Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Arbitration Petition 11 of 2006
PETITIONER:
M/s Delta Mechcons (India) Ltd
RESPONDENT:
M/s Marubeni Corporation
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/05/2007
BENCH:
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
O R D E R
ARBITRATION PETITION NO.11 OF 2006
The respondent took up the project of construction of a thermal
power plant at Ramagundam in Karimnagar District of the State of Andhra
Pradesh. It entered into four sub-contracts with the petitioner relating to that
work. The general conditions of sub-contracts were to be part of the four
separate contracts. The sub-contracts were terminated on 25.7.2001 with
effect from 7.8.2001. It appears that there were subsequent discussions
between the parties and on the basis of ascertainment of the sums due to the
petitioner the same were paid by the respondent and the petitioner in return
gave in writing that it had received full and final payment from the
respondent in terms of the settlement between the two and also a certificate
that all payments against the said four sub-contracts have been made by the
respondent to the petitioner and received by the petitioner and that no bills
are pending with the respondent for settlement. After the matters rested on
this basis, the petitioner made a claim in respect of the four sub-contracts.
The petitioner also named an arbitrator and called upon the respondent to
name an arbitrator in terms of the arbitration agreement. The respondent
disputed the claims of the petitioner and pleaded that there was no subsisting
claim for the petitioner based on any of the four sub-contracts. Even then
without prejudice to its contentions the respondent also named an arbitrator.
In terms of the arbitration agreement, the two nominated arbitrators had
together to name the Chairman of the Arbitral Tribunal or the presiding
arbitrator. The nominated arbitrators failed to do so.
2. Meanwhile the petitioner had also moved the concerned District
Court under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act seeking what
it called interim protection pending an arbitration. Four separate
applications were filed. The applications were dismissed by the District
Court. The petitioner filed appeals in the High Court of Gujarat. The High
Court disposed of the appeals recording the following:
"After having argued at some length, learned counsel on both
sides agreed and submitted that the main dispute between the
parties is the subject-matter of separate arbitration proceedings
and at this stage it may not be necessary or advisable to invite
observations of this Court as regards the legality and validity of
any of the claims or liability of any of the parties to satisfy such
claims. It was, therefore, jointly submitted that all the appeals
may be disposed as withdrawn with the observation that the
parties may put forward their case before the arbitral tribunal,
which may decide the dispute referred to it without being
influenced by any observation made in the impugned judgment
as also the fact that these appeals were not pressed for any
orders on merits."
3. The relevant clauses relating to arbitration, as contained in the
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agreement between the parties are as under:
"21. SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
If at any time any question, dispute, or difference arise between
the Contractor and the Subcontractor in connection with or
arising out of the Subcontract or the Subcontract Works, either
party shall give to the other notice in writing specifying the
nature of such question, dispute or difference and the point at
issue, and the parties shall discuss the matter and shall
endeavour to reach an amicable settlement. In case parties fail
to reach an amicable solution within sixty (60) days after the
date of the said notice, the matter shall be referred to an
arbitration in accordance with Clause 22 hereof.
22. ARBITRATION
22.1 Any dispute which could not be resolved between the
parties in accordance with clause 21 hereof shall be settled
exclusively by arbitration conducted in accordance with the
Rules of Concilation and Arbitration of the International
Chamber of Commerce. Each arbitral tribunal shall consist of
three arbitrators. The Contractor and the sub-contractor shall
each appoint one arbitrator and the two arbitrators thus
appointed shall jointly agree upon the third arbitrator to act as
chairman. If such agreement cannot be reached within thirty
(30) days from the date of appointment of the later member, the
third arbitrator shall be appointed by the International Chamber
of Commerce. The said Chairman shall not be the same
nationality of either party to the sub-contract.
22.2 The arbitration shall be conducted in India
22.3 The language to be used on all written documents
provided in each arbitration shall be English.
22.4 The decision of the arbitral tribunal shall be
considered final and binding upon both parties and shall not be
subject to any appeal whatsoever.
22.5 The cost and expenses of arbitration shall be borne by the
party based on the award of the arbitral tribunal.
22.6 Performance of the sub-contract work shall continue
during the arbitration proceedings notwithstanding the
existence of any dispute, controversy or question."
4. When the named arbitrators failed to nominate a presiding
arbitrator, the petitioner approached the International Chamber of Commerce
(for short ICC) with a request that the presiding arbitrator may be nominated
by the ICC. There was some correspondence between the ICC and the
parties and ultimately the ICC informed the petitioner that the ICC had
decided not to appoint a Chairman of the arbitral tribunal pursuant to the
rules of ICC as appointing authority. It was in that context that the petitioner
approached this Court with this application under Section 11 of the
Arbitration and Conciliation Act.
5. Learned counsel for the petitioner submitted that going by the
arbitration agreement the petitioner and the respondent have nominated their
arbitrators but the nominee arbitrators had failed to appoint a presiding
arbitrator in terms thereof and in that context, as per the agreement, the
petitioner had approached the ICC for nominating a presiding arbitrator but
the ICC had refused the request without assigning any reason. In that
context it was submitted that the jurisdiction of the Chief Justice of India ---
being an international arbitration --- under the Act was attracted and it was
just and necessary to appoint a presiding arbitrator in terms of Section 11 of
the Act. This argument is controverted by the respondent, in addition to
pleading on the merits that there was no subsisting claim for the petitioner
and that the arbitration is barred by limitation, by contending that the
petitioner had not complied with the procedure set down by the ICC before
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calling upon ICC to name the presiding arbitrator and in that context the
jurisdiction of the Chief Justice of India under Section 11 of the Act is not
attracted. It was also contended that there were four sub-contracts and a
single application for the appointment of a presiding arbitrator in respect of
the disputes relating to four different contracts was not maintainable. It
was for the petitioner to have agreed to follow the ICC Rules and to comply
with those rules so as to get an arbitrator appointed by the ICC in terms of
their Rules and the petitioner having failed to do so, the application filed by
the petitioner had only to be rejected. The arbitration agreement clearly
provides that disputes between the parties are to be settled exclusively by an
arbitration conducted in accordance with the Rules of Conciliation and
Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. It is hence
submitted that the petitioner not having adhered to the said Rules, ICC was
not justified in refusing to act.
6. It is true that there is a clause that the arbitration is to be
conducted in terms of the Conciliation and Arbitration Rules of ICC. But it
also provides that the arbitral tribunal shall consist of three arbitrators. The
contractor and the sub-contractor had to each appoint one arbitrator and the
two arbitrators thus appointed, should jointly agree upon the third arbitrator
as Chairman. If such agreement be not reached within the time provided, the
third arbitrator shall be appointed by the ICC. The Chairman was not to be
of the same nationality of either party to the sub-contract. The arbitration
agreement has to be read as a whole to know its purport.
7. It is open to the parties while entering into an arbitration
agreement to provide as to how the arbitral tribunal should be constituted. It
is also open to them to provide for the rules to be followed. As I read the
arbitration agreement, I find that the parties had reserved unto themselves
the right to nominate an arbitrator each stipulating that the two arbitrators so
nominated, should agree upon the third arbitrator to act as the Chairman. In
other words, the parties by their agreement have left it to the two arbitrators
to appoint a third arbitrator to act as the Chairman. They have also agreed
that in case of failure of the two arbitrators to appoint the third arbitrator, the
third arbitrator was to be appointed by ICC. The parties had also provided
that the arbitration should be conducted in accordance with the Rules of
Conciliation and Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce.
8. It was the contention of learned senior counsel for the
respondent that once the machinery contemplated by the parties failed, the
petitioner could only go by way of the Rules of Conciliation and Arbitration
of the International Chamber of Commerce and the petitioner not having
proceeded in terms of the said Rules, the ICC was justified in not appointing
a presiding arbitrator and in that context no cause of action has arisen for the
petitioner for approaching this Court. As I read the arbitration agreement it
consists of two parts. Firstly, the parties have agreed that the arbitration
should be conducted in accordance with the Rules of Conciliation and
Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. Having agreed to
that, the parties also have agreed on the mode of creating the arbitral
tribunal. This is by the parties nominating one arbitrator each and the
nominated arbitrators appointing the Chairman of the tribunal or the
presiding arbitrator. They have contemplated the failure of the nominee
arbitrators to name the Chairman or the presiding arbitrator and they have
provided the means for supplying that omission. They have agreed that in
that case, the presiding arbitrator should be got appointed by the ICC.
According to me, the agreement to follow the Rules of ICC in the conduct of
arbitration proceedings is different from the agreement regarding
appointment of the arbitral tribunal. There is no obligation on the parties to
undertake before the ICC, to have the arbitration in accordance with its
procedure and Rules including even the constitution of the arbitral tribunal,
for the ICC to act to appoint the Chairman of the arbitral tribunal. In fact,
except stating that it refuses to appoint a presiding arbitrator, the ICC has not
given any specific reason for refusing to do so. Nor am I in agreement with
the submission of learned senior counsel for the respondent that unless the
parties surrender their rights of creating the arbitral tribunal to the ICC in
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toto the ICC would be justified in refusing to name the presiding arbitrator.
After all, the process of settlement of disputes through arbitration is a
process of settlement extra cursum curiae and the parties are at liberty to
choose their judge and in the case on hand, the parties have provided the
manner of constituting the tribunal. Therefore, no invalidity is attached to
their agreement. They had agreed to approach ICC in case the nominated
arbitrators failed to name the Chairman. One of the parties had moved ICC
to supply the omission in terms of the arbitration agreement. The ICC for its
own reasons has filed to act. I have, therefore, come to the conclusion that
the named arbitrators have failed to nominate a presiding arbitrator in terms
of the agreement and in that respect the ICC has not supplied the vacancy
approached in terms of the agreement. In that context the procedure agreed
upon by the parties to constitute the arbitration tribunal has broken down
justifying the approach of the petitioner to the Chief Justice of India for the
appointment of a Chairman for the arbitral tribunal or the presiding
arbitrator.
9. I do not see much merit in the contention of learned senior
counsel for the respondent that there should have been four separate
applications for appointment of the presiding arbitrators since four sub-
contracts were involved. Even assuming that the contention has merit, I
reject it as being too technical.
10. There was not much argument before me on the merits
concerning non-subsistence of any further claim for the petitioner and the
request being barred by limitation. The parties proceeded on the basis that
those were questions for the arbitral tribunal to decide. This might have
been so particularly in the context of the stand adopted by them in the High
Court of Gujarat in the appeals arising from the orders of the District Court
in the applications under Section 9 of the Act. These questions have tobe
decided by the arbitral tribunal, in the circumstances of this case.
11. As per the arbitration agreement the Chairman of the arbitral
tribunal has to be of a nationality different from the nationality of the
contracting parties. Learned counsel for the petitioner contended that since
the arbitrator was being appointed by the Chief Justice of India or his
nominee in terms of Section 11 of the Act, this restriction would not apply
and I was free to appoint anyone as Chairman or the presiding arbitrator. I
am not in a position to agree. In the light of my reasoning above, it is
obvious that this part of the agreement between the parties must also be
given effect to. Therefore, this is a case where I have to appoint a Chairman
of the arbitral tribunal who is of a nationality different from the nationality
of either of the parties. Suffice it to say that for the moment I hold that my
jurisdiction to name a Chairman of the arbitral tribunal has rightly been
invoked and that a Chairman of the arbitral tribunal has to be appointed by
me.
12. To enable me to name the Chairman, I direct, the parties either
to submit an agreed name with the consent of that person or in case they are
not able to agree, submit two names each with the consent of the nominees,
for being considered for appointment as the Chairman of the arbitral
tribunal. The parties are, therefore, directed to file either a joint statement or
separate statements in writing indicating the names as directed above on or
before the 10th of July, 2007 and the matter will be posted for further orders
on 13th July, 2007.