Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ORIENT ENGG. & COMMERCIAL CO. LTD. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/10/1977
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SINGH, JASWANT
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1977 AIR 2445 1978 SCR (1) 622
1978 SCC (1) 10
ACT:
Witness-Summoning of a witness-Arbitrator or other quasi-
judicial authority, whether covered by s. 121 of the
Evidence Act-Duty of the Court before issuing summons under
Order XLVI Rule 3, C.P.C. read with s. 121 of the Evidence
Act when parties present a list of witnesses to be summoned.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No. 1 filed, under Order XVI Rules 1 and 2 read
with s. 151, C.P.C., a list of witnesses to be summoned
including the Arbitrator who made an award in a matter
between the appellant and the respondent No. 1. The
Registrar of the High Court in the routine course granted
summons without satisfying himself as to the sufficiency of
cause to summon the arbitrator as required under Order XVI
Rule 3, C.P.C. An objection petition u/s. 151, C.P.C. filed
before the learned Judge of the High Court against the
orders of the Registrar was dismissed.
Allowing the appeal, the Court,
HELD : (1) It is not right that every one who is included in
the witness list is automatically summoned, but the true
rule is that if grounds are made out for summoning a
witness, he will be called. The court must realise that its
process should be used sparingly and after careful
deliberation if the arbitrator should be brought into the
witness box. If a party has a case of mala fides and makes
out prima facie that it is not a frivolous charge or has
other reasonably relevant matters to be brought out, the
court may, in given circumstances, exercise its power to
summon even an arbitrator because nobody is beyond the reach
of truth or trial by court. [634 A-B, C-D]
(2)Courts should bear in mind the reason behind s. 121 of
the Evidence Act when invited to issue summons to an
arbitrator. It will be very embarrassing and in many cases
objectionable if every quasi-judicial authority or tribunal
were put to the necessity of getting into the witness box
and testify as to what weighed in his mind in reaching his
verdict. The slightest attempt to get to the materials of
his decision, to get back to, his mind and to examine him as
to why and how he arrived at a particular decision should be
immediately and ruthlessly excluded as unreasonable. When
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an arbitrator has given an award, if grounds justifying his
being called as a witness are affirmatively made out, the
court may exercise its powers-otherwise not.
In the instant case the court has not approached the
question from the proper perspective and on the materials on
record, there is no justification for the examination of the
arbitrator. [633 C-D, H]
Khub Lal v. Bishambhar Sahai A.I.R. 1925 Allahabad 103,
approved.
[The Court left open to the High Court to issue-necessary
Process on a fresh application stating why he wants to
examine the arbitrator, if and when made by the respondent.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1296 of1977.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Orderdated
25-1-77 of the High Court of Delhi at New Delhi in T. No.
2253of 1976 in Suit No. 459-A of 1974.
Soli J. Sorabji, Addl. Solicitor General E. C. Agarwala and
Girish Chandra for the Appellant.
633
Bakshi Shivcharan Singh and H. S. Marwah for Respondent No.
1
The Order of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-We live and learn from counsel’s arguments
each day and in this case we were asked to unlearn.
Counsel for the appellant has objected, in this appeal, to
the examination, as a witness, of an arbitrator who has
given his award on a dispute between the appellant and the
1st respondent. His contention is that, on broad principle
and public policy, it is highly obnoxious to summon an
arbitrator or other adjudicating body to give evidence in
vindication of his award. This is a wholesome principle as-
is evident from s. 121 of the Indian Evidence Act. That
provision states that no Judge or Magistrate shall, except
upon the special order of some court to which he is
subordinate be compelled to answer any questions as to his
own conduct in court as such Judge or Magistrate or as
anything which came to his knowledge in court as such Judge
or Magistrate, but he may be examined as toother matters
which occurred in his presence whilst he was so acting. Of
course, this--section does not apply proprio vigore to the
situationpresent here. But it is certainly proper for the
court to bear in mindthe reason behind this rule when
invited to issue summons to an arbitrator. Indeed, it will
be a very embarrassing and, in many cases, objectionable if
every quasi-judicial authority or tribunal were put to the
necessity of greeting into the witness box and testify as to
what weighed in his mind in reaching his verdict. We agree
with the observations of Walsh, A.C.J. in Khub Lal v.
Bishambhar Sahai(1) where the learned Judge has pointed out
that the slightest attempt to get to the materials of his
decision,, to get back to his mind and to examine him as to
why and how he arrived at a particular decision should be
immediately and ruthlessly excluded as undesirable.
In this case, a list of witnesses was furnished by the 1st
respondent :and the Registrar of the High Court, in the
routine course, granted summons perhaps not adverting as to
why the arbitrator himself was being summoned. That was
more or less mechanical is evident from the fact that the
reason given for citing the arbitrator is the omnibus
purpose of proving the case of the party-not the specific
ground to be made out. We should expect application of the
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mind of the Registrar to the particular facts to be
established by a witness before the coercive process of the
court is used. It is seen that the learned Judge before
whom objection was taken under s. 151 C.P.C. to the summons
to the arbitrator ,dismissed the petition on the score that
he saw no ground to refuse to summon the arbitrator as a
witness. The approach should have been the other way
round. When an arbitrator has given an award, if grounds
justifying his being called as a witness are affirmatively
made out, the court may exercise its power, otherwise not.
It is not right that every one,.who is included in the
witness list is automatically summoned; but the true rule is
that, if grounds are made out for summoning a witness be
will be called; not if the demand is belated, vexatious or
frivolous. Thus the court also has not approached the
question from the proper
(1)A.I.R. 1925 All. 103.
634
perspective. If arbitrators are. summoned mindlessly
whenever applications for setting aside the award are
enquired into, there will be few to undertake the job. The
same principle holds good even if the prayer is for
modification or for remission of the award. The short point
is that the court must realise that its process should be
used sparingly. and after careful deliberation, if the
arbitrator should be brought into the witness box. In no
case can he be summoned merely to show how he arrived at the
conclusions he did. In the present case, we have been told
that the arbitrator had gone wrong in his calculation and
this had to be extracted from his mouth by being examined or
cross-examined. We do not think that every Munsif and every
Judge, every Commissioner and, every arbitrator has to
undergo a cross-examination before his judgment or award can
be upheld by the appellate court, How vicious such an
approach would be is apparent on the slightest reflection.
Of course, if a party has a case of mala fides and makes out
prima facie that it is not a frivolous charge or has other
reasonably relevant matters to be brought out the court
may., in given circumstances, exercise its power to summon
even an arbitrator, because nobody is beyond the reach of
truth or trial by Court. In the present case, after having
heard counsel on both sides, we are not satisfied that on
the present material there is justification for the
examination of the arbitrator. We therefore set aside the
order.
However, we make it clear that if the court is convinced,
after hearing the respondent on a fresh application stating
why he want to examine the arbitrator, it is still open to
it to issue the necessary process. Such a step must be a
deliberate step and not a routine summons. With these
observations, we allow the appeal. There will be no order
as to costs.
Appeal allowed.,
635