Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2490 of 2004
PETITIONER:
M/s Hanil Era Textiles Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
M/s Puromatic Filters (P) Ltd.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/04/2004
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & G.P. Mathur
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
(Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No.5552 of 2002)
G.P. MATHUR,J.
1. Leave granted.
2. This appeal is directed against the judgment and order dated
21.12.2001 of the High Court of Delhi by which the appeal preferred by the
appellant against the order of rejection of the appellant’s application under
Order VII Rule 10 CPC passed by the Additional District Judge, Delhi on
28.3.1998 was dismissed.
3. The appellant Hanil Era Textiles Limited, New Era House, Mogul
Lane, Matunga (West), Bombay placed a purchase order bearing
No.CA/32/95 dated 31.5.1995 with M/s Puromatic Filters Pvt. Ltd. 25/100,
Yashwant Nagar, Goregaon (W), Bombay for supply of 136 numbers Coarse
Filters and 136 numbers Fine Filters. The purchase order was in following
terms :
"Dear Sir,
We are pleased to order the Material parts listed below
subject to terms, conditions and instructions, on the reverse hereof
and the attachments, if any hereto. Please acknowledge your
acceptance by returning the duplicate copy duly signed within one
week."
Thirty per cent of the amount was paid as advance. The delivery
instructions contained a clause \026 Deliver the material at NEW ERA
HOUSE/Patalganga Factory. The purchase order mentioned that the same
was subject to the terms and conditions mentioned thereon. Condition
No.17 reads as under :
"17. JURISDICTION
Any legal proceeding arising out of the order shall be
subject to the jurisdiction of the Courts in Mumbai."
According to the respondent, it dispatched the ordered materials to the
appellant through M/s Transport Corporation of India but the price thereof
was not paid. The respondent M/s Puromatic Filters Pvt. Ltd., 12,
D.S.I.D.C. Scheme-II, Okhla Industrial Area, Phase-II, New Delhi,
accordingly filed Suit No.162 of 1997 in the Court of District Judge, Delhi,
for recovery of Rs.3,93,344.80 and pendente lite and future interest at the
rate of 24 per cent per annum from the date of filing of the suit till the date
of realization of the decretal amount. The dispute in the present appeal is
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regarding the territorial jurisdiction of the Court at Delhi to try the suit and
para 8 of the plaint which contains the necessary averment in this regard is
reproduced hereinbelow :
"8. That the cause of action has arisen at Delhi as the ordered
goods were delivered to the defendant through their transporters
M/s Transport Corpn. of India Ltd., the value of goods was to
be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff at Delhi and as such
this Hon’ble Court is having jurisdiction to try and adjudicate
upon the matter in dispute."
4. The appellant (defendant in the suit) moved an application under
Section 20 read with Order VII Rule 10 and Section 151 CPC before the trial
Court praying that the plaint in Suit No.162 of 1997 be returned for
presentation before the Court having territorial jurisdiction in which the suit
should have been instituted. The main plea taken in the application was that
as per Clause 17 of the Local Purchase Order No.CA/32/95 dated 31.5.1995
any legal proceedings arising out of the order shall be subject to the
jurisdiction of the Courts in Bombay and the plaintiff having accepted the
terms and conditions of said Local Purchase Order, it was bound by the said
clause. It was also pleaded that notwithstanding the aforesaid clause 17 of
the purchase order, the contract for supply of coarse filters and fine filters
was entered into between the parties at Bombay and the advance payment of
Rs.1,16,353.44 was made by the defendant to the plaintiff at Bombay. The
respondent (plaintiff) filed a reply on the ground, inter alia, that the
defendant had issued a certificate for removal of excisable goods (Form CT-
3) bearing No.CCEX/KphII/HETL/95/116 dated 13.1.1996 vide which the
defendant sought permission to remove the ordered goods from the factory
premises of the plaintiff at Delhi and as such the Court at Delhi had
territorial jurisdiction to try the suit. The plaintiff also denied that it had
accepted the terms and conditions printed on the back of the purchase order
or is bound by clause 17. It was also submitted that the goods in question
were delivered to the agent of the defendant at Delhi from the factory
premises of the plaintiff at Delhi under certificate in Form CT-3.
5. The learned Additional District Judge, Delhi, held that in absence of
the written statement having been filed by the defendant, he had to decide
the controversy on the basis of the allegations made in the plaint and
especially when the plaintiff had asserted that the goods were delivered to
the defendant at Delhi on the basis of Form CT-3, the Court at Delhi had
territorial jurisdiction to try the suit. The appeal preferred by the appellant
against the said order was dismissed by the High Court on 21.12.2001.
6. There is no dispute that the appellant placed the order for supply of
136 coarse filters and 136 fine filters with the respondent (plaintiff) vide
Purchase Order No.CA/32/95 at Bombay on 31.5.1995 and that an advance
payment of Rs.1,16,353.44 was also made at Bombay. According to the
averments made in the plaint, the appellant (defendant) sent Form CT-3 and
thereafter the plaintiff dispatched the goods from their factory in Delhi
through M/s Transport Corporation of India, as per the directions of the
defendant. Original documents were sent to the branch office of the plaintiff
at 25/100, Yashwant Nagar, Goregaon (W), Bombay but the defendant did
not retire the documents from the branch office of the plaintiff and illegally
and unauthorisedly took the delivery of the goods from Transport
Corporation of India. These averments show that the offer to purchase the
goods was made by the defendant at Bombay and the same was accepted by
the plaintiff’s branch office at Bombay. The advance payment was also
made by the defendant at Bombay. Thus, a part of cause of action accrued
at Bombay. According to the plaintiff, the goods were dispatched from
Delhi through M/s Transport Corporation of India Ltd. after receipt of Form
CT-3, which was sent by the defendant. In this manner, the plaintiff claims
that a part of cause of action accrued in Delhi.
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7. The effect of Clause 17 of the Purchase Order which mentions \026 any
legal proceedings arising out of the order shall be subject to the jurisdiction
of the Courts in Mumbai, has to be examined in the aforesaid background.
Under sub-sections (a) and (b) of Section 20, the place of residence of the
defendant or where he carries on business or works for gain is determinative
of the local limits of jurisdiction of the Court in which the suit is to be
instituted. Sub-section (c) of Section 20 provides that the suit shall be
instituted in a Court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the cause of
action, wholly or in part, accrues. As shown above, in the present case, a
part of cause of action had accrued in both the places, viz., Delhi and
Bombay. In Hakam Singh v. Gammon (India) Ltd. 1971 (1) SCC 286, it
was held that it is not open to the parties to confer by their agreement
jurisdiction on a Court which it does not possess under the Code. But
where two Courts or more have under the Code of Civil Procedure
jurisdiction to try a suit or a proceeding, an agreement between the parties
that the dispute between them shall be tried in one of such Courts is not
contrary to public policy. It was also held that such an agreement does not
contravene Section 28 of the Contract Act.
8. The same question was examined in considerable detail in A.B.C.
Laminart Pvt. Ltd. v. A.P. Agencies AIR 1989 SC 1239 (headnote D) and it
was held as under :
"When the Court has to decide the question of
jurisdiction pursuant to an ouster clause it is necessary to
construe the ousting expression or clause properly. Often
the stipulation is that the contract shall be deemed to have
been made at a particular place. This would provide the
connecting factor for jurisdiction to the Courts of that
place in the matter of any dispute on or arising out of that
contract. It would not, however, ipso facto take away
jurisdiction of other Courts. Where an ouster clause
occurs, it is pertinent to see whether there is ouster of
jurisdiction of other Courts. When the clause is clear,
unambiguous and specific accepted notions of contract
would bind the parties and unless the absence of ad idem
can be shown, the other Courts should avoid exercising
jurisdiction. As regards construction of the ouster clause
when words like ’alone’, ’only’, ’exclusive’ and the like
have been used there may be no difficulty. Even without
such words in appropriate cases the maxim ’expressio
unius est exclusio alterius’\026 expression of one is the
exclusion of another \026 may be applied. What is an
appropriate case shall depend on the facts of the case. In
such a case mention of one thing may imply exclusion of
another. When certain jurisdiction is specified in a
contract an intention to exclude all other from its
operation may in such cases be inferred. It has therefore
to be properly construed."
This view has been reiterated in Angile Insulations v. Davy Ashmore
India Ltd. 1995 (4) SCC 153.
9. Clause 17 says - any legal proceedings arising out of the order shall be
subject to the jurisdiction of the Courts in Mumbai. The clause is no doubt
not qualified by the words like "alone", "only" or "exclusively".
Therefore, what is to be seen is whether in the facts and circumstances of the
present case, it can be inferred that the jurisdiction of all other Courts except
Courts in Mumbai is excluded. Having regard to the fact that the order was
placed by the defendant at Bombay, the said order was accepted by the
branch office of the plaintiff at Bombay, the advance payment was made by
the defendant at Bombay, and as per the plaintiffs’ case the final payment
was to be made at Bombay, there was a clear intention to confine the
jurisdiction of the Courts in Bombay to the exclusion of all other Courts.
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The Court of Additional District Judge, Delhi had, therefore, no territorial
jurisdiction to try the suit.
10. In the result, the appeal succeeds and is hereby allowed. The order
dated 28.3.1997 of the Additional District Judge, Delhi as affirmed by the
order dated 21.12.2001 by the Delhi High Court is set aside. The plaint
filed by the respondent herein is ordered to be returned for presentation
before the competent Court at Bombay. No costs.