Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDIAN RAYON CORPN. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAUNAQ & COMPANY PVT. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/08/1988
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 2054 1988 SCR Supl. (2) 231
1988 SCC (4) 31 JT 1988 (3) 482
1988 SCALE (2)739
ACT:
Arbitration Act, 1940: ss. 14 & 30: Award-Application
for setting aside of-Time for-30 days from service of notice
of filing of award by Court-Statutory requirement-Filing of
award in proper Court and intimation thereof by Court or its
office-Notice need not be in writing-Can be communicated in
any form.
%
Limitation Act, 1963: Article 119(b)-Award-Application
for setting aside of-Time for-30 days from service of notice
of filing of award by Court or its office.
HEADNOTE:
Section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act, 1940 enjoins the
arbitrator or the umpire to give notice to the parties of
filing of the award. Under clause (b) of Article 119 of the
Limitation Act, 1963, the time for making an application for
setting aside an award or getting an award remitted for
reconsideration is thirty days from the date of service of
the notice of the filing of the award.
The award was filed in the court on 4th February, 1977.
The respondent affirmed an affidavit on 29th November, 1977
to that effect and prayed that a notice be issued and served
on the appellant. Thereafter a Master’s Summons was taken
out by the respondent on 10th January, 1978 using the said
affidavit as the ground for the prayers. On 4th February,
1978 the appellant filed an affidavit stating that the award
had been wrongly filed in the High Court and it should be
taken off the file. On 3rd May, 1978 an order was passed as
prayed in the affidavit and the Master’s Summons, and on
July 30, 1981 a notice under s. 14(2) of the Act was served
on the appellant.
The appellant applied for certified copy of the award on
18th August, 1981 and received the same on lst September,
1981. It made an application under s. 30 of the Act on 8th
September, 1981 for setting aside of the award. The High
Court held that the notice was served prior to 30th July,
1981 and as such the application was barred by lapse of
time.
PG NO 232
Dismissing the appeal by special leave,
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HELD: In order to be effective both for the purpose of
the judgment in terms of an award and for setting aside the
award, the award must be filed in the proper court. There
must be service of notice or intimation or communication of
the filing of the said award by the court to the parties. If
all these factors are established or are present, the mode
of service of the notice would be irrelevant. It need not
necessarily be in writing. If the substance is clear the
form of the notice is irrelevant but the notice of award
having been filed in the court, is necessary. The filing in
the court is necessary and the intimation thereof by the
Registry of the court to the parties concerned is essential.
Beyond this there is no statutory requirement of any
technical nature under s. 14(2) of the Arbitration Act.
[234D]
It is upon the date of service of such notice that the
period of limitation begins and as at present under clause
(b) of Art. 119 of the Limitation Act, 1963 the limitation
expires on the expiry of the thirty days of the service of
that notice for an application for setting aside of the
award. l236F]
In the instant case, on 4th February, 1978 an affidavit
had been filed in the High Court, stating on behalf of the
appellant that the award had been wrongly filed in that
Court. The appellant had, therefore, acknowledged that it
had notice of the said filing communicated to it by the
Court. The notice can thus be attributed to have been served
on the appellant either on 3rd or 4th February, I978, prior
to 30th July, 1981. If that is the position then the
application for setting, aside of the award was clearly
barred by lapse of time. [234C, 236B-H, 237A]
Nilkantha Shidramappa Ningashetti v. Kashinath Somanna
Ningashetti & Ors., [1962] 2 SCR 551 and Dewan Singh v.
Champat Singh & Ors., [1970] 2 SCR 903 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2746 of
1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 25.8.1987 of the
Calcutta High Court in Appeal from Original Order No. 158 of
1982.
D. Bhandari for the Appellant.
S.K. Dholakia and Vineet Kumar for the Respondent.
PG NO 233
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. Special leave granted. The
appeal is disposed of by the order herein.
This appeal is directed against the judgment and order
of the Division Bench of the High Court of Calcutta, dated
25th August, 1987, dismissing the application for setting
aside the award, on the ground that the said application was
barred by lapse of time. The award in this case was filed in
the High Court on 4th February, 1977. The respondent
affirmed an affidavit on 29th November, 1977 stating that
the award had been filed in the Court on 4th February, 1977
and Prayed that a notice be issued and served on the
appellant so that the judgment in terms of the award could
be passed.
On 10th January, 1978 the respondent’s advocate-on-
record took out a Master’s Summons and used the aforesaid
affidavit as the ground for the prayers which were made in
the summons. On lst February, 1978 M/s. Khaitan & Company,
solicitors, on behalf of the appellant, filed a Vakalatnama
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and a requisition in the department of the High Court for
searching the records in this case. On 2nd February, 1978,
M/s. Khaitan & Co. searched the records of the High Court of
Calcutta. On 4th February, 1978, the appellant filed an
affidavit stating that the award had been wrongly filed in
the High Court of Calcutta and it should be taken off the
file.
On 3rd May, 1978 an order was passed as prayed in the
affidavit and the Master’s Summons, and on 30th July, 1981,
a notice under Section l4(2) of the Arbitration Act, 1940
(hereinafter called ‘the Act’) was served on the appellant.
Section 14(2) of the Act enjoins the arbitrator or the
umpire to give notice to the parties of filing of the award
in order to facilitate the passing of the order thereon.
On 18th August, 1981, the appellant applied for a
certified copy of the award and the application for setting
aside the award under Section 30 of the Act, was filed on
8th September, 1981. Under clause (b) of Article 119 of the
Limitation Act, 1963 the time for setting aside an award or
getting an award remitted for reconsideration is 30 days
from the date of the service of the notice of the filing of
the award. Hence, there must be filing of the award in
Court. A notice must be given to the party/parties concerned
of such filing of the award in the Court and on the expiry
of 30 days from the service of the said notice limitation
for setting aside an award expires. ln this case, it appears
PG NO 234
that the appellant applied for a certified copy of the award
on 18th August, 1981 and on lst September, 1981, the
appellant received the certified copy from the Court. The
application under Section 30 of the Act, for setting aside
the award was made on 8th September, 1981. Hence, if the
date of service of the notice of the filing of award be 30th
July, 1981, then in the events that have happened as
narrated above, indisputably the application was within
time. If, however, the notice is attributed to have been
served prior to that date then the application was barred by
lapse of time. The High Court held that the notice in this
case was served prior to 30th July, l981.
It appears as mentioned before that on 4th February,
1978 an affidavit had been filed in the High Court, stating
on behalf of the appellant that the award had been wrongly
filed in that Court. The appellant has, therefore,
acknowledged that the award had been filed and a notice was
issued to it in respect of the said award. ln our opinion,
this conclusion irresistibly follows from the narration of
events mentioned hereinbefore. ln order to be effective both
for the purpose of obtaining the judgment in terms of the
award and for setting aside the award, the award must be
filed in the Court. There must be service of notice or
intimation or communication of the filing of the said award
by the Court to the parties. If all these factors are
established or are present, the mode of service of the
notice would be irrelevant. If the substance is clear, the
form of the notice is irrelevant but the notice of the award
having been filed in the court, is necessary. The filing in
the Court is necessary and the intimation thereof by the
Registry of the Court to the parties concerned, is
essential. Beyond this there is no statutory requirement of
any technical nature under Section 14(2) of the Act.
This conclusion, in our opinion, irresistibly follows
from the principles enunciated by this Court in Nilkantha
Shidramappa Ningashetti v. Kashinath Sommanna Ningashetti &
Ors., [1962] 2 SCR 551 where this Court held that the
communication by the Court to the parties concerned or their
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counsel, of the information that an award has been filed was
sufficient compliance with the requirements of sub-section
(2) of Section 14 of the Act. ln the aforesaid decision this
Court reiterated that the notice need not necessarily mean
"communication in writing". The expression "give notice" in
sub-section (2) of Section 14 of the Act simply means giving
intimation of the filing of the award. Such intimation need
not be given in writing and could be communicated orally or
otherwise. That would amount to service of the notice when
no particular mode was specified. Elaborating the aforesaid
PG NO 235
principles this Court at page 555 of the said report
observed as follows:
"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 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."
The aforesaid question was again examined from a
slightly different angle later in Dewan Singh v. Champat
Singh & Ors., [1970] 2 SCR 903 where this Court while
dealing with Article 158 of the Limitation Act, 1908 which
was the previous Article corresponding to clause (b) of
Article 119 of the Limitation Act, 1963, held that the said
PG NO 236
Article gave 30 days’ time for applying to set aside the
award; from the date of service of the notice of the filing
of the award. As mentioned hereinbefore, the notice of the
service of the award may be communicated in any form. It
need not necessarily be in writing. If that is the position
in law then in view of the facts of this case the conclusion
would irresistibly be that the notice was served at least
either on 3rd or 4th February, 1978 because at that time
the appellant had acknowledged that the award had been filed
in view of the affidavit filed by it in the High Court of
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Calcutta and that the award had been filed in a wrong Court,
according to the appellant, and that he had notice of the
said filing communicated to him by the Court. That would be
natural and ordinary inference to draw from the conduct of
the parties as narrated before. lf that is the position then
the application, in our opinion, for setting aside the award
was, indisputably, barred by limitation.
Counsel for the appellant, however, drew our attention
to the statement recorded by the High Court where it was
stated as follows:
"The learned counsel for both parties have agreed the
service of notice under section 14(2) of the Arbitration Act
is a mandatory provision and an application for setting
aside of the award shall not be time barred so long as the
aforesaid notice is not served."
It was, however, submitted on behalf of the appellant
that there cannot be any concession on a question of law. We
are of the opinion that this concession does not, as such,
help the parties very much. The fact that the parties have
notice of the filing of the award, is not enough. The notice
must be served by the Court. We reiterate again that there
must be (a) filing of the award in the proper court; (b)
service of the notice by the court or its officer to the
parties concerned; and (c) such notice need not necessarily
be in writing. It is upon the date of service of such notice
that the period of limitation begins and as at present under
clause (b) of Article 119 of the Act, the limitation expires
on the expiry of the thirty days of the service of that
notice for an application for setting aside of the award.
The importance of the matter, which need be emphasised, is
the service of the notice by the Court. It is not the method
of the service that is important or relevant. In this case
as both the Courts have, in fact, found that the notice was
issued and served and, in our opinion, that finding is based
on cogent material and relevant evidence, prior to 30th
July, 1981, the application made in this case was clearly
barred by lapse of time.
PG NO 237
We find, therefore, no ground to interfere with the
decision of the High Court. The appeal accordingly fails and
is dismissed without any order as to costs.
P.S.S. Appeal dismissed.