Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL COOPERATIVE MARKETINGFEDERATlON OF IND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ALIMENTA S.A.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/10/1988
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
CITATION:
1989 AIR 818 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 548
1989 SCC Supl. (1) 308 JT 1988 (4) 721
1988 SCALE (2)1612
ACT:
Arbitration Act 1940, Section 35--Two contracts for
supply of goods--One of the parties invoking arbitration
clause-- Arbitrator appointed--In the meanwhile one of the
parties obtaining permission of Supreme Court to file money
suit since claims getting barred by limitation--Money suits
filed--Whether other party entitled to approach Court and
obtain stay of arbitration proceedings.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner signed two contracts, one on the 12th
January. 1980 and the other on 18th August, 1980 for the
supply of Indian H.P.S. Groundnut Kernels Javas to a Swiss
Company. On 20th December, 1980 the petitioner informed the
respondent not to nominate any vessels to load goods as it
were unable to get necessary clearance from the Government,
and by a telex message on 27th January. 1981 informed the
respondent that the goods could not be exported on account
of executive/legislative ban.
The respondent invoked the arbitration proceedings with
the Federation of Oil Seeds and Fats Association who
informed the petitioner on 6th March, 1981 by a letter of
the appointment of an arbitrator. The petitioner challenged
the arbitration proceedings in the Delhi High Court. On
March 23rd. 1981 a stay order was passed restraining the
arbitration proceedings, and on 11th December. 1981 the High
Court held that no arbitration agreement existed with regard
to the second contract and as such nobody was entitled to
seek reference to arbitration.
The petitioner filed a special leave petition to this
Court. This Court passed an interim order granting special
permission to the respondent to file a money suit in any
court since the claims were getting barred by time.
Pursuant to this order the r respondent filed a regular
money suit in a foreign court, and two identical suits in
the Bombay High Court for recovering damages, for which the
written statements were filed.
PG NO 548
PG NO 549
The petitioner moved an application in one of the suits
in the High Court stating that in the interests of justice
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pending disposal of the three suits an injunction should be
granted restraining the parties from proceeding with the
arbitration, and that the arbitration be stayed under the
principles of section 35 of the Arbitration Act, 1940. The
High Court granted interim injunction restraining the
parties from proceeding with arbitration. On 8th March,
1985, the High Court dismissed the notice of motion and
held that this Court’s order dated 2nd December, 1983 was
clear, there was no abandonment of the pending arbitration
proceedings by the respondent and therefore stay could not
be granted. This order was confirmed by the Division Bench
in appeal.
In the S.L.P. to this Court the question was: whether
the High Court was right in declining to grant stay of the
arbitration proceedings.
Dismissing the application,
HELD: 1. The High Court rightly held that Section 35
does not apply. [556A]
Sujant Singh v. Seth Mohinder Paul, AIR1964 Punj 395
ref. to.
2. In particular facts and circumstances if a party
filed a suit to save limitation the same would not vitiate
the award or make the award bad under s. 35 of the
Arbitration Act.[555F]
3. Foreign awards automatically are not ‘lifeless award’
They can be enforced in this Court in accordance with
law.[556G]
Oil & Natural Gas Common. v.Western Co. of N. America,
AIR 1987 SC 574 ref to.
4. Whether in a particular case it would be just and
equitable to the parties to direct them to proceed with the
arbitration, must depend upon the facts and circumstances
of a particular case having regard to the legal provisions
applicable to a particular Situation.[556A-D]
In the instant case, there is a valid arbitration
agreement between the parties. In view of the direction of
this Court. the continuation of the arbitration proceedings
in respect of the filing of the suit would not be bad. In
these circumstances if the court declined to exercise its
jurisdiction under section 151 of the Code of Civil
Procedure to grant stay of the proceedings of arbitration in
PG NO 550
London, the court has not acted in excess of jurisdiction
or has not exercised its jurisdiction improperly. In such a
situation the Appellate Court should not normally
interfere. In the premises, it would have been improper to
exercise any jurisdiction to interfere. [557B-C]
V/C Tractoroexport, Moscow v. M/s Tarapore & Co. & Anr.,
[1970] 3 SCR 53; Serajuddin & Co. v. Michael Goldetz & Ors.,
AIR 1960 Cal. 47; In re All India Groundnut Syndicate Ltd.,
[1945] 47 Bom. L.R. 420 and Ramji Dayawala & Sons (P) Ltd.
v. Invest Import, [1981] 1 SCR 899. referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil)No.6536 of 1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 26.4.1988 of the
Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 431 of 1988.
G. Ramaswami, Additional Solicitor General and Mukul
Mudgal for the Petitioner.
Anil B. Diwan, D.N. Misra, M.P. Bharucha and S.J.
Vajifdar for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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SABYASACHI MUKHARJI,J. This application for leave to
appeal is from the decision of the Division Bench of the
High Court of Bombay, dated 26th April, 1988. By the said
decision the Division Bench summarily dismissed the appeal
thereby affirming the order of the learned Single Judge of
the High Court. On 12th January, 1980 the petitioner herein
signed what has been treated as the first contract with the
respondent for the supply of 5000 Mts. of Indian H.P.S.
Groundnut Kernels Javas (hereinafter referred to as the said
goods) for the year 1979-8O. The second contract in respect
of the same was signed for 4000 Mts. on 3rd April, 1980.
On 18th August, 1980 since 3100 Mts. of the remaining
first contract and total of 4000 Mts. of the second contract
had not been supplied, the contract was extended for the
balance quantity for the next crop season 1980-81. On 20th
December. 1980 the petitioner informed the respondent not
to nominate any vessels to load goods as they were unable
to get necessary clearance from the Government.
PG NO 551
The petitioner on 27th January, 1981 sent a telex
informing the respondent that the goods could not be
exported on account of executive/legislative ban on such
exports.
On 6th March, 1981 the Federation of Oil Seeds and Fats
Association (FOSFA) informed the petitioner by its letter of
the appointment of an arbitrator because of non-shipment due
to Government’s refusal. Thus the respondent invoked the
arbitration proceedings with FOSFA. On 19th March, 1981 the
petitioner filed a petition in the Delhi High Court
challenging the arbitration proceedings by FOSFA. The Delhi
High Court on 23rd March, 1981 passed a stay order and
restrained the arbitration proceedings by FOSFA. On 11th
December, 1981, the Delhi High Court held that no
arbitration agreement existed with regard to the second
contract dated 3rd April, 1980 and as such none was entitled
to seek reference to arbitration. It was further held that
vis-a-vis the first contract dated 12th January, 1980 there
was an arbitration clause existing. The National
Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation of India Ltd.,
filed a special leave petition in this Court on 1st April,
1982 challenging the decision of the Delhi High Court on the
ground that there was no valid FOSFA arbitration clause
incorporated in the first contract dated 12th January, 1980.
On 2nd December, 1983 this Court passed an interim order
granting special permission to the respondent to file a
money suit in any court against the petitioner since the
claims were getting barred by time. The said order stated as
follows:
"The order of this court dated 30.4.1982 is modified to
the extent that Alimenta S.A. is at liberty to file suit
against N.A.F.E.D. in respect of its claims/disputes under
the two contracts dated 121.1980 and 3.4.1980. It is
directed that such suit shall not constitute abandonment of
the pending arbitrations instituted/commenced by Alimenta
S.A. against N.A.F.E.D. or in any manner prejudice the said
arbitrations or any awards made therein or the enforcement
thereof and shall not prejudice Alimenta’s contention in any
of the cases."
On 17th December, 1983 the respondent filed a regular
money suit No. 488 of 1984 for an amount of US $1,70,39,544
(equivalent to Rs. 17,93,93,440) and interest On the sum of
US $ 11,23,500 (equivalent to Rs.11,23,35,000). Written
statement was filed by the respondent raising several
objections, inter alia, limitation, maintainability etc. On
or about 24th July, 1984, the respondent filed another
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identical suit in the Bombay High Court being Suit No.
PG NO 552
2657/84 for recovering damages for which the written
statement was filed on 20th March, 1984. The respondent also
filed another identical suit No. 1241 of 1981 in the High
Court on 21st March, 1985 for which also the written
statement was filed. The Supreme Court on 9th January, 1987
held that there was a valid arbitration clause in the first
contract dated 12.1.1980. In January, 1987 the respondents
started arbitration proceedings in respect of FOSFA contract
dated 12.1.1980. In 1987, the petitioner’s Solicitor in
London issued summons to restrain the London arbitration.
The arbitrator thereafter affirmed that they would not
proceed with the arbitration until the petitioner’s
application for stay was finally disposed of. The petitioner
moved an application in suit No. 1241 of 1985 in the Bombay
High Court stating that in the interests of justice pending
disposal of the above three suits an injunction should be
granted restraining the parties from proceeding with the
arbitration and the arbitration be stayed under the
principles of Section 35 of the Indian Arbitration Act,
1940. On 2nd January, 1988 the Bombay High Court granted an
interim injunction restraining the parties from proceeding
with the arbitration. The learned Single Judge on 8th March,
1988 dismissed the notice of motion holding, inter alia,
that this Court’s order dated 2nd December, 1983 set out
hereinbefore was clear and, therefore, stay could not be
granted. There was an appeal to the Division Bench.
On 28th March, 1988 there was an interim order in
appeal No. 431 of 1988 permitting the respondent to seek
clarification from this Court regarding its order dated 2nd
December, 1983. This Court disposed of the said application
by stating that the Bombay High Court might make its own
order. As mentioned hereinbefore the Division Bench of the
High Court dismissed on 26th April, 1988 the appeal
preferred from the decision of the learned Single Judge of
that High Court. Hence, the petitioner seeks have to appeal
to this Court.
The question concerned here is, whether the High Court
was right. The High Court noted that it was an admitted
position that under the first contract the defendant therein
being the petitioner herein, has supplied 1900 Mts while
under the second contract the defendant has not supplied
anything. The High Court noted that the petitioner has
pleaded that the Government had not permitted supply of any
further materials to the plaintiff being the respondent
herein. The respondent is a Swiss Company. As per the
contract the respondent had initiated arbitration
proceedings against the petitioner with the Federation of
Oil Seeds and Fat Association (for brief called FOSFA London
PG NO 553
in 1981 and had informed the petitioner by their letter
dated 10th March, 1981 for the appointment of an arbitrator
on their behalf. The defendant had contended that there
could not be any such arbitration and, therefore, it filed a
petition in the High Court challenging the arbitration
proceedings. The Delhi High Court on the 11th December, 1981
came to the conclusion that as regards the first contract
there was a valid arbitration agreement and as regards the
second contract, there was no such arbitration agreement. In
other words, as regards the first contract the respondent
herein could have proceeded with the arbitration while with
regard to the second contract there was no question of
referring the dispute to the arbitrator as such. Both the
parties had filed special leave petitions to this Court,
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being 1755 of 1982 and 1756 of 1982 from the decision of the
High Court of Delhi. This Court admitted the petition but
did not decide the matter immediately. In the meanwhile, the
claim of the plaintiffs was getting barred by law of
limitation and, therefore, they moved this Court for an
early hearing. This Court instead of hearing the petition
passed an order on 12th December, 1988 giving liberty to the
respondent to file suit in respect of its claims. It was
further stated that filing of such a suit would not
constitute abandonment of the pending arbitration
proceedings instituted or commenced by the respondent
against the petitioner.
It is pursuant to this liberty that the respondent had
filed suit No. 488 of 1984. Thereafter, without withdrawing
the first suit but perhaps on the basis that there was some
technical defect in the suit according to the Bombay High
Court, the respondent had filed a second suit No. 2659/84 on
20th March, 1984. It had filed another suit No. 1241 of 1985
on the very next date. All these suits were pending in the
High Court of Bombay. The cause of action in respect of
these suits is the same. It has been stated that the present
suit had been filed by way of an abundant caution and
without prejudice to the rights and contentions including
the arbitration proceedings. As a result of this decision
the respondent started their arbitration proceedings from
the stage at which it had been stayed earlier but only in
respect of the first contract. The first notice of motion is
for stay of these arbitration proceedings on the ground that
the present suit as also the other two suits are pending and
there cannot be any multiplicity of the proceedings in
respect of the same cause of action. The High Court noted
further that in view of the decision of this Court giving it
liberty to file the proceedings the respondent was at
liberty to proceed with the arbitration proceedings in
respect of the first contract and having regard to this
position it stated at the time of hearing of this petition
PG NO 554
before the High Court and also in its affidavit that it was
giving up claim in respect of the first contract.
The learned Solicitor General who had appeared in the
Bombay High Court on behalf of the petitioner, which was the
defendant, contended that it was not open to the respondent
to forego a part of its claim. The learned Solicitor General
had also argued that the cause of action was one and it was
not open to the respondent to split up its cause of action.
The High Court, however, did not find any substance in that
argument. The High Court was of the view that there were two
claims arising out of the two contracts and the claims could
easily be segregated or separated and that was the reason
that the High Court held that the respondent could give up
part of its claims which related to the first contract.
In our opinion, the High Court was right. Relying upon
the decision of this Court in V/C Tractoroexport, Moscow v.
M/s. Tarapore & Co. & Anr., [1970] 3 SCR 53, the learned
Solicitor General had submitted before the Bombay High Court
that though Section 35 of the Arbitration Act, 1940 does not
apply, the principles underlying the same would apply and
those principles were that arbitrators should not proceed
with arbitration side by side and in rivalry or in
competition with the Civil Court. It Was further submitted
before the High Court that it can exercise cognate or
similar powers possessed by it under Section 151 of the Code
of Civil Procedure and should avoid the possibility of
conflict of decisions. Reliance was placed on a decision of
the Calcutta High Court in Serajuddin & Co. v. Michael
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Goldetz & Ors., AIR 1960 Cal. 47. In the said circumstance
it was submitted that the proper course was to restrain the
plaintiffs from getting the matter decided in London so long
as the suit was pending and had not been disposed of. In
view of the fact that the subject matter of the reference
was the same as in the plattings of the suit, the public
tribunal should have precedence, it was submitted by the
learned Solicitor General.
Reliance was also placed on the decision of India
Groundnut Syndicate Ltd., [1945] 47 Bom. L.R. 420. Though
there was no averment relating to inconvenience with regard
to the contract or proceedings in a foreign Contract learned
Solicitor had relied on the decision of this Court in Ramji
Dayawala & Sons (P) Ltd. v. Invest Import, [1981] 1 SCR 899,
and submitted that it was more convenient for adjudication
in India then in London. In addition to this the high costs
of the arbitration and the restrictions on the availability
of foreign-exchange were also highlighted before the High
Court of Bombay, and in as much as the defence in action in
PG NO 555
India as also the arbitration in London was the same, and
the evidence was the same and the entire contract had to be
performed by shipping the goods from India. Therefore, it
was submitted that it was not necessary that the parties
should be allowed to proceed with the arbitration in London.
It was also submitted that no prejudice would be caused to
the respondent if they are required to proceed with the
present suit and not with the arbitration proceedings. On
behalf of the petitioner, however, it had been contended
that the respondent was interested in delaying the
proceedings somehow or the other. In support of this the
petitioner brought to the notice of the High Court that in
1980 when the breach of contract took place, the plaintiff
instituted arbitration proceedings and the respondent
promptly filed petition in the Delhi High Court and got stay
of the arbitration proceedings. Thereafter, they lost
interest in the matter and the matter came to be decided by
this Court and this Court by its order dated 9.1.1987
expressed and directed that the first contract was subject
to the arbitration agreement and there was no reason why the
defendants could not have proceeded with such arbitration.
It further appears that sometime in October, 1987 the
petitioner had taken out an originating summons in the High
Court of Justice in London but the summons were not served
on the respondent. The arbitrators had given the directions
that they would proceed and not wait any further. And it was
upon this that the respondent had brought the present
proceedings in the Bombay High Court. The High Court further
felt that in view of the decision of this Court on 2nd
December, 1983 there was no abandonment of the pending
arbitration proceedings by the respondent.
It is well-settled that in particular facts and
circumstances it a party files a suit to save limitation the
same would not Vitiate the award or make the award bad under
Section 35 of the Arbitration Act. Reference in this
connection may be made to the observations of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court in Sujant Singh v. Seth Mohinder Paul,
AIR 1964 Punj 395. The High Court felt that in the facts and
circumstances of this case Section 35 of the Arbitration Act
does not apply, which postulates that neither any reference
nor any award shall be rendered invalid by reason only of
the commencement of the legal proceedings upon the subject-
matter of the reference but when the legal proceedings upon
the whole subject-matter of the reference have been
commenced between all the parties to the reference and
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notice has been given to the arbitrator or the umpire, all
further proceedings in a pending reference shall unless a
stay of proceedings is granted under Section 34, be invalid.
The High Court held, and in our opinion rightly, that
PG NO 556
Section 35 does not apply. The order of this Court set out
hereinbefore clearly permits the continuation of legal
proceedings in suit and cannot operate to nullify the
arbitration proceedings in London. The High Court,
therefore, declined to grant stay of the arbitration
proceedings. Was the High Court right, is the question in
this application.
Reliance was placed by the learned Additional Solicitor
General Mr. G. Ramaswamy before us on a decision of this
Court in Oil & Natural Gas Commn. v. Western Co. of N.
America, AIR 1987 SC 674 for the proposition that in a
situation of the present type it would be improper to ask
the petitioner to go on with the arbitration in London. The
facts there were entirely different from the facts before
us. Section 151 of the Code of Civil Procedure on the bais
of which and on the principle of which stay of proceedings
in London was sought, are well-settled and these principles
are whether in a particular case it would be just and
equitable to the parties to direct them to proceed with the
arbitration, must depend upon the facts and circumstances of
a particular case having regard to the legal provisions
applicable to a particular situation. In the decision
referred to hereinbefore this Court took into consideration
the fact that there was an application under Sections 30 &
33 of the Arbitration Act for setting aside the awards
rendered by the umpire in that case and that there was a
possibility of the award rendered by the Umpire being stayed
by the Indian court. This Court also took into consideration
that in that event an extremely anomalous situation would
arise inasmuch as the successful party the Western Company
might well have recovered the amount awarded as per the
award from the assets of the losing party in U.S.A. after
procuring the judgment in terms of the award from the U.S.A.
court. Such possibility of damage and danger is absent in
the present case. In the said decision before this Court by
the contract therein the Indian courts had exclusive
Jurisdiction and it would, however, be improper to proceed
on the basis that the Indian courts have exclusive
jurisdiction to affirm or set aside the award in terms of
the proper law of the contract, or in terms of the actual
contrast between the parties. Foreign awards automatically
are not ’lifeless awards’. They can be enforced in this
country in accordance with law. See in this connection the
Foreign Awards (Recognition and Enforcement) Act, 1961.
Furthermore, unlike the case of Oil & Natural Gas
Commission this is not a case of restraining the respondent
from proceeding in a foreign court. This is a case of
binding the parties to their bargain for going to the
arbitration. The learned Single Judge of the High Court in
PG NO 557
the instant case had taken into account all the relevant
facts. It had considered the contract of the parties, the
arbitration agreement, the statement made on behalf of the
respondent and had thereafter exercised its jurisdiction not
to stay the proceedings of arbitration in relation to the
first contract. There is a valid arbitration agreement
Between the parties. In view of the direction of this Court,
the continuation of the arbitration proceedings in respect
of the filing of the suit would not be bad. In those
circumstances if the court declined to exercise its
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jurisdiction under Section 151 of the Code of Civil
Procedure to grant stay of the proceedings of arbitration in
London, the court, in our opinion, has not acted in excess
of jurisdiction or has not exercised its jurisdiction
improperly. In such a situation the Appellate Court should
not normally interfere. In the premises, it would have been
improper to exercise any jurisdiction to interfere. See the
observations of this Court in Ramji Dayawala & Sons (P) Ltd.
(supra). There will be no stay of the arbitration in
relation to the first contract only.
In the Premises, it would not be proper for us to
interfere with the judgment of the Division Bench of the
High Court. The application, therefore, fails and is
accordingly dismissed.
N.V.K.