the High Court which also dismissed the
appeal reaffirming the judgment of the learned single Judge
holding that the application of the appellant was barred by
limitation as the same was moved after a span of 30 days from
the knowledge of the filing of the award in Court. The Division
Bench also directed the appellant to deposit with the office of
the Prothonotary & Senior Master, High Court, Bombay, a
sum of Rs.2,36,29,954/-. The appellant deposited the above
said amount as per the said order. Thereupon the respondent
moved a Notice of Motion No. 206 of 2006 in Appeal No. 321 of
1997 in Arbitration No. 260/96 in Award No. 98/96 praying
the Court to direct the office of the Prothonotary & Senior
Master, High Court, Bombay to pay and hand over the sum of
Rs.2,36,29,954/- with accrued interest due thereon to the
respondent. The appellant filed an affidavit in reply to the
notice of motion. The respondent again moved a Notice of
Motion No. 1082 of 2006 praying the Court to pass a judgment
and decree in terms of the Award dated 2.3.1996. Hence the
present appeal by way of special leave petition has come up.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 17
We have heard Mr. Gopal Subramanium, learned
Additional Solicitor General of India, appearing for the
appellant and Mr. Ashok H. Desai, learned senior counsel
appearing for the respondent.
The learned ASG and the learned senior counsel
advanced elaborate submissions with reference to the
provisions of the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940, Limitation
Act,1963 and also cited many decisions in support of their
respective contentions.
Mr. Gopal Subramanium submitted as under:
(a) that the award was filed by the arbitrator and not by
the appellant and that the appellant has not
instructed their counsel to file the award and that the
award was filed by the counsel at the instance of the
arbitrator. The arbitrators had addressed a letter to
the counsel along with their affidavits for filing the
award. As the award was filed on behalf of the
arbitrator, the doctrine of constructive notice cannot
be stretched to the extent of imputing knowledge on
the appellant of filing of the award;
(b) that as per Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act, the
arbitrator causes the award to be filed on request of
either of the party or on the express direction of the
Court. In the instant case, the appellant has not filed
any application requesting the arbitrator to file the
award in Court. In the absence of such an application,
the award filed by the arbitrator, cannot be construed
as an award filed at the instance of the appellant and
hence doctrine of constructive notice cannot be
extended to the facts and circumstances of the case.
The High Court has overlooked the significance of the
expression "the Court shall thereupon give notice to
the parties of the filing of the award " occurring in the
aforesaid section. The use of the aforesaid expression
in the said section reflects the legislative intention that
the notice referred therein should always be given by
the Court.
(c) The High Court has failed to comprehend the true
spirit and intent of clause (b) of Article 119 of the
Limitation Act. Mr. Gopal Subramanium submitted
that the words used in Article 119 makes it
abundantly clear that the said Article recognizes the
date of service of notice as the relevant date for
computation of the stipulated period of limitation. The
Legislature, after exercising its wisdom, has
specifically used the expression "the date of service of
notice" and not the date of knowledge of the filing of
the award, in Article 119 of the Limitation Act. The
construction now adopted by the High Court tends to
obliterate the difference between the date of service of
notice and the date of knowledge of the award, and is
hence contrary to the legislative intent.
(d) that the appellant has not received any
communication or intimation about the filing of the
award except for the notice dated 9.5.1996. The
expression "the Court shall thereupon give notice to
the parties of the filing of the award" occurring in
Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act has to be conjointly
read with the expression "the date of notice" occurring
in Article 119(b) of the Limitation Act. A conjoint
reading of the aforesaid section in the manner
indicated above leads to an irresistible conclusion that
the relevant date to be taken into account for
completion of the period of limitation as stipulated in
Article 119(b) of the Limitation Act, is the date of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 17
service of notice by the Court. The notice dated
9.5.1996 is the first form of communication received
by the appellant on 14.6.1996 as regards the filing of
the award. Accordingly, the period of thirty days has
to be computed from 14.6.1996 i.e. the date of receipt
of the said notice. In view of the expression "the date
of notice" used in Article 119 of the Limitation Act, the
period of limitation has to be computed from the date
of service of notice.
e) The provisions of Order III Rule 5 of C.P.C. is
reproduced hereunder:
"5. Service of process on pleader \026 Any process served
on the pleader who has been duly appointed to act in
Court for any party or left at the office or ordinary
residence of such pleader, and whether the same is for
the personal appearance of the party or not, shall be
presumed to be duly communicated and made known
to the party whom the pleader represents, and, unless
the Court otherwise directs, shall be as effectual for all
purposes as if the same had been given to or served on
the party in person."
It was argued that the High Court has erred in importing
the principle of Order III Rule 5 of the C.P.C. to the facts of the
present case. The principle embodied in the said Rules is only
applicable in cases where the counsel acts on behalf of his
client and where the counsel in his representative capacity
represents his client. In the present case, the counsel has not
acted in his representative capacity. By filing the award at the
instance of the arbitrator, the counsel was acting as a
representative of the arbitrator and was not acting as a
representative of the appellant. Since at the time of filing of
the award, the counsel was acting under the instruction of the
arbitrator, the principles of agency cannot be extended to the
aforesaid facts of the present case.
Explaining further, the learned ASG submitted that it is
manifest from the aforesaid Rule that the presumption
inherent in the said Rule applies only in cases where the
pleader has been duly appointed to act for the party. The
presumption under the Rule cannot be applied to situations
where the pleader is not acting for the party. For application
of the aforesaid Rule, it is sine qua non that the pleader should
have been appointed by the party to act in Court. It is
submitted that in the instant case, the counsel was not
appointed by the appellant to act in Court on its behalf. The
counsel, at the time of filing of the award, was acting on behalf
of the arbitrator and was appointed by the arbitrator to file the
award on his behalf.
(f) that the High Court is not right in applying the
proposition laid down by this Court in F.C.I. vs. B.
Kuttappan, (1993) 3 SCC 445 and has failed to
appreciate the legal proposition laid down by this
Court in Deo Narain Choudhary vs. Shree Narain
Choudhary, (2000) 8 SCC 626. The High Court
has committed an error in overlooking the
proposition laid down by this Court in Ch.
Ramalinga Reddy vs. Superintending Engineer,
(1999) 9 SCC 610.
(g) That the High Court has overlooked real bone of
contention between parties and have been swayed
away by the proposition that the notice
contemplated by Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act
can be in any form i.e., oral or written and the
aforesaid proposition only adumbrates the principle
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 17
that the notice referred to in Section 14(2) need not
specifically be framed in a written format.
Thus Mr. Gopal Subramanium submitted that the
impugned judgment is contrary to well settled
proposition of law.
Mr. Ashok H. Desai, learned senior counsel, appearing
for the respondent submitted as follows:
1. The instant case is squarely covered by the decision
of this Court in F.C.I. vs. B. Kuttappan (Supra).
2. In regard to the argument of the learned ASG
appearing for the appellant, that M/s Little &
Co.,advocate was acting as a representative of the
arbitrator and it was not acting as a representative
of the appellant and that they were not appointed
by the appellant to act in Court on their behalf, Mr.
Ashok Desai submitted that the above submission
is falsified by Annexures P-3 and P-4 filed by the
appellant itself. Annexure P-3 is the letter dated
23.3.1996 addressed to the Prothonotary & Senior
Master, High Court, Mumbai by which M/s Little &
Co., advocates, in their capacity as an advocate for
the appellant herein, requested that the award
therein be taken on file.
Annexure P-4 is the letter dated 26.4.1996
addressed to the Prothonotary & Senior Master,
High Court, Mumbai by which M/s Little & Co.,
advocates, again in their capacity as the advocate
for the appellant herein, gave the addresses of the
parties as well as their advocates.
According to Mr. Ashok Desai, both these
letters confirm that the award was filed by M/s
Little & Co., advocates as the counsel for the
appellant and that they had, by their own showing,
been appointed by the appellant to act on its behalf
in Court. The learned single Judge also held that
there is not a word to say that M/s Little & Co. had
filed the award in Court for and on behalf of the
Arbitrator nor despite the specific contention of the
bar of limitation, had any affidavit been filed either
by the arbitrators or any one from the office of M/s
Little & Co. to say that the Arbitrator had engaged
or required M/s Little & Co. to file the award.
(3) It is settled law that intimation, communication or
notice to pleader is notice to the party in view of
Order III Rule 5 of C.P.C. and that such intimation,
communication or notice to pleader would be
sufficient compliance with Section 14(2) of the
Arbitration Act, 1940. Therefore, Mr. Ashok Desai
submitted that the appellant is estopped from
claiming that it did not have the corresponding
knowledge of the filing of the award by M/s Little &
Co. The moment the award was filed by the
appellant’s counsel in Court and was taken on
record by the Court, the notice by the Court is
deemed to the appellant. In other words, even in
the absence of formal notice, some other act of the
Court is enough to foist awareness of the filing of
the award in Court, wherefrom the period of
limitation is to commence.
(4) Inviting our attention to Rule 786 of the Bombay
High Court (Original Side) Rules, Mr. Ashok Desai
submitted that the award has been filed in Court,
the Prothonotary and Senior Master shall forthwith
issue notice of such filing to the parties interested
in the award. In the instant case, the learned single
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 17
Judge has recorded that the Prothonotary & Senior
Master of the Court had on around 24.4.1996
directed the counsel for the appellant M/s Little &
Co., to furnish detailed addresses of the parties and
that the appellant’s counsel had on 26.4.1996
furnished those addresses. The learned single
Judge found that this communication from the
Court received by the appellant’s counsel on or
before 26.4.1996 could itself be treated to be a
notice by the Court to counsel for the appellant,
about the filing of the award in Court. Thus it was
submitted even if the period of 30 days as
contemplated under Article 119 of the Limitation
Act is computed from 26.4.1996, the petition to set
aside the award filed on 12.7.1996 would be time
barred.
He denied that the High Court has failed to follow the dictum
laid down by this Court in the case of Deo Narain Choudhary
vs. Shree Narain Choudhary,(supra) and in Ch. Ramalinga
Reddy vs. superintending Engineer (supra).
In the above cases, this Court held that limitation does
not begin to run merely on filing of a caveat in Court by the
objecting party as the notice regarding filing of the award must
be act of Court, even though it need not be in writing. The
instant case is not one where deemed or constructive notice is
imputed to the appellant because its own counsel expressly
acting as its counsel, filed the award in Court and hence the
appellant is estopped from claiming lack of knowledge about
the filing of the award on that date. It does not lie in the
mouth of the appellant whose counsel had filed the award in
Court to contend that it did not have the knowledge of the
filing of the award. Likewise, in the case of Ch. Ramalinga
Reddy vs. superintending Engineer (supra), this Court held
that mere intimation from one party to the other party as to
the filing of the award, without direction by the Court, is not
notice in terms of Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act, 1940.
The instant case is again not one where constructive or
deemed notice is imputed to the appellant because of any
intimation sent by the respondent to the appellant.
Concluding his arguments, Mr. Ashok Desai submitted
that the instant case is fully covered by the decision of this
Court in F.C.I. vs. B. Kuttappan, (supra) as aforesaid. In the
said case, this Court has been pleased to impute constructive
notice to the party for the act of its counsel on similar facts.
Mr. Ashok Desai submitted that when the party or its pleader
already has knowledge of the filing of the award in Court in
terms of Section 14 of the Arbitration Act, 1940, a subsequent
notice by the Court to the parties in this regard is of no legal
consequence and cannot in law prejudice the rights of the
parties. He further submitted that it is factually incorrect that
in the instant case, M/s Little & Co. did not act in its
"representative capacity" on behalf of the appellant and
reiterated that in the instant case M/s Little & Co. filed the
award expressly acting in Court as the counsel for the
appellant and that M/s Little & Co. was appointed by the
appellant to act in Court on its behalf which is evident from
Annexures P- 3 and P-4 to the appeal.
Arguing further, Mr. Ashok Desai submitted that the
question in the instant matter is not whether the appellant
had expressly instructed its counsel to file the award in Court
but whether the very act of the appellant’s counsel acting as
counsel of the appellant in filing the award in Court imputes
deemed and constructive knowledge of the filing of the award
on the appellant.
It was also submitted by Mr. Ashok Desai that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 17
decisions of this Court in Deo Natain Choudhary vs. Shree
Narain Choudhury (supra) and Ch. Ramalinga Reddy vs.
Superintending Engineer (supra), are not applicable to the
facts of the instant case and are even otherwise consistent
with the decision of this Court in F.C.I. vs. B. Kuttappan,
(supra). Mr. Ashok Desai further submitted that the appeal
filed by the ONGC has no merits and therefore, is liable to be
dismissed with heavy costs.
Questions of law:-
In the above background, the following substantial
questions of law arise for consideration by this Court:
1. Whether the High Court was justified in extending the
principle of constructive notice to the facts of the present
case ignoring the express stipulations of Section 14(2) of
the Arbitration Act, 1940?
2. Whether the High Court was justified in ignoring the
fundamental difference between the two expressions i.e.
date of service of notice and date of knowledge of award?
3. Whether the High Court was justified in overlooking the
legislative intent in framing Article 119(b) of the
Limitation Act by incorporating the expression "the date
of service of notice"?
4. Whether in view of the exhaustive nature of Article
119(b) of the Limitation Act, the High Court was justified
in importing the principle embodied in Order III Rule 5 of
the Code of Civil Procedure?
5. Whether the High Court has failed to appreciate the
significance of the expression "the Court shall thereupon
give notice to the parties of filing of the award" occurring
in Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act, 1940?
6. Whether the High Court was justified in overlooking that
the presumption of constructive notice can be drawn
only against the party whom the counsel is representing
at the time of performing the said act?
We have given our careful consideration to the entire material
placed before us, the arguments advanced by both sides with
reference to the pleadings, annexures, documents, provisions
of law in the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940 and of the Limitation
Act, 1963 and the rulings cited by both the counsel.
In the instant case, the award was filed at the instance of
the arbitrator by M/s Little & Co. on 23.3.1996 as is clear
from Annexure P-4. The relevant part of annexure P-4 reads
as under:
"We, therefore, now give below the address of the parties
as well as their advocates for the purpose of serving
notice in respect of the above award.
The address of the claimant is as under:
Xxxxxxxxxxx
The address of the respondents and their advocates are
as under:
Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd.
(E & C Division)
Bombay Regional Business Centre
16-E Maker Towers,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 17
Cuffe Parade
Bombay-400 005
M/s Little Co.
Central Bank Building, 3rd Floor,
Mahatma Gandhi Road,
Fort, Bombay-400 023."
The description of M/s Little & Co. as the lawyer of the
respondent in the Arbitration, is not of any consequence and
not binding on the appellant so long as no vakalat is given to
them at the relevant time of filing of the award before the
Court to act as their lawyer in the proceedings initiated under
Sections 33 & 34 of the Arbitration Act, 1940 before the High
Court.
The fact that Annexure P-4 is filed after filing of the
award and that the counsel has furnished the address of the
appellant for service of notice reflects that M/s Little & Co.
was not representing the appellant at the time of filing of the
award. These letters, in our view, clearly establish that M/s
Little & Co. at the time of filing of the award was acting at the
instance of the Arbitrator.
The fact that M/s Little & Co. on the panel of the
advocates of the appellant does not determine its
representative capacity at the time of filing of the award.
Panel lawyers are not standing counsel for the ONGC in the
High Court. Panel lawyers’ services are availed of, on a case to
case basis. M/s Little & Co. filed the award acting as the
agent of the arbitrator and while doing this ministerial act of
filing of the award on behalf of the Arbitrator they were not
acting in their capacity as the counsel of the appellant.
The respondent has misconstrued the pleadings of the
appellant. The appellant is not denying the fact that M/s
Little & Co. was the counsel for the appellant in the arbitration
proceedings. The appellant is, in fact, only contending that at
the time of filing of the award, the counsel was not acting on
behalf of the appellant but was acting as a representative of
the arbitrator. The law requires the arbitrator to file the award
before the competent Court. The Arbitrator can discharge this
legal duty by himself or through an agent who happened to be
an appellant’s counsel in the Arbitration. The fact that the
counsel had filed the award at the express request of the
arbitrator reflects that the counsel was acting as a
representative of the Arbitrator at the time of filing of the
award and was discharging any professional service as a
lawyer to the appellant. In fact, as contended by the learned
ASG appearing for the appellant, that the appellant had
occasioned to appoint M/s Little & Co. to act as its lawyer
before the High Court even before the award was filed. Since
the appellant had no intention to get the award filed in Court,
there was no question of appointing M/s Little & Co. to
coordinate with arbitrator to obtain the award and file the
same before the court. Therefore, in our view, the knowledge
of the said lawyer about the filing of the award is not a notice,
either actual or constructive to the appellant.
Order III Rule 5 CPC:-
We shall now consider the arguments advanced on Order
III Rule 5 C.P.C. In our view, the principles enshrined in
Order III Rule 5 C.P.C. is not applicable to the facts of the
instant case. The principles embodied in the said Rule is only
applicable in cases where the counsel acts on behalf of his
client and where the counsel in its representative capacity
represents its client. In the instant case, by filing the award at
the instance of the arbitrator, the counsel is acting as a
representative of the arbitrator and was not acting as a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 17
representative of the appellant and, therefore, the presumption
envisaged by the said Rule cannot be stretched to situations
where the pleader is not acting on behalf of the party.
Arguments on Article 119 of the Limitation Act, 1963:-
Mr. Gopal Subramanium, learned Additional Solicitor
General, submitted that Article 119 recognizes the date of
service of notice as the relevant date for computation of the
period of limitation. This Article unlike other Articles does not
refer to the date of knowledge of filing of the award and hence
the period of limitation cannot be computed from the date of
knowledge of filing of the award as contemplated by Article
119 of the Limitation Act. In view of the specific expression
used in Article 119, limitation cannot be computed from the
date of knowledge of the award. Further, at the time of filing
of the award, the appellant did not have knowledge of the filing
of the award as the award was filed by M/s Little & Co. at the
instance of the Arbitrator.
Our attention was drawn to paragraph 5 of the counter
affidavit filed by the respondent in this appeal. We have
perused the same. It is seen from the averments that the
respondent has admitted in paragraph 5 of the counter
affidavit that an act of the Court is necessary to foist
awareness of filing of the award. The averments made in the
said paragraph itself indicates that by the letter dated
24.4.1996, the Prothonotary and Senior Master directed M/s
Little & Co. to furnish detailed address of the parties for the
purpose of serving them the notice of filing the award. The
fact that M/s Little & Co. was directed to furnish address of
the parties for service of notice indicates that the Court itself
did not consider the act of filing of the award by M/s Little &
Co. as notice or even constructive notice. The letter dated
24.4.1996 is a letter directing the counsel for the appellant to
furnish address for service of notice on the parties. Therefore,
the said letter cannot be treated as an act of Court sufficient
to foist knowledge of filing of award. On the other hand, the
said letter induces and triggers the belief that the Court shall,
notwithstanding the filing of the award, serve notice on the
parties including the appellants of filing of the award. Vide
the communication dated 26.4.1996 M/s Little & Co. only
complied with the aforesaid direction and accordingly
furnished the address for service of notice on the parties. By
furnishing the addresses, even M/s Little & Co. though the
knowledge they have about the filing the award is not notice to
ONGC and the Court ought to service notice separately.
Therefore, it was submitted that the period of limitation
cannot be computed w.e.f. 26.4.1996. We see merit and
substance in the above submission.
Likewise, in paragraph 6 of the counter affidavit, the
respondent has admitted that the arbitrator had caused the
award to be filed through the appellant’s counsel in the
arbitration proceedings. Thus at the relevant time M/s Little
& Co. was acting as an agent of the arbitrator and was not
acting as counsel for the appellant.
The doctrine of constructive notice cannot be extended to
acts that are performed at the instance of a third party. As
already stated and noticed, that at the time of filing of the
award M/s Little & Co. was acting at the instance of the
arbitrator i.e. a third party. This sine qua non for application
of the principle of constructive notice is that the counsel
should have acted as a representative of the party. Since the
award was filed at the instance of the arbitrator and on his
express request, the counsel was acting as a representative of
the arbitrator and not as a representative of the appellant.
We shall now consider the decisions cited by learned ASG
in support of his contention.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 17
1. Kumbha Mawji vs. Union of India, [1953] SCR 878
In this case, this Court was considering the authority of
the umpire to file the award on behalf of the appellant into
court in terms of Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act. This
Court held that Section 14(2) clearly implies that where the
award or a signed copy thereof is in fact filed into court by a
party he should have the authority of the umpire for doing so.
This Court further held as under:
"The mere filing of award in Court by a party to it
without the authority of the arbitrator or umpire is not a
sufficient compliance with the terms of s.14 of the
Indian Arbitration Act, 1940, nor can it be inferred from
the mere handing over of the original award by the
umpire to both the parties that he authorized them to
file the same in Court on his behalf; that authority has
to be specifically alleged and proved."
2. Nilkantha Shidramappa Ningashetti vs. Kashinath
Somanna Ningashetti and Others, [1962] 2 SCR 551
In this case, in a partition suit the Arbitrator filed his
award in the court and the judge adjourned the case for "the
parties’ say to the arbitrator’s report." No notice in writing
was given to the parties by the court of the filing of the award.
Objection to the award was filed by the appellant beyond the
period of limitation. The court ordered the award to be filed
and decree to be drawn up in terms of the award as the
objection filed was beyond the period limitation.
The appellant’s case was that the period of limitation as
under Art. 158 of the Limitation Act, for an application to set
aside the award, would run against him only from the date of
service of the notice in writing was issued by the Court to the
appellant the time never began to run against him. The
appellant also contended that as the court had refused to set
aside the award the appeal was maintainable under s.39(1)(VI)
of the Arbitration Act. This Court held as under:
"that the communication by the court to the parties or
their counsel of the information that an award had been
filed was sufficient compliance with the requirements of
sub-s.(2) of s.14 of the Arbitration Act, with respect to
the giving of the notice to the parties concerned, about
the filing of the award. Notice does not necessarily
mean "communication in writing". The expression "give
notice" in sub-s.(2) of s.14 of the Arbitration Act simply
means giving intimation of the filing of the Award. Such
intimation need not be given in writing and could be
communicated orally. That would amount to service of
notice when no particular mode of service was
prescribed.
Held, further that where there was no objection
before the court praying for setting aside the award, no
question of refusing to set it aside could arise, and no
appeal therefore was maintainable under s.39(1)(VI) of
the Arbitration Act."
3. Parasramka Commercial Company vs. Union of
India, 1969 (2) SCC 694
In this case, the appellant entered into a contract with
the Union of India and the matter was referred to arbitration.
The award was made and signed on April 26, 1950. The
arbitrator did not send a notice of the making and signing of
the award but sent a copy of the award signed by him to the
company which acknowledged the receipt of the copy by letters
dated May 5 and May 16, 1950. The Appellant filed an
application under Section 14(1) of the Arbitration Act in the
Trial Court on March 30, 1951, for making the award rule of
the Court. The respondent took an objection before the Trial
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 17
Court that the application was beyond time as it was not filed
within 90 days of the receipt of notice that the award had been
made and signed. The Trial Court upheld the objection and
dismissed the application and the High Court, in revision,
confirmed it. The Company appealed to this Court with
special leave. It was contended that the notice under Section
14(1) had to be something besides the award of which a copy
had been sent. This Court held as under:
"that reading the word ’notice’ it denotes merely an
intimation to the party concerned of a particular fact.
Notice may take several forms. It must be sufficient in
writing and must intimate quite clearly that the award
has been made and signed. In the present case, a copy
of the award signed by the arbitrator was sent to the
company. The company had sufficient notice that the
award has been made and signed. In fact the two
letters of May 5 and May 16 quite clearly show that the
Company knew full well that the arbitrator had given
the award, made it and signed it. In these
circumstances to insist upon a letter which perhaps was
also sent it is to refine the law beyond the legitimate
requirements. The only omission was that there was no
notice of the amount of the fees and charges payable in
respect of arbitration and award. But that was not an
essential part of the notice for the purpose of limitation.
A written notice clearly intimating the parties concerned
that the award has been made and signed certainly
starts limitation. The decision of the learned Single
Judge who has endorsed the opinion of the Subordinate
Judge that limitation began to run from the receipt of
the copy of the award which was signed by the
arbitrator and which gave due notice to the party
concerned that the award had been made and signed is
upheld. That is how the party itself understood when it
acknowledged the copy sent to it. Therefore, the
application must be treated as being out of time."
4. Indian Rayon Corporation Ltd. vs. Raunaq and
Company Pvt. Ltd., (1988) 4 SCC 31
This Court in the above matter held:
"In order to be effective both for the purpose of
obtaining the judgment in terms of the award and for
setting aside the award, there must be (a) filing of the
award in the proper count; (b) service of the notice by
the court or its office to the parties concerned; and (c)
such notice need not necessarily be in writing. It is
upon the date of service of such notice that the period of
limitation begins and at present under clause (b) of
Article 119 of the Limitation Act, the limitation expires
on the expiry of the 30 days of the service of that notice
for an application for setting aside of the award. It is
the service of the notice and not the mode or method of
the service that is important or relevant. Beyond this
there is no statutory requirement of any technical
nature under Section 14(2) of the Act. The expression
’give notice’ in Section 14(2) simply means giving
intimation of the filing of the award. Such intimation
need not be given in writing and could be
communicated orally or otherwise."
5. Food Corporation of India and Others vs. E.
Kuttappan, (1993) 3 SCC 445. In this case, this Court held
as under:
"When the arbitrator had sent the award and other
papers to the respondent through his counsel, unless
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 17
he had authorized the respondent or his counsel on his
behalf to the filing of it in court, it cannot be assumed
that when the respondent or his counsel filed the award
and other connected papers in court it was not done for
and on behalf of the arbitrator. Instantly it was the
respondent who by his letter had requested the
arbitrator to send to his lawyer the award for filing it
into court and to whom the arbitrator obliged on such
request. When the arbitrator chose to accede to the
request of the respondent in specific terms, he by
necessary implication authorized the respondent’s
counsel to file the award and the connected papers in
court on his behalf. The law enjoined on the arbitrator
to file the award in court for which purpose he could
even be directed by the court. The obligation of filing
the award in court is a legal imperative on the
arbitrator. The agency of the party or its lawyer
employed by the arbitrator for the purpose normally
need be specific but can otherwise be deduced, inferred
or implied from the facts and circumstances of a given
case. It needs, however, shedding the impression that
when a lawyer files the award in court when given to
him by the arbitrator his implied authority to do so,
shall not be presumed to exist. In the instant case, no
one raised the plea that the filing of the award in court
by the respondent’s lawyer was without the authority of
the arbitrator and the courts below were not engaged on
that question. The matter was agitated on the basis of
knowledge of award from that fact.
6. Patel Motibhai Naranbhai and Another vs. Dinubhai
Motibhai Patel and Others, (1996) 2 SCC 585
In the above case, this Court held thus:
"9. Under Sub-section (2) of Section 14, a duty is cast
upon the arbitrator to file the award or cause the award
to be filed in the court at the request of the party to the
arbitration agreement or if so directed by the court.
There is no provision which requires the arbitrator to
apply to the court for filing of the award and pass a
decree in terms of the award. An application for filing
the award in court has to be made within thirty days
from the date of service of the notice of making of the
award under Article 119 of the Limitation Act. Even if it
is held that Article 119 will apply only to an application
made by a party and not by the arbitrator, Article 137
will come in the way of the arbitrator’s making any
application beyond the period of three years from the
date of making of the award.
10. Faced with the situation that an application for
filing the Award in Court Under Section 14(2) of the
Arbitration Act has become barred by limitation,
Jayantikumar Ishwarbhai Patil induced the Arbitrator
to make an application for filing of the Award and also
for making the Award the rule of the Court. In other
words. Jayantikumar Ishwarbhai Patel, a party to the
dispute with the help of the Arbitrator, did indirectly
what he could not have done directly. We are of the view
that law cannot be allowed to be circumvented in this
fashion. The Court should have declined to entertain
the application moved by the Arbitrator nearly six years
after making of the Award. Without the application of
the Arbitrator, the application made by Jayantikumar
Ishwarbhai Patel Under Section 14(2) could not survive.
The court should not come to the aid of a party where
there has been unwarrantable delay in seeking the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 17
statutory remedy. Any remedy must be sought with
reasonable promptitude having regard to the
circumstances."
7. Secretary to Govt. of Karnataka and Another vs. V.
Harishbabu, (1996) 5 SCC 400
In the above case, this Court held thus:
"We also do not find any merit in the submission of the
learned Counsel for the respondent that the
endorsement made by the government pleader on
24.6.1993 on the award which was then filed by the
arbitrator in court would amount to a notice under
Section 14(2) of the Act. The endorsement made by the
additional government pleader on 24.6.1993 can at best
be construed as a notice issued by the arbitrator under
Section 14(1) of the Act and such a notice, as we have
already observed, is not a substitute for a notice which
is mandatorily required to be issued by the Court and
served upon the parties regarding the filing of the award
under Section 14(2) of the Act. The trial court, therefore,
fell in error in opining that "admittedly he has not filed
any objections within 30 days from the date of the filing
of award by the respondent No. 3 before this Court and
there are no other impediments as such to deny the
relief sought for by the petitioner." The period of
limitation, for filing objections to the award as we have
already noticed, does not commence from the date of
filing of the award by the arbitrator in the court and
that period would only commence from the date of
service of the notice issued by the court under Section
14(2) of the Act. The High Court also fell in error in
observing that the appellant could not be heard to say
that he had no knowledge of the filing of the award in
the Court prior to 13.7.1993 on the ground that "the
additional government pleader representing respondents
1 and 2 before the court below had taken notice of the
filing of the award by the arbitrator on 24.6.1993."
There is nothing on the record to show that any such
notice was issued by the Court regarding the filing of
the award. The endorsement made by the additional
government pleader on the award which was later on
filed by the arbitrator in the court, did not relieve the
court of its mandatory obligation to issue the notice,
orally or in writing, to the appellant or its counsel to file
the objections, if any, to the award. The endorsement
made by the additional government pleader is of no
consequence in so far as the issuance of notice by the
Court under Section 14(2) is concerned. Computing the
period of 30 days with effect from 13.7.93 no award
could be made a rule of the Court before the expiry of
the period of 30 days from that date. Not filing of any
objections to the memo by 31.7.93, could not take away
the statutory right of the appellants to file objections to
the award within a period of 30 days commencing from
13.7.1993. Under these circumstances, the order of the
trial court as well as the impugned order dated
12.7.1995 of the learned Single Judge of the High court
cannot be sustained and the same are hereby set aside.
This appeal consequently succeeds and is allowed."
8. Ch. Ramalinga Reddy vs. Superintending Engineer
and Another, (1999) 9 SCC 610 (3 Judges)
In this case, this Court held thus:
"3.The award was made on 29-7-1985. It was sent by
the arbitrator to the Court on 31-7-1985 and was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 17
received by the Court at 12 noon on 5-8-1985. It is the
case of the appellant that his advocate informed the
Additional Government Pleader in writing of the receipt
of the award on 5-8-1985. On 7-8-1985, the Court
issued notice of the award and it was received by the
respondents on 10-8-1985. The petition to challenge
the award was filed by the respondents on 6-9-1985.
6. Section 14(1) of the Arbitration Act, 1940, requires
arbitrators or umpires to give notice in writing to the
parties of the making and signing of the award. Section
14(2) requires the court, after the filing of the award, to
give notice to the parties of the filing of the award. The
difference in the provisions of the two sub-sections with
respect to the giving of notice is significant and
indicates clearly that the notice which the court is to
give to the parties of the filing of the award need not be
a notice in writing. The notice can be given orally. (See
Nilkantha Sidramappa Ningashetti v. Kashinath
Somanna Ningashetti.) In Indian Rayon Corpn. Ltd. v.
Raunaw and Co. (P) Ltd. it was held that the fact that
parties have notice of the filing of the award is not
enough. The notice must be served by the court. There
must be (a) filing of the award in the proper court; (b)
service of the notice by the court or its office to the
parties concerned; and (c) such notice need not
necessarily be in writing. It is upon the date of service
of such notice that the period of limitation begins for an
application for setting aside the award.
9. It will be noted that it was held that it did not lie in
the mouth of the party who had filed the award in court
through his advocate to contend that he did not have
knowledge of the filing of the award and he could not
contend that it was only the subsequent date upon
which the Court issued notice that was the starting
point of limitation. This judgment, as the passage
quoted indicates, does not in any way dilute what was
laid down in the cases of Nilkantha Sidramappa
Ningashetti and Indian Rayon Corpn. Ltd., indeed, it
could not, for those were decisions of a larger and a
coordinate Bench, respectively. The judgment holds
only that a party who has filed the award in court
through his advocate is estopped from contending that,
so far as he is concerned also, the period of limitation to
challenge the award begins only when the court issues
notice in respect of its filing. The ratio of the judgment
has, therefore, no application to the facts of the case
before us."
9. Deo Narain Choudhary vs. Shree Narain Choudhary,
(2000) 8 SCC 626.
In the above judgment, this Court held that notice
regarding filing of the award must be some act of court even
though it need not be in writing but intimation by the
arbitrator is not sufficient for the purpose of Section 14(2).
Dismissing the appeal, this Court held that the period of
limitation under Article 119 of the Limitation Act, 1963 will
start running from the date the notice has been given by the
court under Section 14(2) of the Act. This Court in para 16
held thus:
"16. There can be no dispute with the proposition of law
that the notice need not be in writing and can be oral.
However all the authorities clearly lay down that the
notice must be some act of the Court. The proposition
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 17
that a notice must be by the Court is also confirmed by
an authority of this Court in the case of Ch. Ramalinga
Reddy v. Superintending Engineer reported in (1999) 9
S.C.C. 610. In this case "it has been held that mere
intimation by an Arbitrator is not sufficient and it is the
Court which has to given notice."
10. East India Hotels Ltd. vs. Agra Development
Authority, (2001) 4 SCC 175
In this case, this Court held thus:
"10. From a perusal of the above provision, shorn of
unnecessary details, it is clear that notice under sub-
section (2) of Section 14 of the Act need not be in writing
and that it can also be oral. What is essential is that
there must be service of notice or intimation or
communication of the filing of the award to the parties,
mode of service of such a notice being immaterial. But
such information, communication and knowledge must
be by or pursuant to order of the court. However, after
filing of an award by the arbitrator or the Umpire in the
court, if it merely records the presence of the parties or
their counsel but does not indicate that notice of filing
of the award be given to the parties, no service of notice
can be attributed from that fact, as notice must be
referable to an act of the court."
11. Bharat Coking Coal Ltd. vs. L.K. Ahuja, (2004) 5 SCC
109
In this case, this Court held thus:
"If there is no material to show that a notice of filing of
the award has ever been given to the parties, any period
of limitation as prescribed in Article 119(b) loses its
significance. The law is clearly to the effect that mere
knowledge of passing of an award is not enough. The
period of limitation will commence as provided in Article
119(b) of the Limitation Act only upon notice as to filing
of the award in the court being given to the parties
concerned.
In the present case the situation has arisen with
very special features. The Supreme Court made an
order appointing a new arbitrator who was directed to
file an award in the Court and he submitted the award
in court after publishing the same to the parties.
Though on 18-02-2002 the Registry notified the
submission of the award in court by way of an office
report, but the same cannot be treated to be in the
nature of a notice. The noting made by the Registry in
the office report merely brought to the notice of the
Court as to what had transpired and as the matter was
being listed before the Court, a copy was served upon
the parties concerned. It is only thereafter it can be
said that the Court directed issue of notice to the
parties regarding filing of the award which has been
sent by the Registry. The Registry on its own could not
have issued a notice without a direction from the Court
in this regard. Therefore there was no notice of filing of
the award in the Court to the parties as contemplated in
Article 119(b) of the Limitation Act. Further, on 11-3-
2002 when the matter was listed before the Court, the
parties concerned took notice of the same and
thereafter, objections have been filed by the parties on
11-4-2002. The plea based on limitation is therefore
liable to be rejected."
In the instant case, the impugned judgment has been
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 17
passed without appreciating the factual difference in the
present case and the set of facts leading to the dictum laid
down in F.C.I. vs. E. Kuttappan (supra). The dictum laid
down therein is not applicable to the facts and circumstances
of the case on hand. The factual difference in F.C.I. vs. B.
Kuttappan (supra) and the present case are explained as
under:-
Facts of Food Corporation of
India vs. B. Kuttappan
Facts of the present case
The respondent therein moved
an application before the
Arbitrator requesting him to
forward the award to his
advocate for filing the same in
Court.
No application is made by the
Petitioner requesting the
Arbitrator to file the award.
The Arbitrators themselves
forwarded the letter along with
the affidavit requesting the
Counsel to file the Award.
Filing of the Award was done
at the instance of the
Respondent herein and on its
express request.
The Filing of the award is
done at the instance of the
Arbitrator and not at the
instance of the Petitioner.
M/s Little & Co. was acting as
the agent of the Arbitrator.
When it did the ministerial act
of filing the award in the
Court as requested by the
Arbitrator.
In view of the aforesaid difference in the facts and
circumstances, the dictum laid down in F.C.I. vs. B. Kuttappan
(supra) cannot be applied to the present case.
In our view, the High Court has failed to follow the
dictum laid down by this Court in Deo Narain Choudhary vs.
Shree Narain Choudhary (supra) and Ch. Ramalinga
Reddy vs. superintending Engineer (supra).
This Court has expressly laid down that notice regarding
filing of Award must be given to the Court by some act of
court. The letter of Prothonotary and Senior Master cannot be
regarded as an act of court. This Court also conclusively laid
down in the aforesaid case that mere intimation from one
party to the other of the filing of the Award cannot be
construed as notice in terms of Section 14(2) of the Act.
Hence, in our view, the intimation from the Prothonotary
seeking address of the parties for the purpose of issuance of
notice cannot be characterized as notice in terms of Section
14(2).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 17
We have already said that the dictum laid down in
Kuttappan’s case (supra) was not applicable to the facts of the
present case. At the time of filing of the Award M/s Little &
Co. was not acting as representative of the appellant as
admitted by the respondent in para 5 of the counter affidavit.
The Arbitrator had caused the Award to be filed through M/s
Little & Co. The aforesaid categorical admission cannot,
therefore, be ignored or brushed aside.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that objections to the
Award filed by the appellant on 12.06.1996 was not barred by
time. We, therefore, allow the appeal and set aside the order
passed by the High Court in Appeal No. 321 of 1997 affirming
the judgment passed by the learned single Judge dismissing
the arbitration petition under Sections 30 and 33 of the Act,
1940 on the ground of limitation under Article 119 of the
Limitation Act.
During the pendency of the special leave petition in this
court on 05.05.2006, this Court directed the Prothonotary and
Senior Master, High Court, Bombay to invest the sum of
Rs. 2,36,29,954/- in fixed deposit in a Nationalized Bank. The
Prothonotary and Senior Master is directed to keep the said
fixed deposit in force till the disposal of the arbitration petition
No. 260 of 1996 in Award No. 98 of 1996 by the High Court.
The appellant is at liberty to file his objections to the award
passed by the arbitrator and the High Court. The High Court
is requested to dispose off the arbitration petition which was
filed in the year 1996 within 3 months from today. No costs.