Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
Appeal (civil) 5986 of 2000
Special Leave Petition (civil) 13812 of 2000
$
DATAR SWITCHGEARS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
TATA FINANCE LTD. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/10/2000
BENCH:
M.J.Rao, K.G.Balakrishna
JUDGMENT:
Balakrishnan, J.
Leave granted.
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The appellant challenges an order passed by the Chief
Justice of Bombay High Court, under Section 11 of the
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 [for short, "the
Act"]. The appellant had entered into a lease agreement
with the 1st respondent in respect of certain machineries.
Dispute arose between the parties and the 1st respondent
sent a notice to the appellant on 5.8.1999 demanding payment
of Rs. 2,84,58,701 within fourteen days and in the notice
it was specifically stated that in case of failure to pay
the amount, the notice be treated as one issued under Clause
20.9 (Arbitration clause) of the Lease Agreement. The
appellant did not pay the amount as demanded by the 1st
respondent. The 1st respondent did not appoint an
Arbitrator even after the lapse of thirty days, but filed
Arbitration Petition No. 405/99 on 26.10.99 under Section 9
of the Act for interim protection. On 25.11.99, the 1st
respondent appointed the 2nd respondent as the sole
Arbitrator by invoking clause 20.9 of the Lease Agreement
and the Arbitrator in turn issued a notice to the appellant
asking them to make their appearance before him on 13th
March, 2000. Thereafter, the appellant filed Arbitration
Application No. 2/2000 before Hon’ble the Chief Justice of
Bombay and prayed for appointment of another Arbitrator and
the 1st respondent opposed this application. This petition
was rejected by the Chief Justice holding that as the
Arbitrator had already been appointed by the first
respondent, the Lessor, the petition was not maintainable.
This order is challenged before us.
We heard the appellant’s Counsel Mr. V.A. Mohta and
respondent’s Counsel Mr. R.F. Nariman. The appellant’s
Counsel questioned the authority of the 1st respondent in
appointing an Arbitrator after the long lapse of the notice
period of 30 days. According to the appellant, the power of
appointment should have been exercised within a reasonable
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time. The appellant’s Counsel also urged that unilateral
appointment of Arbitrator was not envisaged under the Lease
Agreement and the 1st respondent should have obtained the
consent of the appellant and the name of the Arbitrator
should have been proposed to the appellant before
appointment. On the other hand, the Counsel for the 1st
respondent supported the impugned order.
Learned counsel for the appellant , Shri V.A. Mohta
argued that the order passed by the Chief Justice is
amenable to Article 136 of the Constitution of India. Even
if it is an administrative order as decided by a three Judge
Bench in Konkan Railway Corporation Ltd. Vs. M/s Mehul
Construction Co. 2000(6) SCALE 71, it is amenable to
Article 136. Learned Senior Counsel for the 1st respondent,
Shri R.F. Nariman, however, stated that in this case we
need not go into this controversy and we may decide the
matter on merits on the assumption that Article 136 is
attracted. In view of the above stand taken for the
respondents, we are not deciding the question of
maintainability.
The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 made
certain drastic changes in the Law of Arbitration. This Act
is codified in tune with the Model Law on International
Commercial Arbitration as adopted by the United Nations
Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL). Section
11 of the Act deals with the procedure for appointment of
Arbitrator. Section 11(2) says that the parties are free to
agree to any procedure for appointing the Arbitrator. If
only there is any failure of that procedure, the aggrieved
party can invoke sub-clause (4), (5) or (6) of Section 11,
as the case may be. In the instant case, the Arbitration
clause in the Lease Agreement contemplates appointment of a
sole Arbitrator. If the parties fail to reach any agreement
as referred to in Sub-Section (2), or if they fail to agree
on the Arbitrator within thirty days from receipt of the
request by one party, the Chief Justice can be moved for
appointing an Arbitrator either under sub-clause (5) or
sub-clause (6) of Section 11 of the Act.
Sub-clause (5) of Section 11 can be invoked by a party
who has requested the other party to appoint an Arbitrator
and the latter fails to make any appointment within thirty
days from the receipt of the notice. Admittedly, in the
instant case, the appellant has not issued any notice to the
1st respondent seeking appointment of an Arbitrator. An
application under sub-clause (6) of Section 11 can be filed
when there is a failure of the procedure for appointment of
Arbitrator. This failure of procedure can arise under
different circumstances. It can be a case where a party who
is bound to appoint an Arbitrator refuses to appoint the
Arbitrator or where two appointed Arbitrators fail to
appoint the third Arbitrator. If the appointment of
Arbitrator or any function connected with such appointment
is entrusted to any person or institution and such person or
institution fails to discharge such function, the aggrieved
party can approach the Chief Justice for appointment of
Arbitrator.
The appellant in his application does not mention
under which sub- section of Section 11 the application was
filed. Evidently it must be under Sub-section (6) (a) of
Section 11, as the appellant has no case that a notice was
issued but an Arbitrator was not appointed or that there was
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a failure to agree on certain Arbitrator. The contention of
the appellant might be that the first respondent failed to
act as required under the procedure.
Therefore, the question to be considered is whether
there was any real failure of the mechanism provided under
the Lease Agreement. In order to consider this, it is
relevant to note the Arbitration clause in the Agreement.
Clause 20.9 of the Agreement is the Arbitration
clause, which is to the following effect:-
20.9 " It is agreed by and between the parties that in
case of any dispute under this Lease the same shall be
referred to an Arbitrator to be nominated by the Lessor and
the award of the Arbitrator shall be final and binding on
all the parties concerned. The venue of such arbitration
shall be in Bombay. Save as aforesaid, the Courts at Bombay
alone and no other Courts whatsoever will have jurisdiction
to try suit in respect of any claim or dispute arising out
of or under this Lease or in any way relating to the same."
The above clause gives an unfettered discretion to the
1st respondent-lessor to appoint an Arbitrator. The 1st
respondent gave notice to the appellant and later appointed
the 2nd respondent as the Arbitrator. It is pertinent to
note that no notice period is prescribed in the above
arbitration clause and it does not speak about any
concurrence or consent of the appellant being taken in the
matter of the choice of Arbitrator.
The question then arises whether for purposes of
Section 11(6) the party to whom a demand for appointment is
made, forfeits his right to do so if he does not appoint an
arbitrator within 30 days. Learned Senior counsel for the
appellant contends that even though Section 11(6) does not
prescribe a period of 30 days, it must be implied that 30
days is a reasonable time for purposes of Section 11(6) and
thereafter, the right to appoint is forfeited. Three
judgments of the High Courts from Bombay, Delhi and Andhra
Pradesh are relied upon in this connection.
Learned Senior counsel for the respondents submits
that the Bombay, Delhi and Andhra pradesh cases relied upon
are distinguishable. It is also contended that under
Section 11(6) no period of time is prescribed and hence the
opposite party can make an appointment even after 30 days,
provided it is made before the application is filed under
Section 11.
The appellant contended that the 1st respondent did
not appoint the Arbitrator within a reasonable period and
that amounts to failure of the procedure contemplated under
the Agreement. Our attention was drawn to a decision of the
Bombay High Court reported in 1999(2) Bombay CR. 189
(Naginbhai C. Patel Vs. Union of India). There, the
petitioner, a Govt. Contractor, as per the form of the
Arbitration clause requested the Secretary P.W.D to appoint
the arbitrator. The Secretary, P.W.D. did not take any
action and the petitioner filed an application under Section
11(6) of the Act. After the filing of this application, the
respondent appointed an Arbitrator and urged before the
Chief Justice that application under Section 11(6) filed by
the petitioner became infructuous. It was held that the
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petitioner had waited for 30 days for appointment of the
arbitrator and as the respondent had failed to appoint the
arbitrator the objection was not sustainable and the
appointment of arbitrator made by the respondent was not
valid in the eye of law.
The above decision has no application to the facts of
this case as in the present case, the Arbitrator was already
appointed before the appellant invoked Section 11 of the
Act. The Counsel for the appellant contended that the
Arbitrator was appointed after a long lapse of time and that
too without any previous consultation with the appellant and
therefore it was argued that the Chief Justice should have
appointed a fresh arbitrator. We do not find much force in
this contention, especially in view of the specific words
used in the Arbitration clause in the Agreement, which is
extracted above. This is not a case where the appellant
requested and gave a notice period for appointment of
arbitrator and the latter failed to comply with that
request. The 1st respondent asked the appellant to make
payment within a stipulated period and indicated that in the
event of non-payment of the amount within fourteen days, the
said notice itself was to be treated as the notice under the
Arbitration clause in the Agreement. The amount allegedly
due from the appellant was substantial and the 1st
respondent cannot be said to be at fault for having given a
larger period for payment of the amount and settling the
dispute. It is pertinent to note that the appellant did not
file an application even after the 1st respondent invoked
Section 9 of the Act and filed a petition seeking interim
relief. Under such circumstances, it cannot be said that
there was a failure of the procedure prescribed under the
contract.
The decision of the Delhi High Court in B.W.L. Ltd.
Vs. MTNL & Ors. [2000(2) Arb. LR 190 (Del.)] decided on
23.2.2000 is also distinguishable inasmuch as the
respondent, in spite of being given opportunity on 11.10.99
by the Court after filing of the application under Section
11 to appoint an arbitrator, failed to do so and the Court
felt that it was a fit case for appointment of an arbitrator
under Section 11. This case is also distinguishable as the
appointment was not made before the filing of the
application under Section 11.
In Sharma & Sons vs. Engineer-in-Chief, Army
Headquarters, New Delhi & Ors. [2000 (2) Arb.LR 31 (AP)],
the respondents were requested on 26.6.95, 6.8.95 and other
dates in 1997 to appoint an arbitrator. Application under
Section 11 was filed after nearly 4 years on 21.4.99. Only
thereafter the respondent appointed an arbitrator on
13.5.99, but only in respect of some of the disputes. The
respondent felt that the other disputes were outside the
ambit of the arbitration clause. The High Court of Andhra
pradesh held that in view of Section 11(6) read with Section
11(8) the respondent had forfeited his right to appoint an
arbitrator after the expiry of 30 days from the date of
demand for arbitrator. Even in the above case, the
appointment was not made before the application under
Section 11 was filed. Hence, the case is not applicable to
the facts of this case.
In all the above cases, therefore, the appointment of
the arbitrator was not made by the opposite party before the
application was filed under Section 11. Hence, all the
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above cases are not directly in point.
In the present case, the respondent made the
appointment before the appellant filed the application under
Section 11 but the said appointment was made beyond 30 days.
Question is whether in a case falling under Section 11(6),
the opposite party cannot appoint an arbitrator after the
expiry of 30 days from the date of demand?
So far as cases falling under Section 11(6) are
concerned -- such as the one before us -- no time limit has
been prescribed under the Act, whereas a period of 30 days
has been prescribed under Section 11(4) and Section 11(5) of
the Act. In our view, therefore, so far as Section 11(6) is
concerned, if one party demands the opposite party to
appoint an arbitrator and the opposite party does not make
an appointment within 30 days of the demand, the right to
appointment does not get automatically forfeited after
expiry of 30 days. If the opposite party makes an
appointment even after 30 days of the demand, but before the
first party has moved the Court under Section 11, that would
be sufficient. In other words, in cases arising under
Section 11(6), if the opposite party has not made an
appointment within 30 days of demand, the right to make
appointment is not forfeited but continues, but an
appointment has to be made before the former files
application under Section 11 seeking appointment of an
arbitrator. Only then the right of the opposite party
ceases. We do not, therefore, agree with the observation in
the above judgments that if the appointment is not made
within 30 days of demand, the right to appoint an arbitrator
under Section 11(6) is forfeited.
In the present case the respondent made the
appointment before the appellant filed the application under
Section 11(6) though it was beyond 30 days from the date of
demand. In our view, the appointment of the arbitrator by
the respondent is valid and it cannot be said that the right
was forfeited after expiry of 30 days from the date of
demand.
We need not decide whether for purposes of sub-clauses
(4) and (5) of Section 11, which expressly prescribe 30
days, the period of 30 days is mandatory or not.
While interpreting the power of the Court to appoint
arbitrator under Section 8 of the Arbitration Act, 1940,
this Court in Bhupinder Singh Bindra Vs. Union of India and
Another (1995) 5 SCC 329, in para 3 held as under:-
"It is settled law that court cannot interpose and
interdict the appointment of an arbitrator, whom the parties
have chosen under the terms of the contract unless legal
misconduct of the arbitrator, fraud, disqualification etc.
is pleaded and proved. It is not in the power of the party
at his own will or pleasure to revoke the authority of the
arbitrator appointed with his consent. There must be just
and sufficient cause for revocation."
When parties have entered into a contract and settled
on a procedure, due importance has to be given to such
procedure. Even though rigor of the doctrine of "freedom of
contract" has been whittled down by various labour and
social welfare legislation, still the court has to respect
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the terms of the contract entered into by parties and
endeavor to give importance and effect to it. When the
party has not disputed the arbitration clause, normally he
is bound by it and obliged to comply with the procedure laid
down under the said clause.
Therefore, we do not think that the first respondent,
in appointing the second respondent as the Arbitrator,
failed to follow the procedure contemplated under the
Agreement or acted in contravention of the Arbitration
clause.
Lastly, the appellant alleged that "nomination"
mentioned in the arbitration clause gives the 1st respondent
a right to suggest the name of the Arbitrator to the
appellant and the appointment could be done only with the
concurrence of the appellant. We do not find any force in
the contention.
In P. Ramanatha Aiyar’s Law Lexicon (2nd Edition) at
page 1310, the meaning of the word ’Nomination" is given as
follows:- "The action, process or instance of nominating;
2. The act, process or an instrument of nominating; an act
or right of designating for an office or duty.
"Nominations" is equivalent to the word
"appointments", when used by a mayor in an instrument
executed for the purpose of appointing certain persons to
office."
Nomination virtually amounts to appointment for a
specific purpose and the 1st respondent has acted in
accordance with Section 20.9 of the Agreement. So long as
the concurrence or ratification by the appellant is not
stated in the arbitration clause, the nomination amounts to
selection of the Arbitrator.
Hence, the appellant, while filing the application
under Section 11 of the Act had no cause of action to
sustain the same as there was no failure of the agreement or
that the 1st respondent failed to act in terms of the
agreement. The application was rightly rejected. The
appeal deserves to be and is accordingly dismissed, however,
without any order as to costs.