Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. FAIR AIR ENGINEERS PVT. LTD.& ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
N.K.MODI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/08/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Leave granted.
We have heard learned counsel on both sides.
This appeal by special leave arises from the order
dated November 13, 1992 of the National Consumer Disputes
Redressal Commission, New Delhi [the "Commission", for
short] passed in First Appeal No.62/1991.
The admitted facts are that the appellant had entered
into a contract with the respondent to carry out
installation of a centrally air-conditioned plant in the
residential house of the respondent in New Delhi. Since he
has committed breach of the contract, seeking to recover a
sum of Rs.3,75,000/- as compensation for alleged deficiency
in service on the part of the appellant in carrying out the
work of installation of the centrally air-conditioned plant,
the respondent laid the complaint before the State
Commission which in its order dated October 30, 1990 had
stayed the proceedings and relegated the parties to
arbitration for seeking the remedy. The appellant carried
the matter in appeal. By the impugned order the Commission
has held that the proceedings before the forums created
under the Consumer Protection Act, 1986 [Act 68 of 1986]
[for short the Act"] is not a legal proceedings nor is the
Commission a judicial authority; therefore, Section 34 of
the Arbitration Act, 1940 is not available to stay the
proceedings. Thus this appeal by special leave.
Shri R.S. Suri, learned counsel for the appellant
contended that the scheme of the Act, in particular Sections
3, 10, 16 and 20 provides for constitution of District
Forum, State Commission and National Commission which
conduct proceedings as per the procedure prescribed in
Section 13; finality is attached to the order or the forums
under Section 24. The orders are enforceable at law by
operation of Section 25 and the penalties for contravention
get sanctions under Section 27. The hierarchy of appeals
provided under Section 19 et al does indicate that the
proceedings before the authorities under the Act are legal
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proceedings and the authorities are judicial authorities
within the meaning of Section 34 of the Arbitration Act,
1940. The Commmission, therefore, was in error in its
conclusion that proceedings before the authorities are not
legal proceedings nor is the Tribunal a judicial authority.
Ms. Binu Tamta learned counsel appearing for the respondent
contended that there is no consensus ad idem between the
parties on the point of reference to an arbitration;
pursuant to a quotation given by the appellant, the
respondent agreed only on the conditions enumerated and
communicated by the respondent to which the appellant had
agreed thereunder. No arbitration clause emerged by
consensus ad idem. Therefore, there is no arbitration
agreement for reference of the dispute for arbitration. It
is also contended that the respondent., after issuance of
the notice by the State Commission, had appeared and taken
five adjournments to file the counter; thereby, it had
acquiesced to the jurisdiction of the State Commission.
Thereby, the appellant, having participated in the
proceedings before the State Commission, is not entitled to
avail of the remedy of stay of stay of further proceedings
under Section 34, pending reference to an arbitration. It is
also contended that the Tribunals constituted under the Act
are Special Tribunals. Though they are invested with the
powers of the civil Court in a limited way it is not
confered with trappings of the Court. Therefore, it is
neither legal proceedings nor is the Tribunal a Judicial
authority under Section 34. Thereby, the remedy of Section
34 is not available to the available to the appellant. It is
further contended that Act being a special statute having
given exclusive jurisdiction to the forums created under the
Act to provide inexpensive and expeditious remedy.
Relegating the parties to the arbitration defeats the
purpose of the remedy through summary trial which is
provided under the Act. Therefore, the Court would be slow
to relegate the parties to the process of arbitration under
the Arbitration Act.
Having regard to the respective contentions,the first
question that arises for consideration is: whether there is
an arbitration agreement between the parties? It is true
that respondent had raised before the Commission the dispute
and in the grounds of appeal about the non-existence of the
arbitration agreement and want of consensus ad idem in that
behalf but from a reading of the order of the National
Commission it would appear that the question was not argued.
The State Commission expressly has gone into the question
and held that by operation of clause [12] of the quotation
there is an arbitration agreement brought into vogue between
the parties. It envisages reference to arbitration and the
question was offered with the consensus ad idem. It is seen
that when the quotation was offered with the conditions
enumerated thereunder, the respondent merely made a counter-
offer giving technical details to a part of the offer as
counter offer and when it was accepted by the appellant, the
parties agreed for that. offer and the counter-offer. In
other words they became an integral part of the contract of
the parties. Thereby, clause [12] of the agreement became an
integral part of the contract . Thus, there is an
arbitration agreement between the parties.
The question then is: whether the appellanthas disabled
itself by acquiescence to the jurisdiction of the State
Commission in seeking adjournment to file the counter. It is
true that in the counter-affidavit filed in this Court the
respondent has stated that the appellant had taken five
adjournments to file the counter. On the fifth occasion the
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counter came to be filed with the petition for stay of the
proceedings. But, unfortunately. this question was not
argued before the National Commission and, therefore, we
cannot 90 into the question whether the appellant acquiesced
to the jurisdiction of the State Commission before
proceeding further in the matter.
The crucial question is: whether the proceedings of the
forums created under the Act are legal proceedings and the
authorities have the trappings of judicial authorities or a
court within the meaning of Section 34 of the Arbitration
Act? Before going into the decisions of this Court it is
necessary to read the provisions of the Act so that we can
have a clear picture of the conspectus of its operation.
Section 3 envisages that "the provisions of the Act shall be
in addition to, and not in derogation of the provisions of
any other law for the time being in force". Section 10
speaks of constitution and composition of District Forums so
as to consist of persons specified in clauses (a) and (b).
They shall include a person who is, or who has been, or is
qualified to be a District Judge, as its Prosident, apart
from other members envisaged under clause (b) of sub-
section [1] thereof. Similarly, section 16 of the. Act
speaks about composition of the State Commission. It
provides that each State Commission shall consist of a
person who is, or has been, a Judge of a High Court,
appointed by the State Government, who shall be the
President of the Commission, apart from other members
envisaged under clause (b) of sub-section [1] thereof.
Section 20 of the Act, similarly, envisages the composition
of the National Commission and a person who is, or has been,
a Judge of the Supreme Court, to be appointed by the Central
Government, shall be its President, apart from other members
envisaged in clause (b) of sub-section [1] thereof. Thus the
presiding officers of the forums are judicial officers and
in the case of commissions they are sitting or retired
Judges of the High Court or the Supreme Court, as the case
may be. A remedy of complaint has been provided to the
aggrieved consumer defined under Section 2 (d) of the Act.
The expression ’complaint" has been defined under section 2
(b) of the Act. Section 12 prescribes the manner in which
the complaint shall be made. Section 24-A provides for the
period of limitation within which the complaint shall be
laid, namely within 2 years from the date on which the cause
of action has arisen.
Section 13 provides for the procedure after receipt of
complaint and for disposal thereof. The details thereof are
not material except sub-sections (4), (5) and (6) thereof
which have cutting edge as material in this behalf. Sub-
section (4) postulates that for the purposes of that
section, the District Forum shall have the same powers as
are vested in a Civil Court under the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908, while trying a suit in respect of the
enumerated matters, namely, [i] summoning and enforcing the
attendance of any defendant or witness and examining the
witness and oath, [ii] discovery and production of any
document or other material object producible as evidence,
[ii] the reception of evidence on affidavits, [iv] the
requisitioning of the report of the concerned analysis or
test from the appropriate laboratory or from any other
relevant source, [v] issuing of any commission for the
examination of any witness, and [vi] any other matter which
may be pescribed. Under the Rules framed under the Act,
District Forums have got power to prescribe the procedure of
collecting and discovering evidence. Under sub-section (5),
every proceedings before the District. Forum shall be deemed
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to be a judicial proceeding within the meaning of Sections
193 and 228 of the Indian Penal Code and shall be deemed to
be a Civil Court for the purpose of Section 195 and Chapter
XXVI of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973. Sub-section
(6) provides that where the complainant is a consumer
referred to in sub-clause (iv) of Clause (b) of sub-section
(1) of Section 2, the provisions of Rule 8 of Order 1 of the
First Schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 shall
apply subject to the modification that every reference
therein to a suit or decree shall be construed as a
reference to a complaints or the order of the District Forum
thereon. The finding of the District Forum is envisaged
under Section 14 of the Act. If any person feels aggrieved
by the order of the District Forum there is a right of
appeal provided under Section 15 to the State Commission.
The State Commission, in addition to the remedy of appeal
against the order of District Forum, has original
jurisdiction to entertain complaints if the matter is
covered under its specified pecuniary jurisdiction. Under
Section 18 of the Act, the procedure for the disposal of
complaints provided in Section 12, 13 and 14 of the Act and
the rules made thereunder, is made available for the
disposal of the complaint’ or the appeals by the State
Commission. Similarly, the National Commission under Section
21, has been given, in addition to original jurisdiction
power to entertain an appeal against the order of the Stake
Commission or to call for the records and pass appropriate
orders, in circumstances enumerated under clause [b]
thereof, in are consumer dispute pending before or decided
by any State Commission, By operation of Section 22, the
power of a civil court as specified in sub-sections (4), (5)
and (6) of Section 13 of the Act are vested in the National
Commission for disposal of any complaint or proceedings
before it the procedure to be followed by it shall be such
as may be prescribed by the Central Government. Under
Section 23 of the Act, remedy of appeal to this Court is
made available to any person aggrieved by an order of the
National Commission. Section 24 attaches finality to every
order of the District Forum, State Commission or of the
National Commission if no appeal is preferred within
specified time. However, that is subject to any judicial
review under Article 226 or 32 of the Constitution, Section
25 gives teeth to the orders passed by the District Forum,
State Commission and National Commission; every order cen be
enforced in the same manner as if it were a decree or an
order made by a court in a civil suit pending therein; it
shall be lawful for the District Forum, State Commission or
National Commission to send its orders, in case of it
inability to execute it, for execution to the appropriate
executing court. It is obliigatory for the executing court
to execute the order treating it to be a decree or order of
a court sent lo it for execution. For specific enforcement
of the Ace, Section 27 gives sanction of the State for
imposing penalties against the traders or persons against
whom a complaint is made if fails to comply the order passed
by the aforesaid District Forums, National Commission or
State Commission, as the case may be.
Thus, it would be seen that the District Forums. State
Commission and National Commission have all the trappings of
a civil court and judicial authority. The proceedings before
them are legal proceedings. Similar controversy was
considered by this Court in The Bharat Bank Ltd. Delhi vs.
The employees of the Bharat Bank [(1950)] 1 SCR 459] and in
Associated Cement Companies Ltd. vs P.N.Sharma &
Anr.[(1965) 2 SCR 366]. In Sarojini Ramaswami vs. Union of
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India [(1992)] 4 SCC 501], one of us, K. Ramaswamy, J. had
dealt with this aspect of the matter and held thus:
"The Pariament while considering
the motion for removal of the Judge
for deciding whether to adopt the
motion or not takes into
consideration the report as well as
the dissenting opinion, if any, of
the third member of the Inquiry
Committee in case the majority
opinion is that the Judge is
guilty. along with the entire
evidence received by the Inquiry
Committee on which the finding of
guilt of the Inquiry Committee is
based. No doubt, the Parliament
does not substitute its finding for
that of the Inquiry Committee or
supersede it in case it decides not
to adopt the motion by the
requisite majority so that the
motion for removal of the Judge
fails and the proceedings terminate
but in doing so it does take the
decision to not adopt the motion
because it declines to accept and
act on the finding of guilty
recorded in the report of the
Committee after debating the issue
on the basis of the material before
it".
This Court in recent decision in Canara Bank vs.
Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd. & Ors. [J.T. 1995
(3) SC 42] considered the controversy and held they the
word ’court" must be read in the context in which it is used
in the statute. It is permissible, in given the context, to
read it as comprehending the courts of civil judicature and
courts or some tribunals exercising curial, or judicial
powers. In the context in which the word "court" is used in
Section 9A of the Special Courts Act, it is intended to
encompass all curial or judicial bodies which have the
jurisdiction to decide matter or claim, inter alia, arising
out of transactions in securities entered into between the
stated dates in which a securities entered into between the
stated dates in which a person notified was involved.
Therein, the Company Law Board has been held to be a court
exercising the function of the court; therefore, it is
possessed of the trappings of a Court. thus, we have no
hesitation to hold that the proceedings before the District
Forum, State Commission and the National Commission are
legal proceedings. The District Forum, National Commission
and the State Commission are judicial authorities falling
under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act.
The question then is: whether the case shall be stayed
by operation of Section 34 of the Arbitration Act? Section
34 envisages that where any party to an arbitration
agreement or any person claiming under him commences any
legal proceedings against any other party to the agreement
or any person claiming under him in respect of the matter
agreed to be referred, any party to such legal proceedings,
before filing a written statement at any time or before
taking any other steps in the proceedings, shall apply to
the judicial authority before which the proceedings are
pending to stay the proceedings; and such authority, if
satisfied that there is no sufficient reason why the matter
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should not be referred in accordance with the arbitration
agreement and that the applicant was, at the time when the
proceedings were commenced, and still remains ready and
uilling to do all things nacessary to the proper conduct of
the arbibration, may make an order staying the proceedings.
It would thus be clear that, by invocation of Section
34, the party to the proceedings does not get an automatic
right to have the proceedings pending before the judicial
authorities stayed. The said section gives discretion to the
authorities to stay the proceedings on their satisfying that
there was no sufficient reason why the matter should not be
referred in accordance with the agreement between the
parties for arbitration when the party seeking stay of the
proceedings was and still remains ready and willing to do
all things necessary to the proper conduct of the
arbitration. In other words, on judicial satisfaction as to
the contract between the parties and subject matter of the
dispute as to the nature of the dispute, the judicial
authority has been invested with a discretion to stay the
proceeding or proceed with the matter pending before its
Similar power is available under Section 8 of the
Arbitration and Conciliation Third Ordinance,1996. The Act
was enacted to provide for protection of the interests of
consumers and for that purpose the Act has made provision
for the establishment of Consumer Councils and other
authorities, viz.,District Forums, State Commissions and
National Commission for the settlement of consumers’
disputes and for matters connected therewith.
This Court in Lucknow Development Authority M.K. Gupta
[(1994) 1 SCC 243] elaborately considered. The scheme and
object of the Act. It was held that object was to secure
social purpose to promote the facilities in a comprehending
manner for settlement of issue involved in the consumer
complaints and to assess the damage. In construing the
object of the Act, the interests of the consumers which the
Act seeks to protect are given predominance. The Act has
departed from the settle legal forums provided under the
Code of Civil Procedure. The importance of the Act is to
promote the welfare of the society by enabling the consumers
to participate directly in the market economy. It attempts
to remove the helplessness of a consumer which he faces
against powerful business, described as a ’network of
rackets’ or a society in which ’producers have secured
power’ to rob the rest or as right of public bodies which
are degenerating into storhnouses of inaction where papers
do not move from one desk to another as a matter of duty and
responsibility but for extraneous consideration leeving the
common man helploss, bewildered and shocked. The malady is
becoming so rampant, widespread and deep that the society,
instead of bothering, complaining and fighting against it is
accepting it as a part of life. The Act, therefore, intends
to secure inexpensive and cxpeditious consurer service.
Accordingly, it must be held that the orovisions of the
Act are to be construed widely to live effect to the object
and purpose of the Act. Itis seen that Section 3 envisages
that the provisions of the Act are in addition to and are
not in derogation of any other law in forces. it is true, as
rightly contended by Shri, that the words "in derogation
ofthe provisions of any other law for the time being in
force" would be given proper meaning and effect and if the
complaint is not stayed and the parties are not relegated to
the arbitration, the Act purports to operate in derogation
of the provisions of the Arbitration Act. Prima facie, the
contention appears to be plausible but on cunstruction and
conspectus of the provisions of the Act we think that the
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contention is not well-founded. The Parliament is aware of
the provisions of the Arbitration Act and the Contract Act
and the consequential remedy available under Section 9 of
the Code of Civil Procedure, i.e., to avail of right of
civil action in a competent court of civil jurisdiction.
Nonetheless, the Act provides the additional remedy.
It would, therefore, be clear that the Legislature
intended to provide a remedy in addition to the consentient
arbitration which could be enforced under the Arbitration
Act or the civil action in a suit under the provisions of
the Code of Civil Procedure. Thereby, as seen, Section 34 of
the Act does not confer an automatic right nor create an
automatic embargo on the exercise of the power by the
judicial authority under the Act. It is a matter of
discreation. consedered from this perspective, we hold that
though the District Forum, State Commission and National
Commission are judicial authorities, for the purpose of
Section 34 of the Arbitration Act, in view of the object of
the Act and by operation of Section 3 thereof, we are of the
considered view that it would be appropriate that these
forums created under the Act are at liberty to proceed with
the matters in accordance with the provisions of the Act
rather than relegating the parties to an arbitration
proceedings pursuant to a contract entered into between the
parties. The reason is that the Act intends to relieve the
consumers of the cumbersome arbitration proceedings or civil
action unless the forums on their own and on the peculiar
facts and circumetances of perticular case, come to the
conclusion that the appropriate forum for adjudication of
the disputes would be otherwise those given in the Act.
Considered from this perpective, we hold that this
dispute need not be referred to arbitration under clause
[12] of the agreement and the matter could be decided on
merits by the State Commission itself.
The appeal is, therefore, allowed to the above extent
but, in the circumstances, without cost. The order of the
State Commission stands set aside and the matter is remitted
to the State Commission for decision on merits according to
law.