Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 9405 of 1995.
PETITIONER:
RAMACHANDRA REDDY & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF A.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/02/2001
BENCH:
U.C.Banerjee, Brijesh Kumar, G.B.Pattanaik
JUDGMENT:
PATTANAIK,J.
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Claimants are the appellants against the judgment of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court, arising out of an arbitration
proceeding. The North work excavation of approach channel
of Srisailam Project had been awarded to the claimants for
different amounts indicated in the contract. The contract
itself contained an arbitration clause. Dispute being
raised on different items of claim, those disputes had been
referred to a panel of arbitrators and the panel of
arbitrators, ultimately passed an award where-under claim
Items 1, 2 and 3 stood rejected. So far as claim item No.
4 is concerned, the same was allowed in part. Claim Item
No. 5 was claim of interest and the arbitrators allowed the
interest @ 12 per cent per annum over the amount awarded.
Claim Item No. 6 was the claim of cost and the arbitrators
directed that each party will bear its own cost. Against
the award of the arbitrators, rejecting claim item Nos. 1,
2 and 3, the claimants filed an objection in the Civil Court
and sought for remittance under Section 16 on the ground
that the arbitrators have left undetermined the claims of
the claimants on item No.1, 2 and 3 on an erroneous view of
the relevant clauses of the agreement. Claimants also filed
an application under Section 14 to make the award in
relation to claim allowed by the arbitrators as a rule of
Court. The State of Andhra Pradesh also filed a petition
under Section 30 of the Arbitration Act to set aside that
part of the award which allowed the claim of the contractor
to the extent of Rs.57,000/-. All these applications which
were registered as O.S. No. 1094/86, O.P.104/87 and
O.P.424/87 were disposed of by a common judgment of the
learned Vth Additional Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad.
The said learned Judge made the award in relation to claim
item No.4 a rule of Court. But he set aside the award in
relation to claim item Nos. 1,2,3 and 5and remitted the
same for reconsideration to the panel of arbitrators.
Against the aforesaid Judgment of the Additional Judge, City
Civil Court, remitting the disputes/claims in relation to
claim items 1, 2, 3 and 5 to the panel of arbitrators, the
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State of Andhra Pradesh preferred appeals under Section 39
of the Arbitration Act. The High Court by the impugned
judgment set aside the order of the Additional Judge, so far
it relates to remitting the claim item No. 1 to the panel
of arbitrators for reconsideration. So far as claim item
Nos. 2 and 3 are concerned, the High Court upheld the
direction of the Additional Judge, but, appointed a retired
Chief Justice of the Court as arbitrator to arbitrate the
claim items 2 and 3 and a part of claim item No. 5 relating
to interest. In this appeal filed by the claimants, we are
concerned only with claim item No.1. The legality of the
award in relation to claim items 2 and 3 are the subject
matter of an appeal, which is pending in this Court.
Claim Item No. 1 relates to increase in quantity of
hard rock abnormally and on this head, the claimants had
claimed Rs.93, 76, 990/-. The claimants statement that was
filed before the arbitrator, makes out a vague claim on this
score without indicating the basis for the claim in
question. In respect of the aforesaid quantity of extra
excavation on hard rock, the State of Andhra Pradesh had
made the payment in terms of Clause 25 of Schedule C of
Section 2 of the agreement as per its letter dated 21st
October, 1981. Notwithstanding the said payment, the
claimants had made the extra claim on the ground that the
quantity of excavation of hard rock being abnormally high
and much beyond the anticipated quantity indicated in the
agreement and even much in excess of the so-called 25 per
cent of the work as per the GOMS No. 2289 dated 12.6.1968,
the claimants are entitled to a separate rate for such extra
excavation and the arbitrators failed to exercise their
jurisdiction in not granting the claim and on the other
hand, rejecting the same. The High Court in the impugned
judgment however, referring to clause 59 of the agreement,
which deals with delay and extension of time and in view of
the letters of the Superintending Engineer dated 15th July,
1980 and 19th May, 1983, came to hold that the
contractor-claimant will not be entitled to be paid at any
higher rate for such additional excavation work and
accordingly set aside the order of the learned trial Judge,
remitting the claim item No. 1 for being re-disposed of by
the arbitrator.
Mr. P.P.Rao, the learned senior counsel, appearing
for the appellant, contended that the High Court committed
serious error in referring to clause 59 as well as to the
letter dated 15th July, 1980 and 19th May, 1983, in coming
to the conclusion that the claimant-contractor will not be
entitled to be paid at any higher rate for the extra amount
of excavation made by him. Mr. Rao further submitted that
under GOMS No. 2289 dated 12.6.1968, a deviation limit upto
a maximum of 25 per cent being permissible, for any work in
excess of that limit, the contractor is entitled to claim a
higher rate and that being the position, the arbitrators had
committed an error apparent on the award in refusing the
claim and the High Court committed error in setting aside
the order of remittance passed by the Additional Judge. In
support of this contention, reliance was placed on the
judgment of this Court in the case of S. Harcharan Singh
vs. Union of India, 1990(4) SCC 647. Mr. Rao also further
urged that in view of the recommendations of the Executive
Engineer notwithstanding the continued objection of the
claimant, expressing inability to continue with the abnormal
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increase in the hard rock excavation, it must be held that
the payment at a higher rate for the additional or excess
quantity of excavation was implied and failure on the part
of the arbitrator to consider the same, constitutes an error
on the face of the award and as such the learned Additional
Judge was justified in remitting the matter for
reconsideration of the arbitrator. Mr. Rao lastly
submitted that for this excess of excavation work, the
contractor was entitled to be paid in accordance with Clause
63 of the agreement, which has not been noticed by the
arbitrator and adjudged from that stand point, the High
Court also committed error in setting aside the order of
remittance made by the learned Additional Judge.
Ms. K. Amreswari, appearing for the respondent State
of Andhra Pradesh, on the other hand contended that the
power of interference of the Court under Sections 30 and 33
as well as under Section 16 is of a limited nature and the
Court would be justified in interfering with the reasoned
award of an arbitrator, if the award contains any apparent
error on the same. If the impugned award is examined from
the aforesaid stand point, the conclusion is irresistible
that it did not contain any error and, therefore, the
interference of the Court was not warranted. Ms. Amreswari
further contended that the claimants nowhere in the claim
petition had made out a case that for the additional
quantity of excavation work, they are entitled to the rate
as per clause 63 of the agreement which was urged for the
first time in this Court and, therefore, the said contention
should not be allowed to be raised. Ms. Amreswari further
urged that clause 63 will have no application for the extra
item of excavation made by the contractors since that clause
applies to any supplemental item, which are found essential,
incidental and inevitable during the execution of the work
and by no stretch of imagination, the additional excavation
which is the subject matter of claim in claim item No. 1
can be held to be supplemental item. Ms. Amreswari further
submitted that for this additional quantity of excavation
the claimant having been paid for in accordance with clause
25 of the agreement, the further claim of the contractor is
not arbitrable at all and, High Court therefore was fully
justified in setting aside the order of remittance made by
the Additional Judge. Ms. Amreswari further contended that
the claim for payment of higher rate for the work done
beyond the agreement is not at all sustainable in view of
the positive letter of the authorities dated 15th July, 1980
and 19th May, 1983, while allowing extension of time for
completion of the work, as has been held by this Court in
the case of Ch.Ramalinga Reddy vs. Superintending Engineer
and Anr. 1999(9) SCC 610, and, therefore, the High Court
was fully justified in interfering with the directions of
the sub- ordinate Judge in remitting the said claim item
No.1 for fresh arbitration. Mrs. Amreswari lastly
submitted that a bare scrutiny of the order of the Vth
Additional Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad, remitting
claim items Nos. 1, 2 and 3 for reconsideration would
indicate that no reasons had been given for such remittance
and on the face of it, the said judgment of the Civil Court
tantamounts to gross error of jurisdiction in interfering
with an award and transgressing the scope and limitation
provided under Sections 30 and 16 and, therefore, the High
Court was justified in correcting the said error in appeal.
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Under the Arbitration Act, Section 16 is the provision
under which the Court may remit the award for
reconsideration of an arbitration and necessity for
remitting the award arises when there are omissions and
defects in the award, which cannot be modified or corrected.
Remission of an award is in the discretion of the Court and
the powers of the Court are circumscribed by the provisions
of Section 16 itself. Ordinarily, therefore, a Court may be
justified in remitting the matter if the arbitrator leaves
any of the matters undetermined or a part of the matter
which had not been referred to and answered and that part
cannot be separated from the remaining part, without
affecting the decision on the matter, which was referred to
arbitration or the award is so indefinite as to incapable of
execution or that the award is erroneous on the face of it.
Discretion having been conferred on the Court, to remit an
award, the said discretion has to be judicially exercised
and an appellate Court would not be justified in interfering
with the exercise of discretion unless the discretion has
been misused. What is an error apparent on the face of an
award which requires to be corrected has always been a
subject matter of discussion. An error of law on the face
of the award would mean that one can find in the award or a
document actually incorporated thereto stating the reasons
for a judgment some legal propositions which is the basis of
the award and which can be said to be erroneous. Documents
not incorporated directly or indirectly into the award
cannot be looked into for the purpose of finding out any
alleged error. The courts are not to investigate beyond the
award of the arbitrators and the documents actually
incorporated therein and, therefore, when there would be no
patent error on the face of the award, it would not be open
for the court to go into the proceedings of the award. If
the application for remittance filed by the claimants
invoking jurisdiction of the court under Section 16 is
examined from the aforesaid stand point and if the order of
the learned Civil Court, remitting claim Item No. 1 is
tested in the light of the discussions made above, the
conclusion is irresistible that no case for remittance had
been made out and the learned trial Judge exercised his
discretion on the grounds which does not come within the
four-corners of the provisions of Section 16 of the
Arbitration Act. In fact no reasons had been ascribed for
interference with the award, rejecting claim Item No. 1 and
for remittance of the same. The High Court being the Court
of appeal, was therefore, fully justified in exercise of its
appellate power in correcting the error made by the Civil
Judge in remitting claim item No. 1.
Let us now examine the contentions of Mr. P.P.Rao,
the learned senior counsel, appearing for the appellant.
The learned counsels contention in fact centres round the
question as to whether for the additional quantity of
excavation work, the contractor would be entitled to at a
higher rate in accordance with Clause 63 of the agreement.
Mrs. Amreswari, appearing for the State was fully justified
in her submissions that this contention had never been
raised either before the arbitrator or before the
subordinate Judge or even before the High Court. In fact
the claim petition filed before the arbitrator is rather
cryptic and absolutely vague, not indicating on what basis
the additional claim is made, though the foundation for the
claim was there, namely there had been an increased amount
of excavation work beyond the agreement. It is in this
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connection, Mr. Rao had relied upon the two decisions of
this Court in the case of S.Harcharan Singh vs. Union of
India, 1990(4) SCC 647 and National Fertilizers vs. Puran
Chand Nangia 2000(8) SCC 343. But before examining the said
contention, it would be appropriate for us to extract Clause
63, which was the sheet anchor of the argument of Mr. Rao.
Clause 63 reads as under:
Cl.63. Payment for additions and deductions for
omissions: (A) The contractor is bound to execute all
supplemental items that are found essential, incidental and
inevitable during the execution of the work, at the rates to
be worked out as detailed below: (a)For all items of work
in excess of the quantities shown in schedule A of the
tender the rates payable for such items shall be either the
tender rates or the standard schedule of rates for the items
plus or minus the overall tender percentage accepted by the
competent authority which ever is less. (b)For items
directly deducible from similar items in the agreement, the
rates shall be derived by adding to or substracting from the
agreement rate of such similar items, the cost of difference
in quantity of material or labour between the new items and
the similar items in the agreement, worked out with
reference to the Schedule of rates adopted in the sanctioned
estimate plus or minus the overall tender percentage.
(c)For new items which do not correspond to any items in the
agreement, the rates shall be standard schedule rate plus or
minus the over all tender percentage. The terms standard
schedule of rates used in the above subclauses (a), (b) &
(c) means the schedule of rates on which the sanctioned
estimate was prepared. (d)In the event of the Executive
Engineer and the Contractor failing to agree on a rate for
such additional work, the Executive Engineer may, at his
option either: (i)employ other parties to carry out the
additional work in the same manner as provided for under
clause 48, or (ii)the contractor shall execute the work upon
written orders from the Executive Engineer and the cost of
labour and materials plus 10 per cent thereon shall be
allowed therefor, provided that the vouchers for the labour
and materials employed shall have been delivered to the
Executive Engineer or his representative within seven days
after such work shall have been completed. If the Executive
Engineer considers that payment for such work on the basis
of the vouchers presented is unduly high, he shall make
payment in accordance with such valuation as he considers
fair and reasonable and his decision to the matter shall be
final, if the amount involved in additional payment is
Rs.1000 or less, for each occasion on which such additional
works shall have been authorised. If such amount exceeds
Rs.1000, the contractor shall have the right to submit the
matter to arbitration under the provisions of the
arbitration clause 73. (e)If, in the opinion of the
Executive Engineer a rate for the additional work is not
capable of being properly arrived at prior to execution of
work, or if the work is not capable of being properly
measured, then the cost and payment thereof shall be dealt
with as provided for in the preceding sub- clause (d)(ii).
In the case of S. Harcharan Singh vs. Union of
India, 1990(4) SCC 647, on which Mr. Rao had strongly
relied upon, this Court had quoted clause 12 of the
agreement in paragraph 8 of the judgment and referring to
the standard form of contract of the Central Public Works
Department, specifically permitting for a limit of variation
called deviation limit up to a maximum of 20 per cent, it
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was held that the contractor has to carry out the work at
the rate stipulated in the contract upto such limit but for
work in excess of that limit he has to be paid at the rates
to be determined in accordance with clause 12A, under which
the Engineer in-charge can revise the rates, having regard
to the prevailing market rates. The Court also referred to
the letters of the Executive Engineers, the Superintending
Engineer and the Additional Chief Engineer recommending that
the additional work may be confined to 20 per cent and for
the extra quantity of additional work, he may be paid
remuneration at the increased rate taking into account the
increased cost of the execution of work on account of
peculiar nature of the work. We fail to understand how the
aforesaid decision will be of any assistance to the claimant
in the present case, where there is no clause like Clause
12A nor is there any letter from the competent authority
agreeing to payment at a higher rate for the additional work
beyond the limit of 25 per cent as provided under the GOMS
No.2289 dated 12.6.1968. Arbitrator being a creature of the
agreement, unless agreement either specifically or
inferentially provides for a higher rate to be awarded for
any additional or excess work done by the contractor, it
would not be permissible for the arbitrator to award for the
so-called additional work at a higher rate. In the case in
hand, not only there is no letter from the competent
authority, namely the Superintending Engineer that the
contractor would be paid at any higher rate for the
additional excavation of rock, though the Executive Engineer
had indicated that he has recommended to the Superintending
Engineer. But such recommendation of the Executive
Engineer, who was not competent to decide the question of
awarding a higher rate for the excess quantity of excavation
will not clothe any jurisdiction on the arbitrator to award
the contractor at a higher rate nor would it entitle the
contractor to get a higher rate for the claim in question on
the basis of agreement. Now coming to the very clause, upon
which Mr. Rao relied upon, we find that the said clause
relates to supplemental item, which have been found
essential, incidental and inevitable during the execution of
the work. The excavation of hard rock cannot be held to be
a supplemental item and on the other hand, is an item of
work tendered and accepted, and as such clause 63 will have
no application to the claim item No.1. Mr. Rao had also
relied upon the decision of this Court in National
Fertilizers vs. Puran Chand Nangia, 2000(8) SCC 343,
wherein this Court had held that an interpretation of a
particular clause of the agreement must be such, so as to
balance the rights of both parties and when a variation
clause permits the employer to make variation in the work
upto a specified limit, beyond the said limit, the claimant
could be paid at a higher rate. The Court in the aforesaid
case was examining the principle of integrity of the
contract and refused to interfere with the award merely
because arbitrator had granted an escalation. In the
aforesaid case, the Court was examining whether it would be
permissible for interfering with an award which was a
non-speaking one merely because the arbitrator had awarded
the claim at an escalated rate for the excess quantity of
work and since the award itself was a non-speaking award,
the court held that it is not permissible to probe into the
mental process of the arbitrator and then interfered with
the same. Then again the question of granting a higher rate
for any extra quantity of work executed by the contractor
would at all arise only when the contract provides for such
escalated rate either expressly or by implication as in the
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case of S. Harcharan Singh 1990(4) SCC 647, where the
competent authority had agreed for the same by
correspondence. But in the case in hand, when there is no
such acceptance by the competent authority, and there is no
provision in the contract, permitting such escalated rate
for the additional quantity of excavation made and in view
of our rejecting the contention raised on the basis of
clause 63, the conclusion is irresistible that the
contractor will not be entitled to a higher rate for the
additional excavation work and as such the High Court was
fully justified in setting aside the direction of the trial
judge, remitting the claim item No. 1 for reconsideration
and we see no infirmity with the said direction of the High
Court to be interfered with. We also find sufficient force
in the submission of Mrs. Amreswari, relying upon the
letters of the competent authority, specifically intimating
that the grant of extension of time will not in any way make
the contractor eligible for any extra claim due to
escalation in rates of labour and materials or due to any
other reasons under any circumstances and the decision of
this Court in Ramalinga Reddy, 1999(9) SCC 610 supports the
aforesaid contention. In the aforesaid premises, we do not
find any merits in this appeal, requiring our interference
with the impugned judgment of the High Court. The appeal
fails and is
dismissed but in the circumstances there will be no
order as to costs.