Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NATIONAL THERMAL POWER CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SINGER COMPANY AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/05/1992
BENCH:
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
BENCH:
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1993 AIR 998 1992 SCR (3) 106
1992 SCC (3) 551 JT 1992 (3) 198
1992 SCALE (1)1034
ACT:
Arbitration Act, 1940:
Section 1(2)-Applicability of the Act-International
Commercial arbitration agreement-Indian company entering
into contract with a foreign company-Arbitration clause
contained in the contract-Stipulation that laws in force in
India applicable and Courts of Delhi would have exclusive
jurisdiction-Rules of conciliation and arbitration of
International Chamber of Commerce applicable as agreed upon-
Dispute referred to Arbitral Tribunal constituted as per
these Rules-Award made in London, the seat of arbitration-
Whether the award is governed by the Arbitration Act, 1940.
Foreign Awards (Recognition and Enforcement) Act, 1961:
Sections 2 and 9-International commercial arbitration
agreement-Award made in a foreign country-Laws in force in
India applicable as agreed upon by parties-Such award-
Whether to be regarded as foreign award or domestic award.
Private International Law :
International contracts-Law governing the contract-
Parties at liberty to make choice of the law applicable-
Substantive as also procedural-In absence of choice,
presumption that laws of country where arbitration held
applicable-However presumption rebuttable having regard to
true intention of parties-Proper law of contract-What is-
Doctrine of renvoi-Applicability of.
Words & Phrases :
’Proper Law of Contract’-Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant Corporation and Respondent Company
entered into two agreements on 17.8.1982 at New Delhi for
the supply of equipment,
107
erection and commissioning of certain works in India. It
was agreed that the law applicable to the contract would be
the laws in force in India and that the Courts of Delhi
would have the exclusive jurisdiction. The agreements
contained a specific provision that any dispute arising out
of the contract should be decided as per the relevant
clauses of the General conditions of the contract.
According to the General Terms, the Respondent being a
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foreign contractor it would be governed by the provisions
relating to foreign contractors. It further provided for
settlement of disputes amicable, failing which by
arbitration which would be conducted by three arbitrators
one each to be nominated by the owner and the Contractor and
a third to be named by the President of the International
Chamber of Commerce (I.C.C.).
A dispute arose between the parties and it was referred
to the Arbitral Tribunal constituted in terms of rules of
arbitration of the ICC Courts Rules and London was chosen by
the ICC Court as the place of arbitration. The Tribunal
made an interim award.
The appellant corporation filed an application under
the provisions of the Arbitration Act, 1940 before the Delhi
High Court for setting aside the said interim award.
The High Court held that the award was not governed by
the Arbitration Act, 1940; the arbitration agreement on
which the award was made was not governed by the law of
India; The award fell within the ambit of the Foreign Awards
(Recognition and Enforcement) Act, 1961; London being the
seat of arbitration, English Courts alone had jurisdiction
to set aside the award; and, that it had no jurisdiction to
entertain the application filed under the Arbitration Act,
1940.
Being aggrieved against the High Court’s order, the
appellant corporation preferred the present appeal by
special leave.
On behalf of the appellant, it was contended that the
substantive law which governed the arbitration was Indian
law and so the competent courts were Indian Courts. It was
also contended that even in respect of procedural matters,
the concurrent jurisdiction of the courts of the place of
arbitration did not exclude the jurisdiction of Indian
Courts.
It was contended on behalf of the respondent company
that while the
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main contract was governed by Indian law, as expressly
stated by the parties, arbitration being a collateral
contract and procedural in nature, it was not necessarily
bound by the proper law of the contract, but the law
applicable to it must be determined with reference to other
factors and the place of arbitration was an important
factor. It was further contended that since London was
chosen to be the seat of arbitration, English law was the
proper law of arbitration, and all proceedings connected
with it would be governed by that law and exclusively within
the jurisdiction of the English courts; and that the Indian
courts had no jurisdiction in matters connected with the
arbitration, except to the extent permitted by the Foreign
Awards Act for recognition and enforcement of the award.
On the question as to which was the law that governed
the agreement on which the award had been made :
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD : 1. The High Court was wrong in treating the
award in question as a foreign award. The Foreign Awards
Act has no application to the award by reason of the
specific exclusion contained in Section 9 of that Act. The
award is governed by the laws in force in India, including
the Arbitration Act, 1940. [132-C]
2. The expression ’proper law of a contract’ refers to
the legal system by which the parties to the contract
intended their contract to be governed. If their intention
is expressly stated or if it can be clearly inferred from
the contract itself or its surrounding circumstances, such
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intention determines the proper law of the contract. The
only limitation on this rule is that the intention of the
parties must be expressed bona fide and and it should not be
opposed to public policy. Where, however, the intention of
the parties in not expressly stated and no inference about
it can be drawn, their intention as such has no relevance.
In that event, the courts endeavour to impute an intention
by identifying the legal system with which the transaction
has its closest and most real connection. [118-B, E, F]
Hamlyn & Co. v. Taliskar Distillery, (1891-4) All E.R.
849; Vita Food Products Inc. v. Unus Shipping Co. Ltd.,
(1939) AC 277 (PC), relied on.
Dicey & Morries : The Conflict of Laws, 11th Edn. Vol.
II PP.1161-62, referred to.
109
3. Mere selection of a particular place for submission
to the jurisdiction of the courts or for the conduct of
arbitration will not, in the absence of any other relevant
connection factor with that place, be sufficient to draw an
inference as to the intention of the parties to be governed
by the system of law prevalent in that place. This is
specially so in the case of arbitration. This is
particularly true when the place of arbitration is not
chosen by the parties themselves, but by the arbitrators or
by an outside body, and that too for reasons unconnected
with the contract. Choice of place for submission to
jurisdiction of courts or for arbitration may thus prove to
have little relevance for drawing an inference as to the
governing law of the contract, unless supported in that
respect by the rest of the contract and the surrounding
circumstances. Any such clause must necessarily give way to
stronger indications in regard to the intention of the
parties. [119 C-G]
Jacobs Marcus & Co. v. The Credit Lyonnais, [1884] 12
Q.B.D. 589 (C.A.); The Fehmarn, (1958) 1 All E.R. 333,
relied on.
4. Where the parties have not expressly or impliedly
selected the proper law, the courts impute an intention by
applying the objective test to determine what the parties
would have as just and reasonable persons intended as
regards the applicable law had they applied their minds to
the question. The Judge has to determine the proper law for
the parties in such circumstances by putting himself in the
place of a "reasonable man". For this purpose the place
where the contract was made, the form and object of the
contract, the place of performance, the place of residence
or business of the parties, reference to the courts having
jurisdiction and such other links are examined by the courts
to determine the system of law with which the transaction
has its closest and most real connection. The expression
’proper law’ refers to the substantive principles of the
domestic law of the chosen system and not to its conflict of
laws or rules. [120 A-C; 121 A-B]
The Assunzione, (1954) p.150, (C.A.); Mount Albert
Borough Council v. Australasian Temperance and General
Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd., (1938) A.C. 224 (P.C.),
relied on.
Dicey & Morris : The Conflict of Laws, 11th Edn., Vol.
I pp.534-535; Vol. IIp.1164, referred to.
5. Where, there is no express choice of the law
governing the contract as a whole, or the arbitration
agreement as such, a presumption may arise
110
that the law of the country where the arbitration is agreed
to be held is the proper law of the arbitration agreement.
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But that is only a rebuttable presumption. [121 G-H]
Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd. v. James
Miller & Partners Ltd., 1970 AC 583. referred to.
Dicey & Moris : The Conflict of Laws, 11th Edn. Vol.I
p.539, referred to.
6. The validity, effect and interpretation of the
arbitration agreement are governed by its proper law. Such
law will decide whether the arbitration clause is wide
enough to cover the dispute between the parties. Such law
will also ordinarily decide whether the arbitration clause
binds the parties even when one of them alleges that the
contract is void, or voidable or illegal or that such
contract has been discharged by breach or frustration. [122-
B]
Heyman & Anr. v. Darwins Ltd., 1942 (1) All E.R. 337,
referred to.
7. The parties have the freedom to choose the law
governing an international commercial arbitration agreement.
They may choose the substantive law governing the
arbitration agreement as well as the procedural law
governing the conduct of the arbitration. Where the proper
law of the contract is expressly chosen by the parties, as
in the present case, such law must, in the absence of an
unmistakable intention to the contrary, govern the
arbitration agreement. [122 D-E]
8. The proper law of the contract in the present case
being expressly stipulated to be the laws in force in India
and the exclusive jurisdiction of the court in Delhi in all
matters arising under the contract having been specifically
accepted, and the parties not having chosen expressly or by
implication a law different from the Indian law in regard to
the agreement contained in the arbitration clause, the
proper law governing the arbitration agreement is indeed the
law in force in India, and the competent courts of this
country must necessarily have jurisdiction over all matters
concerning arbitration. Neither the rules of procedure for
the conduct of arbitration contractually chosen by the
parties viz., the I.C.C. Rules nor the mandatory
requirements of the procedure followed in the court of the
country in which the arbitration is held can in any manner
supersede the overriding jurisdiction and control of the
Indian law and the Indian courts. [123 F-H; 124-A]
111
Bank Mellat v. Helliniki Techniki SA, (1983) 3 All E.R.
428, referred to.
International Chamber of Commerce Arbitration, 2nd Ed.
(1990); Commercial Arbitration, 2nd Ed., Allen Redfern and
Martin Hunter, Law & Practice of International Commercial
Arbitration, 1986; Russel on Arbitration 20th Ed. (1982);
Cheshire & North’s Private International Law, 11th Ed.
(1987), referred to.
9. The procedural powers and duties of the arbitrators,
are matters regulated in accordance with the rules chosen by
the parties to the extent that those rules are applicable
and sufficient and are not repugnant to the retirements of
the procedural law and practice of the seat of arbitration.
The concept of party autonomy in international contract is
respected by all systems of law so far as it is not
incompatible with the proper law of the contract or the
mandatory procedural rules of the place where the
arbitration is agreed to be conducted or any overriding
public policy. [124 B-D]
10. An award rendered in the territory of a foreign
State may be regarded as a domestic award in India where it
is sought to be enforced by reason of Indian law being the
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proper law governing the arbitration agreement in terms of
which the award was made. The Foreign Awards Act,
incorporating the New York Convention, leaves no room for
doubt on the point. [125-E]
ICC Rules of Arbitration, 1988; Craig, Park and
Paulsson : International Chamber of Commerce Arbitration,
2nd Ed. (1990), referred to.
11. The difference between an ad hoc arbitration and an
institutional arbitration, is not a difference between one
system of law and another; for whichever is the proper law
which governs either proceeding, it is merely a difference
in the method of appointment and conduct of arbitration.
Either method is applicable to an international arbitration,
but neither is determinative of the character of the
resultant award, namely, whether or not it is a Foreign
Award as defined under the Foreign Awards Act, 1961.
[125-H, 126 A-B]
12. An arbitration agreement may be regarded as a
collateral or ancillary contract in the sense that it
survives to determine the claims of the parties and the mode
of settlement of their disputes even after the breach or
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repudiation of the main contract. But it is not an
independent contract, and it has no meaningful existence
except in relation to the rights and liabilities of the
parties under the main contract. It is a procedural
machinery which is activated when disputes arise between
parties regarding their rights and liabilities. The law
governing such right and liabilities is the proper law of
the contract, and unless otherwise provided, such law
governs the whole contract including the arbitration
agreement, and particularly so when the latter is contained
not in a separate agreement, but, as in the present case, in
one of the clauses of the main contract. [129 A-C]
Heyman & Anr. v. Darwins Ltd. 1942 (1) All E.R. 337,
Brember Vulkan Schiffbau Und Maschinenfabrik v. South India
Shipping Corpn., 1981 (1) all E.R. 289, relied on.
Mustil & Boyd: Commercial Arbitration, 2nd Ed. (1989),
referred to.
13. In a proceeding such as the present which is
intended to be controlled by a set of contractual rules
which are self-sufficient and designed to cover every step
of the proceeding, the need to have recourse to the
municipal system of law and the courts of the place of
arbitration is reduced to the minimum and the courts of that
place are unlikely to interfere with the arbitral
proceedings except in cases which shock the judicial
conscience. [130 C-E]
Bank Mellat v. Helliniki Techniki SA, (1983) 3 All E.R.
428, referred to.
14. If the parties had agreed that the proper law of
the contract should be the law in force in India, but had
also provided for arbitration in a foreign country, the laws
of India would undoubtedly govern the validity,
interpretation and effect of all clauses including the
arbitration clause in the contract as well as the scope of
the arbitrators’ jurisdiction. It is Indian law which
governs the contract, including the arbitration clause,
although in certain respects regarding the conduct of the
arbitration proceedings the foreign procedural law and the
competent courts of that country may have a certain measure
of control. [130 F-G]
International Tank and Pipe SAK v. Kuwait Aviation
Fueling Co. KSC, (1975) 1 All E.R. 242, relied on.
15. The choice of the place of arbitration was, as far
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as the parties are concerned, merely accidental in so for as
they had not expressed any
113
intention in regard to it and the choice was made by the ICC
Court for reasons totally unconnected with either party to
the contract. On the other hand, apart from the expressly
stated intention of the parties, the contract itself,
including the arbitration agreement contained in one of its
clauses, is redolent of India and matters Indian. The
disputes between the parties under the contract have no
connection with anything English, and they have the closest
connection with Indian laws, rules and regulations. Any
attempt to exclude the jurisdiction of the competent courts
and the laws in force in India is totally inconsistent with
the agreement between the parties. [131 A, B, C]
16. All substantive rights arising under the agreement
including that which is contained in the arbitration clause
are governed by the laws of India. In respect of the actual
conduct of arbitration, the procedural law of England may be
applicable to the extent that the ICC Rules are insufficient
or repugnant to public policy or other mandatory provisions
of the laws in force in England. Nevertheless, the
jurisdiction exercisable by the English courts and the
applicability of the laws of that country in procedural
matters must be viewed as concurrent and consistent with the
jurisdiction of the competent Indian courts and the
operation of Indian laws in all matters concerning
arbitration in so for as the main contract as well as that
which is contained in the arbitration clause are governed
by the laws of India. [131 - H; 132 - A,B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1978 of
1992.
From the Judgment and Order dated 12.2.1991 of the
Delhi High Court in FAO (OS) No. 102 of 1990.
Shanti Bhushan, Dr. A.M. Singhvi, C.Mukhopadhaya, J.C.
Seth, O.P. Mittal, Sudarsh Menon and G.G. Malhotra for the
Appellant.
S.K. Dholakia, O.P. Sharma, D.C. Singhania, Ms. Nanita
Sharma, Hari Menon, P. Piwany and R.K. Gupta for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
THOMMEN, J. Leave granted.
The National Thermal Power Corporation (the ’NTPC’)
appeals
114
from the judgment of the Delhi High Court in FAO (OS) No.
102/90 dismissing the NTPC’s application filed under
sections 14,30 and 33 of the Arbitration Act, 1940 (No. X
of 1940) to set aside an interim award made at London by a
tribunal constituted by the International Court of
Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce (the
"ICC Court") in terms of the contract made at New Delhi
between the NTPC and the respondent the Singer Company (the
’Singer’) for the supply of equipment, erection and
commissioning of certain works in India. The High Court
held that the award was not governed by the Arbitration Act,
1940; the arbitration agreement on which the award was made
was not governed by the law of India; the award fell within
the ambit of the Foreign Awards (Recognition and
Enforcement) Act, 1961 (Act 45 of 1961) (the ’Foreign Awards
Act’); London being the seat of arbitration, English Courts
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alone had jurisdiction to set aside the award; and, the
Delhi High Court had no jurisdiction to entertain the
application filed under the Arbitration Act, 1940.
The NTPC and the Singer entered into two formal
agreements dated 17.8.1982 at New Delhi. The General Terms
and Conditions of Contract dated 14.2.81 (the ’General
Terms’) are expressly incorporated in the agreements and
they state :
"the laws applicable to this Contract shall be the
laws in force in India. The Court of Delhi shall
have exclusive jurisdiction in all matters arising
under this Contract." (7.2)
The General Terms deal with the special responsibilities of
foreign contractors and Indian contractors. The Singer
being a foreign contractor, is governed by the provisions
relating to the foreign contractors. The General Terms
further provide for settlement of disputes by amicable
settlement, failing which by arbitration.
Sub-clause 6 of clause 27 of the General Terms deals
with arbitration in relation to an Indian contractor and
sub-clause 7 of the said clause deals with abitration in
respect of foreign contractor. The latter provision says:
"27.7. In the event of foreign Contractor, the
arbitration shall be conducted by three
arbitrators, one each to be nominated by the Owner
and the Contractor and the third to be named by the
President of the International Chamber of Commerce,
Paris. Save as above all Rules of Cancellation and
Arbitration
115
of the International Chamber of Commerce shall
apply to such arbitrations. The arbitration shall
be conducted at such places as the arbitrators may
determine."
In respect of an Indian Contractor, sub-clause 6.2
clause 27 says that the arbitration shall be conducted at
of New Delhi in accordance with the provisions of the
Arbitration Act, 1940. It reads :
"27.6.2. The arbitration shall be conducted in
accordance with the provisions of the Indian
Arbitration Act, 1940 or any statutory modification
thereof. The venue of arbitration shall be New
Delhi, India."
The General Terms further provide :
"the Contract shall in all respects be construed
and governed according to Indian laws." (32.3).
The formal agreements which the parties executed on
17.8.82 contain a specific provision for settlement of
disputes. Article 4.1 provides :
"4.1. Settlement of Disputes : It is specifically
agreed by and between the parties that all the
differences or disputes arising out of the contract
or touching the subject matter of the contract,
shall be decided by process of settlement and
arbitration as specified in clause 26.0 and 27.0
excluding 27.61.1 and 27.6.2., of the General
Conditions of the Contract."
Being a foreign contractor, the provisions of sub-
clause 6 of clause 27 of the General Terms are not
applicable to the Singer, but the other provisions of clause
27 govern the present contract. Accordingly, the dispute
which arose between the parties was referred to an Arbitral
Tribunal constituted in terms of the rules of arbitration of
the ICC Court (the ’ICC Rules’). In accordance with Article
12 of those Rules, the ICC Court chose London to be the
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place of arbitration.
It is significant that the parties have expressly
stated that the law which governs their contract, i.e., the
proper law of the contract is the law in force in India and
the courts of Delhi have exclusive jurisdiction in all
matters arising under the contract. One of the clauses of
the Contract deals with arbitration (clause 27 of the
General Terms).
116
The point for consideration is whether the High Court
was right in rejecting the appellant’s application filed
under the provisions of the Arbitration Act, 1940 and in
holding that the award which was made in London on an
arbitration agreement was not governed by the law of India
and that it was a foreign award within the meaning of the
Foreign Awards Act and beyond the jurisdiction of the Indian
Courts except for the purpose of recognition and enforcement
under the latter Act.
The award was made in London as an interim award in an
arbitration between the NTPC and a foreign contractor on a
contract governed by the law of India and made in India for
its performance solely in India. The fundamental question
is whether the arbitration agreement contained in the
contract is governed by the law of India so as to save it
from the ambit of the Foreign Awards Act and attract the
provisions of the Arbitration Act, 1940. Which is the law
which governs the agreement on which the award has been made
?
Mr. Shanti Bhushan, appearing for the NTPC, submits
that admittedly the proper law of the contract is the law in
force in India. The arbitration agreement is contained in a
clause of that contract. In the absence of any stipulation
to the contrary, the contract has to be seen as a whole and
the parties must be deemed to have intended that the
substantive law applicable to the arbitration agreement is
exclusively the law which governs the main contract,
although, in respect of procedural matters, the competent
courts in England will also be, concurrently with the Indian
courts, entitled to exercise jurisdiction over the conduct
of arbitration. But occasions for interference by the
courts in England would indeed be rare and probably
unnecessary in view of the elaborate provisions contained in
the ICC Rules by which the parties have agreed to abide.
The substantive law governing arbitration, which concerns
questions like capacity, validity, effect and interpretation
of the contract etc., is Indian law and the competent courts
in such matters are the Indian courts. Even in respect of
procedural matters, the concurrent jurisdiction of the
courts of the place of arbitration does not exclude the
jurisdiction of the Indian courts.
Mr. S. K. Dholakia appearing for the Singer, on the
other hand, submits that the arbitration agreement is a
separate and distinct contract, and collateral to the main
contract. Although the main contract is governed by the laws
in force in India, as stated in the General Terms, there is
no
117
express statement as regards the law governing the
arbitration agreement. In the circumstances, the law
governing the arbitration agreement is not the same law
which governs the contract, but it is the law which is in
force in the country in which the arbitration is being
conducted. Counsel accordingly submits that the Delhi High
Court is right in saying that the saving clause in section 9
of the Foreign Awards Act has no application to the award in
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question made in London by an Arbitral Tribunal constituted
in accordance with the ICC Rules. Counsel submits that the
High Court has rightly held that the impugned award falls
under the Foreign Awards Act and it is not liable to be
challenged on the alleged grounds falling under sections 14,
30 and 33 of the Arbitration Act, 1940.
Counsel says that the award, having been made in London
in terms of the ICC Rules to which the parties have
submitted, is governed by the provisions of the New York
Convention, as incorporated in the Foreign Awards Act, and
its enforeability in India can be resisted only in the
circumstances postulated under that Act, and the Delhi High
Court has rightly rejected the petition invoking the
jurisdiction of that court in terms of the Arbitration Act,
1940.
Mr. Dholaka does not dispute that the substantive right
of the parties under the Contract are governed by the law of
India. His contention, however, is that while the main
contract is governed by Indian law, as expressly stated by
the parties, arbitration being a collateral contract and
procedural in nature, it is not necessarily bound by the
proper law of the contract, but the law applicable to it
must be determined with reference to other factors. The
place of arbitration is an important factor. London having
been chosen in accordance with the ICC Rules to be the seat
of arbitration, English law is the proper law of
arbitration, and all proceedings connected with it are
governed by that law and exclusively within the jurisdiction
of the English courts. He denies that the Indian courts
have any jurisdiction in matter connected with the
arbitration, except to the extent permitted by the Foreign
Awards Act for recognition and enforcement of the award.
Dicey & Morris in The conflict of Laws, 11th edn.,
Vol. II (’Dicey’) refer to the ’proper law of a contract’
thus :
"Rule 180 - The term ’proper law of a contract’
means the system of law by which the parties
intended the contract to be
118
governed or, where their intention is neither
expressed nor to be inferred from the
circumstances, the system of law with which the
transaction has its closest and most real
connection." (pages 1161-62)
The expression ’proper law of a contract’ refers to the
legal system by which the parties to the contract intended
their contract to be governed. If their intention is
expressly stated or if it can be clearly inferred from the
contract itself or its surrounding circumstances, such
intention determines the proper law of the contract. In the
words of Lord Herchell, L.C. :
"...In this case, as in all such cases, the whole
of the contract must be looked at, and the contract
must be regulated by the intention of the parties
as appearing from the contract. It is perfectly
competent to those who, under such circumstances as
I have indicated, are entering into a contract, to
indicate by the terms which they employ which
system of law they intend to be applied to the
construction of the contract, and to the
determination of the rights arising out of the
contract".
Hamlyn & Co. v. Talisker Distillery, (1891-4) All
E.R. 849 at 852.
Where, however, the intention of the parties is not
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expressly stated and no inference about it can be drawn,
their intention as such has no relevance. In that even, the
courts endeavour to impute an intention by identifying the
legal system with which the transaction has its closest and
most real connection.
The expressed intention of the parties is generally
decisive in determining the proper law of the contract.
The only limitation on this rule is that the intention of
the parties must be expressed bona fide and it should not be
opposed to public policy. In the words of Lord Wright :-
".....where there is an express statement by the
parties of their intention to select the law of the
contract, it is difficult to see
____________________________________________________________
Rule 180 is further elucidated by Dicey in the sub-
rules. Sub-rule (1) reads :- Sub-rule (1) - When the
intention of the parties to a contract,as to the law
governing the contract, is expressed in words, this
expressed intention, in general, determines the proper
law of the contract."
119
what qualifications are possible, provided the
intention expressed is bona fide and legal, and
provided there is no reason for avoiding the choice
on the ground of public policy........"
Vita Food Products Inc. v. Unus Shipping Co. Ltd.,
(1939) AC 277, 290 (PC).
In the absence of an express statement about the
governing law, the inferred intention of the parties
determines that law. * The true intention of the parties in
the absence of an express selection, ha to be discovered by
applying " sound ideas of business, convenience and sense to
the language of the contract itself". Jacobs Marcus & Co.,
v. The Credit Lyonnais, (1884) 12 Q.B.D. 589, 601 (CA). In
such a case, selection of courts of a particular country as
having jurisdiction in matters arising under the contract is
usually, but not invariably, be an indication of the
intention of the parties that the system of law followed by
those courts is the proper law by which they intend their
contract to be governed. However, the mere selection of a
particular place for submission to the jurisdiction of the
courts or for the conduct of arbitration will not, in the
absence of any other relevant connecting factor with that
place, be sufficient to draw an inference as to the
intention of the parties to be governed by the system of law
prevalent in that place. This is specially so in the case
of arbitration, for the selection of the place of
arbitration may have little significance where it is chosen,
as is often the case, without regard to any relevant or
significant link with the place. This is particularly true
when the place of arbitration is not chosen by the parties
themselves, but by the arbitrators or by an outside body,
and that too for reasons unconnected with the contract.
Choice of place for submission to jurisdiction of courts or
for arbitration may thus prove to have little relevance for
drawing an inference as to the governing law of the
contract, unless supported in that respect by the rest of
the contract and the surrounding circumstances. Any such
clause must necessarily give way to stronger indications in
regard to the intention of the parties. See The Fehmarn,
(1958) 1 All E.R. 333.
------------------------------------------------------------
Dicey’s sub-rule (2) of rule 180 reads :-
"Sub-rule (2) - When the intention of the parties to a
contract with regard to the law governing the contract
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is not expressed in words, their intention is to be
inferred from the terms and nature of the contract, and
from the general circumstances of the case, and such
inferred intention determines the proper law of the
contract."
120
Where the parties have not expressly or impliedly
selected the proper law, the courts impute an intention by
applying the objective test to determine what the parties
would have as just and reasonable persons intended as
regards the applicable law had they applied their minds to
the question. * The judge has to determine the proper law
for the parties in such circumstances by putting himself in
the place of a "reasonable man". He has to determine the
intention of the parties by asking himself "how a just and
reasonable person would have regarded the problem", The
Assunzion (1954) P. 150,176 (CA); Mount Albert Borough
Council v. Australasian Temperance and General Mutual Life
Assurance Society Ltd. (1938) A.C. 224, 240 (P.C.)
For this purpose the place where the contract was made,
the form and object of the contract, the place of
performance, the place of residence or business of the
parties, reference to the court having jurisdiction and such
other links are examined by the courts to determine the
system of law with which the transaction has its closest and
most real connection.
The position in these respects is summarised by the
Privy Council in Mount Albert Borough Council v.
Australasian Temperance and General Mutual Life Assurance
Society, Limited, (1938) A.C. 224 at 240:-
"The proper law of the contract means that law
which the English or other Court is to apply in
determining the obligations under the contract
.....It may be that the parties have in terms in
their agreement expressed what law they intend to
govern, and in that case prima facie their
intention will be effectuated by the Court. But in
most cases they do not do so. The parties may not
have thought of the matter at all. Then the Court
has to impute an intention, or to determine for the
parties what is the proper law which, as just and
reasonable persons, they ought or would have
intended if they had thought about the question
when they made the contract.....".
------------------------------------------------------------
Dicey’s sub-rule (3) of rule 180 reads :-
"Sub-rule (3) - When the intention of the parties to a
contract with regard to the law governing it is not
expressed and cannot be inferred from the circumstances,
the contract is governed by the system of law with which
the transaction had its closest and most real
connection."
121
Proper law is thus the law which the parties have
expressly or impliedly chosen, or which is imputed to them
by reason of its closest and most intimate connection with
the contract. It must, however, be clarified that the
expression ’proper law’ refers to the substantive principles
of the domestic law of the chosen system and not to its
conflict of laws rules. The law of contract is not affected
by the doctrine of renvoi. See Dicey, Vol. II, p.1164.
In a case such as the present, there is no need to draw
any inference about the intention of the parties or to
impute any intention to them, for they have clearly and
categorically stipulated that their contract, made in India
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and the courts in Delhi are to ’have exclusive jurisdiction
in all matters arising under this contract’ (cl. 7) The
cardinal test suggested by Dicey in rule 180 is thus fully
satisfied.
As regards the governing law of arbitration, Dicey
says :
"Rule 58-(1) The validity, effect and
interpretation of an arbitration agreement are
governed by its proper law.
(2) The law governing arbitration proceedings is
the law chosen by the parties, or, in the absence
of agreement, the law of the country in which the
arbitration is held." (Vol I, Pages 534-535).
The principle in rule 58, ass formulated by Dicey, has
two aspects (a) the law governing the arbitration agreement,
namely, its proper law; and (b) the law governing the
conduct of the arbitration, namely, its procedural law.
The proper law of the arbitration agreement is normally
the same as the proper law of the contract. It is only in
exceptional cases that it is not so even where the proper
law of the contract is expressly chosen by the parties.
Where, however, there is no express choice of the law
govening the contract as a whole, or the arbitration
agreement as such, a presumption may arise that the law of
the country where the arbitration is agreed to be held is
the proper law of the arbitration agreement. But that is
only a rebuttable presumption. See Dicey, Vol I, p. 539;
see the observation in Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester)
Ltd. v. James Miller & Partners Ltd.,
122
1970 AC 583, 607, 612 and 616)
The validity, effect and interpretation of the
arbitration agreement are governed by its proper law. Such
law will decide whether the arbitration clause is wide
enough to cover the dispute between the parties. Such law
will also ordinarily decide whether the arbitration clause
binds the parties even when one of them alleges that the
contract is void, or voidable or illegal or that such
contract has been discharged by breach or frustration. See
Heyman & Anr. v. Darwins, Ltd 1942 (1) All E.R. 337. The
proper law of arbitration will also decide whether the
arbitration clause would equally apply to a different
contract between the same parties or between one of those
parties and a third party.
The parties have the freedom to choose the law
governing an international commercial arbitration agreement.
They may choose the substantive law governing the
arbitration agreement as well as the procedural law
governing the conduct of the arbitration. such choice is
exercised either expressly or by implication. Where there
is no express choice of the law governing the contact as a
whole, or the arbitration agreement in particular, there is,
in the absence of any contrary indication a presumption that
the parties have intended that the proper law of the
contract as well as the law governing the arbitration
agreement are the same as the law of the country in which
the arbitration is agreed to be held. On the other hand,
where the proper law of the contract is expressly chosen by
the parties, as in the present case, such law must, in the
absence of an unmistakable intention to the contrary, govern
the arbitration agreement which, though collateral or
ancillary to the main contract, is nevertheless a part of
such contract.
Whereas, as stated above, the proper law of arbitration
(i.e., the substantive law governing arbitration) determines
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the validity, effect and interpretation of the arbitration
agreement, the arbitration proceedings are conducted, in the
absence of any agreement to the contrary, in accordance with
the law of the country in which the arbitration is held. On
the other hand, if the parties have specifically chosen the
law governing the conduct and procedure of arbitration, the
arbitration proceedings will be conducted in accordance with
that law so long as it is not contrary to the public policy
or the mandatory requirements of the law of the country in
which the arbitration is held. If no such choice has been
made by the parties,
123
expressly or by necessary implication, the procedural aspect
of the conduct of arbitration (as distinguished from the
substantive agreement to arbitrate) will be determined by
the law of the place or seat of arbitration. Where,
however, the parties have, as in the instant case,
stipulated that the arbitration between them will be
conducted in accordance with the ICC Rules, those rules,
being in many respect self-contained or self-regulating and
constituting a contractual code of procedure, will govern
the conduct of the arbitration, except insofar as they
conflict with the mandatory requirements of the proper law
of arbitration, or of the procedural law of the seat of
arbitration. See the observation of Kerr, LJ. in Bank
Mellat v. Helliniki Techniki Sa., (1983) 3 All E.R. 428.
See also Craig, Park and Paulsson, International Chamber of
Commerce Arbitration, 2nd ed. (1990). To such an extent the
appropriate courts of the seat of arbitration, which in the
present case are the competent English courts, will have
jurisdiction in respect of procedural matters concerning the
conduct of arbitration. But the overriding principle is
that the courts of the country whose substantive laws govern
the arbitration agreement are the competent courts in
respect of all matters arising under the arbitration
agreement, and the jurisdiction exercised by the courts of
the seat of arbitration is merely concurrent and not
exclusive and strictly limited to matters of procedure. All
other matters in respect of the arbitration agreement fall
within the exclusive competence of the courts of the country
whose laws govern the arbitration agreement. See Mustil &
Boyd, Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed.; Allen Redfern and
Martin Hunter, Law & Practice of International Commercial
Arbitration, 1986; Russel on Arbitration, Twentieth ed.,
1982; Cheshire & North’s Private International Law, eleventh
ed. (1987).
The proper law of the contract in the present case
being expressly stipulated to be the laws in force in India
and the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts in Delhi in all
matters arising under the contract having been specifically
accepted, and the parties not having chosen expressly or by
implication a law different from the Indian law in regard to
the agreement contained in the arbitration clause, the
proper law governing the arbitration agreement is indeed the
law in force in India, and the competent courts of this
country must necessarily have jurisdiction over all matters
concerning arbitration. Neither the rules of procedure for
the conduct of arbitration contractulally chosen by the
parties (the ICC Rules) nor the mandatory requirements of
the procedure followed in the courts of the country in which
the arbitration is held can in any manner supersede the
overriding
124
jurisdiction and control of the Indian law and the Indian
courts.
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This means, questions such as the jurisdiction of the
arbitrator to decide a particular issue or the continuance
of an arbitration or the frustration of the arbitration
agreement, its validity, effect and interpretation are
determined exclusively by the proper law of the arbitration
agreement, which, in the present case, is Indian Law. The
procedural powers and duties of the arbitrators, as for
example, whether they must hear oral evidence, whether the
evidence of one party should be recorded necessarily in the
presence of the other party, whether there is a right of
cross-examination of witnesses, the special requirements of
notice, the remedies available to a party in respect of
security for costs or for discovery etc. are matters
regulated in accordance with the rules chosen by the parties
to the extent that those rules are applicable and
sufficient and are not repugnant to the requirements of the
procedural law and practice of the seat of arbitration. The
concept of party autonomy in international contracts is
respected by all systems of law so far as it is not
incompatible with the proper law of the contract or the
mandatory procedural rules of the place where the
arbitration is agreed to be conducted or any overriding
public policy.
The arbitration agreement contained in the arbitration
clause in a contract is often referred to as a collateral or
ancillary contract in relation to the main contract of which
it forms a part. The repudiation or breach of the main
contract may not put an end to the arbitration clause which
might still survive for measuring the claims arising out of
the breach and for determining the mode of their settlement.
See Heyman & Anr. v. Darwins, Ltd., (1942) 1 All E.R. 337;
Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau Und Maschinenfabrik v. South India
Shipping Corpn., (1981) 1 All E.R. 289. See also Mustil &
Boyd, Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed. (1989).
The arbitration agreement may provide that all disputes
which may arise between the parties will be referred to
arbitration or it may provide that a particular dispute
between the parties will be submitted to the jurisdiction of
a particular arbitrator. The arbitration clause may
identify the arbitrator or arbitrators and the place of
arbitration or it may leave such matters to be determined by
recourse to the machinery of an institutional arbitration,
such as the ICC, or the London Court of International
Arbitration or the American Arbitration Association or
similar institutions.
125
Clause 27 of the General Terms of the Contract shows
that it was the intention of the parties that disputes with
a foreign contractor should be referred to arbitration in
accordance with the ICC Rules; while disputes with an Indian
contractor should be settled by arbitration in New Delhi on
an ad hoc basis.
The ICC Rules are made specifically applicable in
respect of disputes with a foreign contractor because of the
special nature of the contract. One of the parties to such
a contract being a foreigner, questions of private
international law (or conflict of laws) may arise
particularly as regards arbitral proceedings conducted in a
foreign territory. In respect of an Indian contractor, the
transaction as well as the dispute settlement process are
completely localised in India and in the Indian legal system
and there is no scope for interference by a foreign system
of law with the arbitral proceedings.
An international commercial arbitration necessarily
involves a foreign element giving rise to questions as to
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the choice of law and the jurisdiction of courts. Unlike in
the case of persons belonging to the same legal system,
contractual relationships between persons belonging to
different legal systems may give rise to various private
international law questions such as the identity of the
applicable law and the competent forum. An award rendered
in the territory of a foreign State may be regarded as a
domestic award in India where it is sought to be enforced by
reason of Indian law being the proper law governing the
arbitration agreement in terms of which the award was made.
The Foreign Awards Act, incorporating the New York
Convention, leaves no room for doubt on the point.
The ICC Rules provide for settlement by arbitration of
business dispute of an international character. They
furnish an institutionalised procedure of arbitration.
These Rules being a self-contained or a self-regulating
code, they operate more or less independently of judicial
interference in the conduct of arbitration, except in so far
as they conflict with the mandatory requirements of the
governing system of the proper law or the procedural law of
the place of arbitration. Party-autonomy in international
business is thus the guiding principle of the self-
regulating mechanism envisaged by the Rules, and
interference by any Court with the actual conduct of
arbitration is to a large extent avoided.
The difference between an ad hoc arbitration and an
institutional
126
arbitration is not a difference between one system of law
and another; for whichever is the proper law which governs
either proceeding, it is merely a difference in the method
of appointment and conduct of arbitration. Either method is
applicable to an international arbitration, but neither is
determinative of the character of the resultant award,
namely, whether or not it is a foreign award as defined
under the Foreign Awards Act, 1961.
Where the ICC Rules apply, there is generally little
need to invoke the procedural machinery of any legal system
in the actual conduct of arbitration. These Rules provide
for the submission of request for arbitration, the
appointment of arbitrators, challenge against the
appointment, pleadings, procedure, selection of the place of
arbitration, terms of reference, time limit for award, cost,
finality and enforceability, and similar matters of
procedure (Article 11 of the ICC Rules). The parties are
free under the ICC Rules to determine the law which the
arbitrator shall apply to the merits of the dispute. In the
absence of any stipulation by the parties as to the
applicable law, the arbitrators may apply the law designated
as the proper law by the Rules of Conflict which they deem
to be appropriate (Article 13 of the ICC Rules). These and
other provisions contained in the ICC Rules make them a
self-contained and self-regulating system, but subject to
the overriding powers of the appropriate national courts.*
A ’foreign award’, as defined under the Foreign Awards
Act, 1961 means an award made or on after 11.10.1960 on
differences arising between persons out of legal
relationships, whether contractual or not, which are
considered to be commercial under the law in force in India.
To qualify as a foreign award under the Act, the award
should have been made in pursuance of an agreement in
writing for arbitration to be governed by the New York
convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign
Arbitral Awards, 1958, and not to be governed by the law of
India. Furthermore such an award should have been made
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outside India as having made reciprocal provisions for
enforcement of the Convention. These are the conditions
which must be satisfied to qualify an award as a ’foreign
award’ (S.2 read with S.9).
------------------------------------------------------------
See ICC Rules of Arbitration, 1988; See also Craig, Park
and Paulsson, International Chamber of Commerce
Arbitration, 2nd ed. (1990).
127
An award is ’foreign’ not merely because it is made in
the territory of a foreign State, but because it is made in
such a territory on an arbitration agreement not governed by
the law of India. An award made on an arbitration agreement
governed by the law of India, though rendered outside India,
is attracted by the saving clause in S.9 of the Foreign
Awards Act and is, therefore, not treated in India as a
’foreign award’.
A ’foreign award’ is (subject to section 7) recognised
and enforceable in India ’as if it were an award made on a
matter referred to arbitration in India’ (S.4). Such an
award will be ordered to be filed by a competent court in
India which will pronounce judgment according to the award
(S.6).
Section 7 of Foreign Awards Act, in consonance with
Art. V of the New York Convention which is scheduled to the
Act, specifies the conditions under which recognition and
enforcement of a foreign award will be refused at the
request of a party against whom it is invoked.
A foreign award will not be enforced in India if it is
proved by the party against whom it is sought to be enforced
that the parties to the agreement were, under the law
applicable to them, under some incapacity, or, the agreement
was not valid under the law to which the parties have
subjected it, or, in the absence of any indication thereon,
under the law of the place of arbitration; or there was no
due compliance with the rules of fair hearing; or the award
exceeded the scope of the submission to arbitration; or the
composition of the arbitral authority or its procedure was
not in accordance with the agreement of the parties, or,
failing such agreement, was not in accordance with the law
of the place of arbitration; or ’the award has not yet
become binding on the parties, or has been set aside or
suspended by a competent authority of the country in which,
of under the law of which, that award was made’. The award
will not be enforced by a court in India if it is satisfied
that the subject matter of the award is not capable of
settlement by arbitration under Indian law or the
enforcement of the award is contrary to the public policy.
The Foreign Awards Act contains a specific provision to
exclude its operation to what may be regarded as ’domestic
award’ in the sense of the award having been made on an
arbitration agreement governed by the law of India, although
the dispute was with a foreigner and the arbitration was
held and the award was made in a foreign State.
128
Section 9 of this Act says :-
"Nothing in this Act shall
(a) .................................
(b) apply to any award made on an arbitration
agreement governed by the law of India."
Such an award necessarily falls under the Arbitration
Act, 1940, and is amenable to the jurisdiction of the Indian
Courts and controlled by the Indian system of law just as in
the case of any other domestic award, except that the
proceedings held abroad and leading to the award were in
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certain respects amenable to be controlled by the public
policy and the mandatory requirements of the law of the
place of arbitration and the competent courts of that place.
It is important to recall that in the instant case the
parties have expressly stated that the laws applicable to
the contract would be the laws in force in India and that
the courts of Delhi would have exclusive jurisdiction ’in
all matters arising under this contract’. They have further
stated that the ’Contract shall in all respects be construed
and governed according to Indian laws’. These words are
wide enough to engulf every question arising under the
contract including the disputes between the parties and the
mode of settlement. It was in Delhi that the agreement was
executed. The form of the agreement is closely related to
the system of law in India. Various Indian enactments are
specifically mentioned in the agreement as applicable to it
in many respects. The contract is to be performed in India
with the aid of Indian workmen whose conditions of service
are regulated by Indian laws. One of the parties to the
contract is a public sector undertaking. The contract has
in every respect the closest and most real connection with
the Indian system of law and it is by that law that the
parties have expressly evinced their intention to be bound
in all respects. The arbitration agreement is contained in
one of the clauses of the contract, and not in a separate
agreement. In the absence of any indication to the
contrary, the governing law of the contract (i.e., in the
words of Dicey, the proper law of the contract) being Indian
law, it is that system of law which must necessarily govern
matters concerning arbitration, although in certain respects
the law of the place of arbitration may have its relevance
in regards to procedural matters.
129
It is true that an arbitration agreement may be
regarded as a collateral or ancillary contract in the sense
that it survives to determine the claims of the parties and
the mode of settlement of their disputes even after the
breach or repudiation of the main contract. But it is not
an independent contract, and it has no meaningful existence
except in relation to the rights and liabilities of the
parties under the main contract. It is a procedural
machinery which is activated when disputes arise between
parties regarding their rights and liabilities. The law
governing such rights and liabilities is the proper law of
the contract, and unless otherwise provided, such law
governs the whole contract including the arbitration
agreement, and particularly so when the latter is contained
not in a separate agreement, but, as in the present case, in
one of the clauses of the main contract.
Significantly, London was chosen as the place of
arbitration by reason of Article 12 of the ICC Rules which
reads :
"The place of arbitration shall be fixed by the
International Court of Arbitration, unless agreed
upon by the parties."
The parties had never expressed their intention to
choose London as the arbitral forum, but, in the absence of
any agreement on the question, London was chosen by the ICC
Court as the place of arbitration. London has no
significant connection with the contract or the parties
except that it is a neutral place and the Chairman of the
Arbitral Tribunal is a resident there, the other two members
being nationals of the United State and India respectively.
The decisions relied on by counsel for the Singer do
not support his contention that the mere fact of London
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being the place of arbitration excluded the operation of the
Arbitration Act, 1940 and the jurisdiction of the courts in
India. In James Miller & Partners Ltd. v. Whitworth Street
Estates (Manchester) Ltd. (1970) AC 583, the parties had not
expressly stated which law was to govern their contract. On
an analysis of the various factors, the House of Lords held
that in the absence of any choice of the law governing
arbitration proceedings, those proceedings were to be
considered to be governed by the law of the place in which
the arbitration was held, namely, Scotland because it was
that system of law which was most closely connected with the
proceedings. Various links with Scotland, which was the
place of performance of the contract, unmistakably showed
that the arbitral proceedings were to be governed by the law
of Scotland,
130
although the majority of the learned Law Lords (Lords Reid
Wilberforce dissenting on the point) held that, taking into
account certain other factors, the contract was governed by
English law. That case is no authority for the proposition
that, even where the proper law of the contract is expressly
stated by the parties, and in the absence of any contrary
indication, a different law governed arbitration. The
observations contained in that judgment do not support the
contention urged on behalf of the Singer that merely because
London was designated to be the place of arbitration, the
law which governed arbitration was different from the law
expressly chosen by the parties as the proper law of the
contract.
It is true that the procedural law of the place of
arbitration and the courts of that place cannot be
altogether excluded, particularly in respect of matters
affecting public policy and other mandatory requirements of
the legal system of that place. But in a proceeding such as
the present which is intended to be controlled by a set of
contractual rules which are self-sufficient and designed to
cover every step of the proceeding, the need to have
recourse to the municipal system of law and the courts of
the place of arbitration is reduced to the minimum and the
courts of that place are unlikely to interfere with the
arbitral proceedings except in cases which shock the
judicial conscience. See the observations of Kerr LJ in
Bank Mellat v. Helliniki Techniki SA, (1983) 3 All E.R. 428.
Courts would give effect to the choice of a procedural
law other than the proper law of the contract only where the
parties had agreed that matters of procedure should be
governed by a different system of law. If the parties had
agreed that the proper law of the contract should be the law
in force in India, but had also provided for arbitration in
a foreign country, the laws of India would undoubtedly
govern the validity, interpretation and effect of all
clauses including the arbitration clause in the contract as
well as the scope of the arbitrators’ jurisdiction. It is
Indian law which governs the contract, including the
arbitration clause, although in certain respect regarding
the conduct of the arbitration proceedings the foreign
procedural law and the competent courts of that country may
have a certain measure of control. See the principle stated
by Lord Denning, M.R. in International Tank and Pipe SAK v.
Kuwait Aviation Fueling Co. KSC, (1975) 1 All E.R. 242.
The arbitration clause must be considered together with
the rest of
131
the contract and the relevant surrounding circumstances. In
the present case, as seen above, the choice of the place of
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arbitration was, as far as the parties are concerned, merely
accidental in so far as they had not expressed any
intention in regard to it and the choice was made by the ICC
Court for reasons totally unconnected with either party to
the contract. On the other hand, apart from the expressly
stated intention of the parties, the contract itself,
including the arbitration agreement contained in one of its
clauses, is redolent of India and matters Indian. The
disputes between the parties under the contract have no
connection with anything English, and they have the closest
connection with Indian laws, rules and regulations. In the
circumstances, the mere fact that the venue chosen by the
ICC Court for the conduct of arbitration is London does not
support the case of the Singer on the point. Any attempt to
exclude the jurisdiction of the competent courts and the
laws in force in India is totally inconsistent with the
agreement between the parties.
In sum, it may be stated that the law expressly chosen
by the parties in respect of all matters arising under their
contract, which must necessarily include the agreement
contained in the arbitration clause, being Indian law and
the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts in Delhi having
been expressly recognised by the parties to the contract in
all matters arising under it, and the contract being most
intimately associated with India, the proper law of
arbitration and the competent courts are both exclusively
Indian, while matters of procedure connected with the
conduct of arbitration are left to be regulated by the
contractually chosen rules of the ICC to the extent that
such rules are not in conflict with the public policy and
the mandatory requirements of the proper law and of the law
of the place of arbitration. The Foreign Awards Act, 1961
has no application to the award in question which has been
made on an arbitration agreement governed by the law of
India.
The Tribunal has rightly held that the ’substantive law
of the contract is Indian law’. The Tribunal has further
held ’the laws of England govern procedural matters in the
arbitration’.
All substantive rights arising under the agreement
including that which is contained in the arbitration clause
are, in our view, governed by the laws of India. In respect
of the actual conduct of arbitration, the procedural law of
England may be applicable to the extent that the ICC
132
Rules are insufficient or repugnant to the public policy or
other mandatory provisions of the laws in force in England.
Nevertheless, the jurisdiction exercisable by the English
courts and the applicability of the laws of that country in
procedural matters must be viewed as concurrent and
consistent with the jurisdiction of the competent Indian
courts and the operation of Indian laws in all matters
concerning arbitration in so far as the main contract as
well as that which is contained in the arbitration clause
are governed by the laws of India.
The Delhi High Court was wrong in treating the award in
question as a foreign award. The Foreign Awards Act, has
no application to the award by reason of the specific
exclusion contained in Section 9 of that Act. The award is
governed by the laws in force in India, including the
Arbitration Act, 1940. Accordingly, we set aside the
impugned judgment of the Delhi High Court and direct that
Court to consider the appellant’s application on the merits
in regard to which we express no views whatsoever. The
appeal is allowed in the above terms. We do not, however,
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make any order as to costs.
G.N. Appeal allowed.
133