Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
J.K. JAIN & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DELHI DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/09/1995
BENCH:
SINGH N.P. (J)
BENCH:
SINGH N.P. (J)
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 318 1995 SCC (6) 571
JT 1995 (7) 409 1995 SCALE (5)625
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
N.P. SINGH. J
Leave granted.
The appellants have questioned the validity of the
order, passed by the High Court, rejecting the claim of the
appellants that there was no agreement between the
appellants and the respondent - Delhi Development Authority,
(hereinafter referred to as ‘the respondent’) to refer the
dispute between them to an Arbitrator.
The appellant No.4-M/s Jain Rolling Mills is a
registered partnership firm and the appellant No.1
(hereinafter referred to as ‘the appellant’) is the Managing
Partner. The respondent issued a notice inviting tenders for
supply of steel bars of various diametres to the extent of
20,000 Mt. Tonnes. The appellant obtained a tender form from
the said respondent on 16.11.1982. The tender was submitted
alongwith a covering letter dated 18.11.1982. After
negotiations, the tender was accepted only for supply of
10.000 Mt. Tonnes of steel bars of various diametres. A
formal agreement was executed. Thereafter some dispute arose
between the parties and it appears that the respondent vide
its letter dated 23.10.1984 rescinded and annulled the
contract for the balance quantity of 3512.285 tonnes. The
Engineer Member of the authority in purported exercise of
the powers under clause 14 of the agreement, appointed an
Arbitrator to make an Award relating to the disputes between
the appellant and the respondent. An Original Miscellaneous
Petition was filed before the Delhi High Court on behalf of
the appellants challenging the appointment of an Arbitrator
on the ground that appellants were not party to any
Arbitration Agreement. That petition was dismissed by a
learned single Judge. On appeal being filed the Division
Bench came to the conclusion that in view of Clause 14 of
the agreement any dispute between the parties had to be
referred to an Arbitrator to be appointed by the respondent.
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In the agreement which was entered into between the
appellants and the respondent it was stated:-
"WHEREAS the Contractor has submitted
tender for the work "Supplying and
stocking of Cold Twisted deformed Steel
Bars Conforming to IS: 1786-1979 of
various dias at any D.D.A. Stores in
Delhi/New Delhi" and the same has been
acepted by the Authority on the terms
and condition contained in the tender
forms and conditions attached herewith
in the letter of acceptance dated the
27.12.82.
NOW THIS DEED WITNESS AS UNDER:
That the terms and conditions contained
in the tender form and conditions of the
contract attached to this deed, and also
the letter of acceptane dated the
27.12.82 shall be binding between the
parties."
To that very agreement, the tender form with the heading
‘Tender and Contract for supply of materials’ was enclosed.
The tender form has an endorsement "issued to M/s Jain
Rolling Mills", signed by the Executive Engineer, Housing
Division, on 16.11.1982. Appellant has signed the agreement
aforesaid and the different pages of the tender form on
behalf of appellant No.4, the firm. The Executive Engineer
has signed on behalf of the respondent. Paragraph 14 of the
said tender form contains the arbitration clause, saying
that ’except where otherwise provided in the contract all
question and disputes relating to the meaning of the
specifications, designs, drawings and instructions,
hereinbefore mentioned and as to the quality of workmanship
or materials used on the work or to any other question,
claim, right matter or thing whatsoever, in any way arising
out of or relating to the contract, designs drawings
specifiation, estimates instruction orders or these
conditions or otherwise concerning the works or the
executions on failure to execute the same whether arising
during the progress of the work or after the completion or
abandonment thereof shall be referred to the sole
arbitration of the person appointed by the Engineer Member,
DDA at the time of dispute....’
The stand of the appellants is that the said clause
shall not be deemed to be a part of the agreement, inasmuch
as it is only part of the tender form which is issued to
every contractor intending to supply materials to the
respondent. It is just general rules for the guidance of the
contractors. It may be pointed out that the notice inviting
tenders clearly stated ’Contract documents consisting of the
detailed plans, complete specifications, the schedule of
quantities of the various classes of work to be done and the
set of conditions of contract to be complied with the person
whose tenders may be accepted will also be found printed in
the form of tenders, can be seen/purchased at the Divisional
office between the hours of 11 A.M. and 4 P.M. every day,
except on Sundays and Public Holidays’ (emphasis supplied).
From the notice inviting tenders it is apparent, that to
whomsoever the contract was to be allotted, the conditions
in the printed form of tender had to be complied with. It
appears because of the aforesaid condition mentioned in the
notice inviting tenders, at the time of the execution of the
agreement, the appellant, the Managing Partner, on behalf of
the firm signed each page of the said form of tender
including the last page. On behalf of the respondent, it has
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been signed by the Executive Engineer and the form of tender
has been attached to the agreement referred to above. In the
agreement it has been clearly stated that the terms and
conditions contained in the tender form and the conditions
of the contract attached to the said deed and also the
letter of acceptance dated 27.12.1982 shall be binding
between the parties. The effect of the aforesaid agreement
shall be that the tender form and conditions of the contract
attached to the said deed to agreement including the letter
of acceptance dated 27.12.1982 shall be deemed to be the
part of the agreement between the appellants and the
respondent including that in event of dispute in respect of
any claim, right or matter or thing whatsoever in any way
arising out of or relating to the contract shall be referred
to the sole arbitration of the person appointed by the
Engineer Member of the respondent.
The learned counsel appearing for the appellants
submitted that the expression ’Tender Form’ mentioned in the
agreement does not refer to the aforesaid form relating to
’tender and contract for supply of materials’ in which there
is an arbitration clause, rather it refers to form No.9
which had been filled up by the appellants saying that they
had submitted their tender for supply to the respondent,
materials described therein within time specified ’subject
to the conditions of the contract’. Towards the end of that
form under heading ’Specification and Additional Conditions’
details of the steel bars to be supplied and that ISI test
certificate in original to be given along with each
consignment etc. have been mentioned.
On the direction being given by Court the original
agreement alongwith all documents attached thereto were
produced on behalf of the respondent. The form of tender in
which clause 14 contains condition regarding referring the
disputes to the arbitration, as well as the form No.9 on
which reliance has been placed on behalf of the appellants
are attached to the agreement and as such both shall be
deemed to be the part of the agreement. These documents have
been signed on behalf of the appellants and the respondent.
In the agreement, a clear and specific statement has been
made that the terms and conditions contained in the tender
form shall be binding between the parties, which shall
include the condition in clause 14 thereof, to refer any
dispute to an Arbitrator to be appointed by the Engineer
Member of the respondent.
It is true that there must be an arbitration agreement,
to confer jurisdiction on the Arbitrator to hear and decide
the dispute. Where there is no such agreement there is an
initial want of jurisdiction. That is why it has been
impressed by Courts that one of the essential ingredients of
submission to arbitration is that the parties should agree
that the dispute should be determined by an Arbitrator.
Where there is an arbitration clause in a contract, it
amounts to two contracts into one, one relating to the
execution of the work entrusted in the manner prescribed and
the other how to resolve the dispute in event any such
dispute arises in respect of the said contract. Whenever one
party to the dispute asserts that there is an arbitration
agreement by which the parties had agreed to refer the
dispute to an Arbitrator which is disputed and challenged by
the other party to the agreement, it has to be examined and
determined. To constitute "an arbitration agreement" it is
not necessary that there should be a formal agreement or
that the terms should all be contained in one document. All
that is necessary that from documents it must appear that
parties had agreed to submit present or future differences
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to arbitration.
Section 2(a) of the Arbitration Act defines
’arbitration agreement’ to mean a written agreement to
submit present or future differences to arbitration, whether
an arbitrator is named therein or not. But when Section 2(a)
while defining ’arbitration agreement’ speaks about a
written agreement to submit present or future differences to
the arbitration, it is not necessary that it should also be
signed by the parties like any formal agreement relating to
a contract. In the case of Jugal Kishore Rameshwardas vs.
Mrs. Goolbai Hormusji, AIR 1955 SC 812 = 1955 (2) SCR 857,
it was said:
"But it is settled law that to
constitute an arbitration agreement in
writing it is not necessary that it
should be signed by the parties, and
that it is sufficient if the terms, are
reduced to writing and the agreement of
the parties thereto is established."
It was said in the case of Banarsi Das vs. Cane
Commissisoner, AIR 1963 SC 1417 = 1963 (2) SCR 760:
"It may be pointed out that the
arbitration clause in the agreement was
enforceable if agreed to, even without
the signature of the appellant as it is
a settled law that to constitute an
arbitration agreement in writing it is
not necesary that it should be signed by
the parties and it is sufficient if the
terms are reduced to writing and the
agreement of the parties thereto is
established."
In the case of Union of India vs. A.L.Rallia Ram, AIR
1963 SC 1685 = 1964 (3) SCR 164, it was said:
"A writing incorporating a valid
agreement to submit differences to
arbitration is therefore requisite: it
is however not a condition of an
effective arbitration agreement that it
must be incorporated in a formal
agreement executed by both the parties
thereto, nor is it required to be signed
by the parties. There must be an
agreement to submit present or future
differences to arbitration, this
agreement must be in writing, and must
be accepted by the parties."
In Commercial Arbitration by Mustill & Boyd, second
edition at page 105, it has been stated:
"...the parties need not set out the
terms of their arbitration agreement in
the contract itself. It is sufficient
for the clause to be incorporated by
reference either to a standard form of
clause or to a set of trade terms which
themselves include provisions requiring
disputes to be submitted to arbitration.
Nor need the contract itself be
contained in a single document."
As already pointed out above, so far the present case
is concerned, the arbitration clause has not been included
in the agreement itself. But it shall be deemed to be part
of the agreement because the agreement specifically says
that the terms and conditions contained in the tender form
shall be binding between the parties which obviously will
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include clause 14 of the tender form, which admittedly
requires any dispute between the parties to be referred to
an arbitration. The other special feature of the present
case is that each page of the tender form which forms part
of the agreement has been signed by the appellant, on behalf
of the firm and the Executive Engineer on behalf of the
respondent. A mere denial of the existence of the contract
of arbitration by one party does not denude the arbitrator
of jurisdiction. The Arbitrator gets jurisdiction to decide
the disputes on basis of the agreement to refer such
disputes and not by its acceptance or denial. The objection
on behalf of the appellants, that there was no condition in
the main agreement to refer the disputes to arbitration can
be accepted only if it is held that the different terms and
conditions mentioned in the tender form are not binding on
the parties, because parties never agreed to those terms and
conditions, while entering into a contract. But the fact
about which there is no dispute, is that both the parties
had signed the tender form in token of having accepted the
terms and conditions mentioned therein including about
reference of disputes, if any, to an Arbitrator. They had
also agreed in the main agreement,that the terms and
conditions contained in the tender form shall be binding
between the parties. In this background, it is difficult for
us to comprehend as to how it can be held that the
appellants had never agreed to refer any dispute arising
between the parties to an Arbitrator in terms of Clause 14
of the tender form.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed. There
shall be no order as to costs.