Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NILKANTHA SHIDRAMAPPA NINGASHETTI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KASHINATH SOMANNA NINGASHETTI AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/04/1961
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
SUBBARAO, K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 666 1962 SCR Supl. (2) 551
CITATOR INFO :
R 1988 SC2054 (7)
ACT:
Arbitration-Award filed in court’ Expression "give notice",
meaning of-If must be given in writing-Period of limitation
to file objections from when to run-Objection to set aside
award filed beyond time-Court files the award-If amounts to
refusal to set aside the award-Indian Limitation Act, 1908
(IX of 1908), art. 158-Arbitration Act, 1940 (10 Of 1940),
ss. 14(2), 39(1)(VI).
HEADNOTE:
In a partition suit the Arbitrator filed his award in the
court and the judge adjourned the case for "the parties’ say
to the arbitrator’s report." No notice in writing was given
to the parties by the court of the filing of the award.
Objection to the award was filed by the appellant beyond the
period of limitation. The court ordered the award to be
filed and decree to be drawn up in terms of the award as the
objection filed was beyond the period of limitation.
The appellant’s case was that the period of limitation as
under art. 158 of the Limitation Act, for an application to
set aside the award, would run against him only from the
date of service of the notice in writing of the filing of
the award and as no notice in writing was issued by the
Court to the appellant the time never began to run against
him. The appellant also contended that as the court had
refused to set aside the award the appeal was maintainable
under S. 39(1)(VI) Of the Arbitration Act.
Held, that the communication by the court to the parties or
their counsel of the information that an award had been
filed was sufficient compliance with the requirements of
sub-s. (2) of s. 14 Of the Arbitration Act, with respect to
the giving of the notice to the parties concerned, about the
filing of the award. Notice does not necessarily mean
"communication in writing". The expression "give notice" in
sub-s.(2) of s. 14 Of the Arbitration Act simply means
giving intimation of the filing of the Award. Such
intimation need not be given in writing and could be
communicated orally. That would amount to service of notice
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when no particular mode of service was prescribed.
Held, further that where there was no objection before the
court praying for setting aside the award, no question of
refusing to set it aside could arise, and no appeal
therefore was maintainable under s. 39(1)(VI) Of the
Arbitration Act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATe, JURISDICTIOn: Civil Appeal No. 36 of 1958.
552
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated January 7, 1954 of
the Bombay High Court in Appeal from Order No. 63 of 1950.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and Naunit Lal, for appellant.
W. S. Barlingay and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for respondents Nos.
1 and 2.
S. T. Desai and M. S. K. Sastri, for respondents Nos. 4 to
7.
1961. April 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAGHUBAR DAYAL, J.-This is an appeal on certificate under
Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution, granted by the High
Court of Judicature at Bombay.
A suit for partition was filed against defendants 1 to 10
and 12, members of a joint family. Defendant no. 1 was
father of the appellant, who was then a minor, defendant no.
12. Defendant no. 11 was an outsider, he being a partner in
the partnership shop of the family. Parties other than
defendant no. 11 referred the matters in difference to an
arbitrator. The arbitrator filed the award in Court on
February 18, 1948. On February 21, 1948, the Civil Judge
adjourned the matter "for parties’ say to the arbitrator’s
report", to March 22, 1948. On March 16, i 1 948, an
application was presented on behalf of defendant no. 1
praying that certain papers and documents be called for from
the arbitrator. On March 22, 1948, an application was
presented on behalf of defendant no. 1 praying for 15 days’
time for going through the papers and documents which he had
asked the arbitrator to send to the Court and to intimate
his say regarding the arbitrator’s award. The Court granted
the request. Defendant no. 1 filed his say about the
arbitrators report on April 2, 1948. He withdrew his
contentions on March 31, 1949. It is to be noted that
neither the objections filed on April 2, nor the other
applications’ purported to have been filed on behalf of
defendant no. 12.
On February 17, 1948, defendant no. 1 filed an application
stating therein:
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"An arbitrator is to be appointed in the
matter of the suit and the arbitrator is to
submit an award. For the aforesaid reasons it
is impossible for me to put forth properly
necessary contentions etc., in the said
matter. Consequently, the minor will be put
to a heavy loss. In these circumstances, I
have no desire to act as a guardian of the
minor. Therefore, my appointment as a
guardian of the minor may be cancelled and
further steps may be taken after appointing a
proper guardian of the minor. His mother
Dhondavvabai may be appointed guardian of the
minor. I have put forth a contention against
the arbitrator’s award. I may be granted time
for that purpose."
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His resignation from guardianship was accepted on April 13,
1948, and Dhondavvabai, the mother of the minor defendant
no. 12, was appointed guardian on June 16, 1948.
On September 5, 1948, a summons purporting to be for
settlement of issues, was served on her. On September 7,
1948, she applied for, and was granted, one month’s time for
submitting the written statement with regard to the claim
and the award in the said matter. On October 7, 1948, she
applied for, and was granted, another one month’s time for
the same purpose. On November 9, 1948, she filed a written
statement on behalf of defendant no. 12, with regard to the
suit and the award, questioning the validity of the award
and praying that it be declared null and void and that the
suit be heard after taking into consideration the interest
of the minor.
On August 24, 1949, the Civil Judge ordered that the award
be filed, that a decree be drawn tip in terms of the award
and that the decree should further contain the terms as to
the Bombay shop run in partnership with defendant no. 11 as
was mentioned in the order. It was said in this order that
none of the parties except defendant no. 1 put in any
objections to the, award, that defendant no. 1 filed his
objections beyond the period of limitation and subsequently
withdrew them and that the objections filed by the guardian-
ad-litem of defendant no. 12 on November 9, 1948, was also
filed beyond the period of limitation
554
Defendant no. 12 then went up in appeal to the High Court.
The High Court dismissed the appeal holding that it was
incompetent as the order of the Civil Judge did not amount
to an order refusing to set aside an award, as there had
been no objection before him for the setting aside of the
award. It further held that the issue of a formal notice
under sub-s. (2) of s. 14 intimating the fling of the award
was not necessary for the commencement of the period of
limitation under Art. 158 of the Limitation Act and that
objections coming under s. 33 of the Arbitration Act also
amounted to objections for the setting aside of the award.
It is this order of the High Court whose correctness is
challenged in this appeal.
The first question to determine is whether limitation for
filing an application to set aside the award began to run
against the appellant-defendant no. 12 from a date more than
a month before November 9, 1948, when a written statement on
his behalf was filed stating that the award be declared null
and void. According to Art. 158 of the First Schedule to
the Indian Limitation Act, the period of limitation for an
application to set aside an award under the Arbitration Act,
1940, begins to run from ’the date of service of the notice
of the filing of the award’. No notice in writing was
issued by the Court to the appellant or his guardian
intimating that the award has been filed in Court. It is
therefore urged for the appellant that the period of
limitation for filing an application to set aside the award
never began to run against him. There could be no date of
service of notice, when no notice had been issued. On the
other hand, it is submitted for the respondents, that- the
limitation began to run from February 21, 1948, the date on
which the Court adjourned the case for parties’ say to March
22, 1948, and that, in any case, from September 7, 1948,
when his guardian had applied for time to file the statement
after having received a summons from the Court on September
5, 1948. On February 21, 1948, the pleaders were present,
according to the entry against the date in the roznama of
the Court. Notice to the counsel of the filing of the award
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means or amounts to notice to the party.
555
Sub-section (1) of s. 14 of the Arbitration Act, 1940 (X of
1940) requires the arbitrators or umpire to give notice in
writing to the parties of the making and signing of the
award. Sub-section (2) of that section requires the Court,
after the filing of the award, to give notice to the parties
of the filing of the award. The difference in the
provisions of the two sub-sections with respect to the
giving of notice is significant and indicates clearly that
the notice which the Court is to give to the parties of the
filing of the award need not be a notice in writing. The
notice can be given orally. No question of the service of
the notice in the formal way of delivering the notice or
tendering it to the party can arise in the case of a notice
given orally. The communication of the information that an
award has been filed is sufficient compliance with the
requirements of sub-s. (2) of s. 14 with respect to the
giving of the notice to the parties concerned about the
filing of the award. ’Notice’ does not necessarily mean
’communication in writing’. ’Notice’, according to the
Oxford Concise Dictionary, means ’intimation, intelligence.,
warning’ and has this meaning in expressions like ’give
notice, have notice’ and it also means ’formal intimation of
something, or instructions to do something’ and has such a
meaning in expressions like ’notice to quit, till further
notice’. We are of opinion that the expression ’give
notice’ in sub-s. (2) of s. 14, simply means giving
intimation of the filing of the award, which certainly was
given to the parties through their pleaders on February 21,
1948. Notice to the pleader is notice to the party, in view
of r. 5 of O. III, Civil Procedure Code, which provides that
any process served on the pleader of any party shall be
presumed to be duly communicated and made known to the party
whom the pleader represents and, unless the Court otherwise
directs, shall be as effectual for all purposes as if the
same had been given to or served on the party in person.
We have been referred to s. 42 of the Arbitration Act for
the modes of serving notice. This section does not apply to
the giving of notice by Courts. It applies to the service
of notice by a party to an arbitration
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agreement or by an arbitrator or umpire. It is contended
that verbal communication of the filing of the award does
not amount to serving of a notice. The expression ’date of
service’ of notice is used in Art. 158, First Schedule of
the Limitation Act because sub-s. (2) of s. 14 would be
applicable both when the reference to arbitration is out of
Court or in a suit. When the arbitration reference is out
of Court, no party is expected to be present in Court and,
therefore, the notice will have to go to the party formally,
i.e., a written notice will is-sue from the Court to the
parties concerned, intimating them that an award had been
filed. It is only in cases where an arbitration is through
Court that, when the award is filed, the Court can have the
counsel for the parties present at the time the case is put
up with the award and that the Court can then orally
intimate to the counsel about the filing of the award.
Further, ’service’, according to Webster’s New International
Dictionary, II Edition, Unabridged, means ’act of bringing
to notice, either actually or constructively, in such manner
as is prescribed by law’. Oral communication will therefore
amount to service too, when no particular mode of service is
prescribed.
We see no ground to construe the expression ’date of service
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of notice’ in col. 3 of Art. 158 of the Limitation -Act to
mean only a notice in writing served in a formal manner.
When the Legislature used the word ’notice’ it must be
presumed to have borne in mind that it means not only a
formal intimation but also an informal one. Similarly, it
must be deemed to have in mind the fact that service of a
notice would include constructive or informal notice. If
its intention were to exclude the latter sense of the words
,;notice’ and ’service’ it would have said so explicitly.
It has not done so here. Moreover, to construe the
expression as meaning only a written notice served formally
on the party to be affected, will leave the door open to
that party, even though with full knowledge of the filing of
the award he has taken part in the subsequent proceedings,
to challenge the decree based upon the award at any time
upon the ground that for
557
want of a proper notice his right to object to the filing of
the award had not even accrued. Such a result would
stultify the whole object which underlies the process of
arbitration-the speedy decision of a dispute by a tribunal
chosen by the parties.
In this case, the parties knew of the filing of the award.
Defendant no.1 had probably known of the imminence of the
filing of the award when he stated, in his application dated
February 17, 1948, that he intended to file an objection to
the award. He was then the guardian of the appellant. He
continued to be the guardian till April 1948. The
appellant’s mother became guardian in June 1948. It has to
be presumed that she would have known of the filing of the
award on that day. Anyway, she knew definitely on September
7, 1948, that an award had been filed and that she had to
file an objection. She took one month’s time on September
7, for filing the objection and again, one month’s time, on
October 7. She actually filed the objection on November 9.
If she be held to have notice of the filing of the award on
September 7, 1948, even then the filing of the objection on
November 9, 1948, was beyond the period of thirty days
prescribed in Art. 158 of the Limitation Act. We therefore
see no justification for the contention that the period of
limitation had not begun to run against the appellant and
that the objection filed on his behalf on November 9, 1948,
was within the period of limitation prescribed under Art.
158 of the First Schedule to the Limitation Act.
We therefore agree with the High Court that the intimation
to the pleaders of the parties on February 21, 1948,
amounted to service of the notice on the parties about the
filing of the award and that the objection filed on behalf
of the appellant was filed after the expiry of the period of
limitation.
The second question is whether the order of the Civil Judge
amounted to an order refusing to set aside the award and
therefore appealable to the High Court. The High Court hold
that it was not such an order and we agree. When no party
filed an objection
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558
praying for the setting aside of the award, no question of
refusing to set it aside can arise and therefore no appeal
was maintainable under s. 39(1)(VI) of the Arbitration Act
which allows an appeal against an order refusing to set
aside an award.
Lastly, it was submitted that the objection to the effect
that the award was illegal and without jurisdiction,
inasmuch as the arbitrator included in the award property
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which did not fall within the scope of his authority, should
have been considered by the trial Court. Such an objection
was not pressed before the trial Court and therefore the
High Court did not allow that objection to be taken before
it. We think that the High Court was right in not allowing
the objection to be raised since it, being not pressed in
the trial Court, will be presumed to have been given up.
We therefore see no force in this appeal and dismiss it with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.