Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. JETHANAND AND SONS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/02/1961
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 794 1961 SCR (3) 754
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC1484 (6)
R 1967 SC1344 (12)
D 1967 SC1440 (8)
D 1968 SC 733 (6)
R 1971 SC2319 (1)
ACT:
Appeal to Supreme Court--Certificate of fitness by High
Court--Remand order, if and when final order--Substantial
question of law--Power of High Court--Constitution of India,
Art. 133--Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (V of 1908), s. 109.
HEADNOTE:
Pursuant to an agreement between the parties a dispute
relating to the supply of stone ballast was referred for
adjudication to an arbitrator who was appointed under the
agreement. The arbitrator’s awards were contested by the
appellants but the trial court held that the dispute was
properly referred and the awards were validity made. The
High Court set aside the orders
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of the trial court and remanded the case for decision after
framing all the issues and giving the parties an opportunity
to produce evidence. The High Court then granted a
certificate of fitness or appeal to this Court under Art.
133(1)(c) of the Constitution.
Held, that an order remanding a case without deciding any
question relating to the rights of the parties is not a
judgment, decree or final order within the meaning of Art.
133 of the Constitution. An order is final if it amounts to
a final decision relating to the rights of the parties in
dispute in the Civil proceeding.
The power under s. 109 of the Code of Civil Procedure having
been expressly made subject to Ch. IV, Part V of the
Constitution an appeal lay under that section to this Court
only against judgments, decrees and final orders.
V....M. Abdul Rahman and Others v. V. D. K. Cassim and Sons
and Another (1933) L.R. 60 I.A. 76, referred to.
As the orders passed by the High Court did not raise any
question of great public or private importance and even the
question of interpretation of Para. 3 of the first schedule
of the Indian Arbitration Act was left open to be tried by
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the Civil Judge, no certificate of fitness to appeal to this
Court could be granted under Art. 133 of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 421 to 423
of 1957.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated February 18, 1955,
of the Allahabad High Court (Lucknow Bench), at Lucknow in
F.A.F.O. Nos. 11 to 13 of 1953.
J. B. Dadachanji, for the appellant.
C. B. Agarwala and C. P. Lal, for the respondent.
1961. February 6. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-These three appeals were filed by the appellants
M/s. Jethanand & Sons with certificate of fitness granted
under Art. 133(1) (c) of the Constitution by the High Court
of Judicature at Allahabad.
The appellants entered into three separate contracts with
the Government of the United Provinces (now called the State
of Uttar Pradesh) on March 20, 1947, May 27, 1947, and June
28, 1947, for the supply of stone ballast at Shankar Garh,
District Allahabad. The contracts which were in identical
terms contained the following arbitration clause
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" All disputes between the parties hereto
arising out of this contract whether during
its continuance or after its rescission or in
respect of the construction or meaning of any
clause thereof or of the tender,
specifications and conditions or any of them
or any part thereof respectively or anything
arising out of or incident thereto for the
decision of which no express provision has
hereinbefore been made, shall be referred to
the Superintending Engineer of the Circle
concerned and his decision shall in all cases
and at all times be final, binding and con-
clusive between the parties."
Pursuant to the contracts, the appellants supplied stone
ballast. Thereafter, purporting to act under cl. (16) of
the agreements, the Executive Engineer, Provincial Division,
referred certain disputes between the appellants and the
State of Uttar Pradesh, alleged to arise out of the
performance of the contracts, to arbitration of the
Superintending Engineer of the Circle concerned. The
Superintending Engineer required the appellants to appear
before him at the time fixed in the notices. The appellants
by their letter dated May 31, 1951, declined to submit to
the jurisdiction of the Superintending Engineer, and
informed him that if he hears and determines the cases ex
parte, the " decisions will not be binding " on them. On
February 7, 1953, the Superintending Engineer made and
published three awards in respect of the disputes arising
under the three contracts and filed the same in the court of
the Civil Judge, Lucknow. The appellants applied for
setting aside the awards alleging that the contracts were
fully performed and that the dispute alleged by the State of
Uttar Pradesh to have arisen out of the contracts could not
arise after the contracts were fully performed and that the
State could not refer those alleged disputes to arbitration.
They also contended that the awards were not valid in law
because on the arbitration agreements action was not taken
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under s. 20 of the Arbitration Act. The Civil Judge,
Lucknow, held that the disputes between the parties were
properly referred to the Superintending Engineer by the
State of Uttar
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Pradesh and that the awards were validly made. Against the
orders passed by the Civil Judge, Lucknow, three appeals
were preferred by the appellants to the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad.
The High Court set aside the orders passed by the Civil
Judge and remanded the cases to the Trial Judge with a
direction that he do allow the appellants and if need be,
the respondent to amend their pleadings, and frame all
issues that arise out of the pleadings and allow the parties
an opportunity to place such evidence as they desire and
decide the case on such evidence. In the view of the High
Court no proper notice of the filing of the awards was
served upon the appellants and that they were " seriously
handicapped in their reply by the course which had been
adopted both by the court and the arbitrator in the conduct
of the proceedings in court." On the applications filed by
the appellants, the High Court granted leave to appeal to
this court under Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution,
certifying that the cases were fit for appeal to this court.
Counsel for the respondent has urged that the High Court was
incompetent to grant certificate under Art. 133(1) (c) of
the Constitution.
The order passed by the High Court was manifestly passed in
exercise of the inherent power to make such orders as may be
necessary for the ends of justice or to prevent abuse of the
process of the court. Under Art. 133 of the Constitution,
an appeal lies to this court from any judgment, decree
original order in a civil proceeding of a High Court if the
High Court certifies that :
(a)............
(b)............ or
(c)"the case is a fit one for appeal to the Supreme Court."
In our view, the order remanding the cases under s. 151 of
the Civil Procedure Code is not a judgment, decree or final
order within the meaning of Art. 133 of the Constitution.
By its order, the High Court did not decide any question
relating to the rights of the parties to the dispute. The
High Court merely
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remanded the cases for retrial holding that there was no
proper trial of the petitions filed by the appellants for
setting aside the awards. Such an order remanding the cases
for retrial is not a final order within the meaning of Art.
133(1)(c). An order is final if it amounts to a final
decision relating to the rights of the parties in dispute in
the civil proceeding. If after the order, the civil
proceeding still remains to be tried and the rights in
dispute between the parties have to be determined, the order
is not a final order within the meaning of Art. 133. The
High Court assumed that a certificate of fitness to appeal
to this court may be issued under s. 109(1)(c) of the Code
of Civil Procedure, even if the order is not final, and in
support of that view, they relied upon the judgment of the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in V. M. Abdul
Rahman v. D. K. Cassim & Sons (1). But s. 109 of the Code
is now made expressly subject to Ch. IV, Part V of the
Constitution and Art. 133 (1) (c) which occurs in that
chapter authorises the grant of a certificate by the High
Court only if the order is a final order. The inconsistency
between s. 109 Civil Procedure Code and Art. 133 of the
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Constitution has now been removed by the Code of Civil
Procedure (Amendment) Act 66 of 1955. But even before the
amending Act, the power under s. 109(1) (c) being expressly
made subject to the Constitution, an appeal lay to this
Court only against judgments, decrees and final orders.
Again, the orders passed by the High Court did not raise any
question of great public or private importance. In the view
of the High Court, the applications forgetting aside the
awards filed by the appellants were not properly tried and
therefore the cases deserved to be remanded to the court of
first instance for trial de novo. The High Court granted
leave to the parties to amend their pleadings; they also
directed the Civil Judge to frame " all the issues that
arise and allow the parties an opportunity of adducing such
evidence as they desired." It was an order for trial de novo
on fresh pleadings and on all issues that may
(1)(1933) L.R. 60 I.A. 76.
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arise on the pleadings. Evidently, any decision given by
the High Court in the course of the order would not in that
trial de novo be binding and the cases will have to be tried
afresh by the Civil Judge. The High Court was of the view
that the interpretation of para. 3 of the first schedule of
the Indian Arbitration Act raised a substantial question of
law. But by the direction of the High Court, this question
was also left open to be tried before the Civil Judge. We
fail to appreciate how an observation on a question which is
directed to be retried can still be regarded as raising a
question of law of great public or private importance
justifying grant of a certificate under Art. 133 (1) (c) of
the Constitution.
We accordingly vacate the certificate granted by the High
Court and dismiss these appeals with costs. One hearing
fee.
Appeals dismissed.