Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 16
PETITIONER:
JAMMU & KASHMIR STATE FOREST CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ABDUL KARIM WANI
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/03/1989
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1498 1989 SCR (2) 380
1989 SCC (2) 701 JT 1989 (3) 99
1989 SCALE (1)933
ACT:
Jammu and Kashmir Arbitration Act 2002 (Smvt) Sections
8, 11, 20 and 41.
Arbitration Act, 1940--Sections 2(a), 18 and 20. Arbi-
tration clause in Contract--How to be construed.
Dispute between parties--Whether referable to arbitra-
tion or not--Court to refrain from expressing opinion on
merits of dispute.
Jurisdiction of Court to make interim order--Only ’for
the purpose’ of arbitration proceedings--Not to frustrate
the same.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a Corporation was created under the Jammu
JUDGMENT:
functions was to undertake the removal and disposal of trees
and exploitation of the forest resources entrusted to it by
the Government.
The Corporation took a decision for the extraction of
timber of a total volume of 10.08 lakh c. ft. which included
the work of felling and removal of trees. The respondent an
approved contractor submitted his tender and was granted the
works contract initially with reference to 4 lakh c. ft.,
and subsequently he was entrusted with an additional work
for a further quantity of 2 lakh c. ft. The respondent
completed the entire work under the contract. Thereafter, he
claimed that he was entitled to the remaining volume of the
work, namely, 4.08 lakh c.ft. as per the procedure, prac-
tice, custom and usage extended to him. The appellant denied
any such practice, custom or assurance and said that a
decision had been taken not to work the area further till
the entire timber already extracted was removed to its
destination. There was, therefore, no question of entrusting
the remaining work to anybody.
Paragraph 15 of the Tender Notice stipulated that:
"Extension for the additional volume in the coupe will not
be claimed as a matter of right but may be considered by the
Management where the achievement
381
is 100 per cent." The agreement provided for arbitration
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 16
which was contained in clause 42, and which stipulated:
"that any dispute, differences or question that may arise
was to be referred for arbitration to the Managing Director
of the Jammu & Kashmir Forest Corporation."
The respondent filed an application under sections 8, 11
and 20 of the Jammu and Kashmir Arbitration Act, 2002 (Smvt)
in the High Court for a direction to the Corporation to file
the agreement and to refer the dispute to an arbitrator.
The High Court deprecated the attitude of the Corpora-
tion in not awarding the remaining work to the respondent.
It held that the trees in question had already been marked
and had, therefore, to be felled ’one day or the other’, and
as the contractor’s achievement was 300 per cent he had all
the right to claim the remaining work as provided in para-
graph 15 of the Tender Notice. The High Court also found
that as there existed a dispute touching the contracts
executed between the parties, it referred the matter under
clause 42 of the agreement to the named arbitrator, namely,
the Managing Director of the State Forest Corporation.
The High Court went further and by an interim order
directed that the contractor be permitted to do the remain-
ing work of extraction of timber of standing marked trees
and the rates be determined by the arbitrator after hearing
both the parties pursuant to the said interim order.
Aggrieved by the aforesaid orders of the High Court the
appellant appealed to this Court by special leave.
On the questions: (i) whether there was any subsisting
arbitration agreement in respect of the matters sought to be
referred, and (ii) whether the interim order of the High
Court directing the respondent to do the remaining work was
without jurisdiction, and whether the respondent was enti-
tled to any compensation for the work done.
Allowing the appeal, the Court,
HELD: [R.S. Pathak. CJ and L.M. Sharma, J. Majority-Per
L.M. Sharma. J.]
1. The claim raised by the respondent in his application
before the High Court is not covered by the arbitration
clause and cannot be
382
referred for a decision of the arbitrator. The order of
reference passed by the High Court has therefore to be set
aside. [390F]
2. If the foundation of the claim of the respondent be
any alleged assurance or custom or practice, it cannot be
said that such claim arises out of the written agreement
between the parties; and so the prayer for reference has to
be rejected. If the case pleaded is true, the appropriate
forum for the respondent will be a Court of Law directly
granting the relief in an appropriate legal proceeding
[388A-B]
3. The language of the term contained in para 15 of the
tender notice is explicit in declaring that the contractor
would not be allowed to claim as a matter of right the
additional volume of work. His right extends only to a
consideration of his case by the management when the ques-
tion of allotment of additional work is taken up. But by the
application filed before the High Court the respondent did
not ask for reference of a dispute as to whether he is
entitled to consideration or not; the prayer is for refer-
ence of a higher claim of immediately getting the additional
work, and this prayer has been allowed. This issue cannot be
said to have any connection with the 15th term of the tender
notice or any other provision thereof or of the agreement.
[388D-E]
4. In the absence of a repudiation by the Corporation of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 16
the respondent’s right to be considered, if and when occa-
sion arises, no dispute can be said to have arisen which may
be referred for arbitration. [390B]
5. In order that there may be a reference to arbitra-
tion, existence of a dispute is essential, and the dispute
to be referred must arise under the arbitration agreement.
[390C]
Seth Thawardas Pherumal v. The Union of India, [1955] 2
SCR 48 relied on.
6. There was no justification for the High Court in
deprecating the Corporation for not awarding the remaining
work 10 the contractor when it was leaving the matter to be
decided by the arbitrator.. [387G]
7. A Court, while considering the question whether an
alleged dispute between the parties has to be referred for
arbitration or not, should refrain from expressing its
opinion on the merits of the dispute which may embarrass the
arbitrator. [387G-H]
383
8. Section 18 deals with the power of the Court to pass
interim orders after award is actually filed in Court. So
far as clause (a) of Section 41 is concerned, it makes only
the procedural rules of the Civil Procedure Code applicable.
The source of power to grant interim relief cannot be traced
to clause (a), otherwise clause (b) would become otiose. So
far as clause (b) is concerned, it circumscribes the Court’s
power within the limits indicating in the second Schedule,
and further qualifies it by declaring in the Proviso that it
cannot be used to the prejudice of any of the powers of the
arbitrator. [391 D-E]
H.M. Kamaluddin v. Union of India, [1983] 4 SCC 417 relied
on.
9. Interim directions can be issued only ’for the pur-
pose of’ arbitration proceedings and not to frustrate the
same. [391E]
10. The High Court in the instant case, by granting the
interim relief, not in the shape of an injunction in the
negative form, but by a mandatory direction clothing the
respondent--plaintiff with the right to do something which
he could have been entitled to only after a final decision
on the merits of the case in his favour committed a serious
error. [391G-H]
[Per Sabyasachi Mukharji, J partly dissenting]
1. There was a dispute in the instant case, whether the
contractor was entitled to the grant of the additional
volume of work. Such dispute was a dispute between the
parties in respect of the ’works to be executed by the
contractor’. In that view of the matter and in the light of
clause 15 read with clause 17 of the Agreement the dispute
was clearly referable to the arbitration of the Managing
Director, Jammu & Kashmir State Forest Corporation. [397F-G]
2. Endeavour should always be to find out the intention of
the parties, and that intention has to be found out by read-
ing the terms broadly, clearly, without being circumscribed.
[398B-C]
3. An arbitration agreement is one which is defined in
section 2(a) of the Arbitration Act, 1940 as a written
agreement to submit present or future differences to arbi-
tration. There was, in the instant case, an arbitration
agreement that is to say, the parties had been ad idem. The
agreement was in writing. It was not a contingent or a
future contract. It was a contract at present time to refer
the dispute arising out of the present contract entered into
by the parties as a result of which the
384
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 16
contractor got a right or privilege to ask for consideration
of grant of the further work. It was not a mere right to get
the additional work. The amplitude of the arbitration clause
was wide enough and should be so read. [397H; 398A-B, C-D]
Seth Thawardas Pherumal v. The Union of India, [1955] 2
SCR 43 distinguished.
A.M. Mair & Co. v. Gordhandass Sagarmull [1950] SCR 792
at 798 and Heyman v. Darwins Ltd., [1942] Appeal Cases 356
at 368 referred to.
4. Though under section 41(b) the Court has power to
pass an interim order or injunction or appointment of re-
ceiver, the Section does not empower the Court to direct
execution of the contract, the extent of which is in dispute
and is a matter referable to be adjudicated by the arbitra-
tor. If the Court does so, then the decision of the dispute
becomes academic because the contract is executed. [399D-E]
5. Where the question is whether the contract was to be
executed by the respondent, if the contract is in fact
executed by the respondent by virtue of the order of the
Court, then nothing remains of the dispute. There is nothing
arbitrable any more land proceedings before the arbitrator
cannot be forestalled by interim order by ordering execution
of the contract before it is decided whether the contractor
had any right to the contract for additional work in the
grab of preservation of the property. [399E-F]
6. The interim directions given by the High Court that
the contractor be allowed to do the remaining work of ex-
traction of timber of standing marked trees was beyond the
competence of the Court. [399F-G]
7. It would be unjust to deprive any party of its dues
simply because the work has been done in view of a wrong
order or incorrect order of the Court of justice when there
was no stay. ]400B]
8. The work in the instant case, has indisputably been
done pursuant to an order of the Court of law and the party
who has done the work must be paid its remuneration. [400C]
&
CIVIL APPELLATE.JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2121 of
1989.
385
From the Judgment and Order dated 4.6.1987 of the Jammu
and Kashmir High Court in Application No. 180 of 1987.
Altar Ahmed and S.K. Bhattacharya for the Appellant.
S.N. Kacker, E.C. Agarwala and Ms. Purnima Bhat for the
Respondent.
The following Judgments of the Court were delivered:
SHARMA, J. The present respondent who is an approved
contractor of the Jammu & Kashmir State Forest Corporation
(appellant before us) filed an application under ss. 8, 11
and 20 of the Jammu & Kashmir Arbitration Act, 2002 (Smvt.),
on the original side of the High Court of Jammu & Kashmir
praying for a direction to the Corporation defendant to file
an agreement between them fully described therein, and to
refer the dispute mentioned in the application to an arbi-
trator. Jammu & Kashmir Arbitration Act is similar to the
Arbitration Act, 1940, enacted in identical language. The
Corporation objected, pleading inter alia that the entire
work allotted to the plaintiff contractor under the agree-
ment had been completed by him without any dispute, and the
present claim of the plaintiff is not covered by the agree-
ment in question or its arbitration clause A learned single
Judge of the High Court allowed the prayer for reference to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 16
the dispute described in the respondent’s application, and
further granted an interim relief. This judgment is under
challenge before this Court by the defendant Corporation.
Special leave is granted.
2. As stated in the affidavit of the plaintiff-contrac-
tor, the Corporation was created under the Jammu & Kashmir
Forest Corporation Act, 1978 and its main functions are: (i)
to undertake research programmes and to render technical
advice to the State Government on the matters relating to
forestry, (ii) to manage, maintain and develop forests
transferred or entrusted to it by the Government, and (iii)
to undertake removal and disposal of trees and exploitation
of forest resources entrusted to it by the Government. In
February 1986 the Corporation invited tenders for extraction
of timber from an area described as Compartment No. 59-Marwa
which included the work of felling and removal of trees. The
plaintiff submitted his tender and was ultimately granted
the work contract with reference to 4 lac cft. standing
volume timber. Subsequently in 1987 he was also entrusted
with an additional work contract for a further quantity of 2
lac cft. in the said Compartment 59-Marwa. Although a deci-
sion by the authorities had
386
been taken for extraction of a total standing volume of
10,08,000 cft., the plaintiff was entrusted with the extrac-
tion work of only 6 lac cft. Thus 4,06,000 cft. of standing
volume remained in the area to be extracted later. According
to his case the plaintiff was entitled to get this addition-
al work in accordance with the practice prevalent in the
Corporation and assurances given to him. It was alleged that
since the Managing Director of the Corporation was not
agreeable to allow this additional work, the plaintiff
approached the Chief Minister of the State who asked the
Managing Director to allot him the remaining work. The
Manging Director first agreed to issue necessary orders but
later refused to carry out the Chief Minister’s direction
which necessitated the filing of the application before the
High Court. The Corporation denied any such practice and
refuted the allegation about any assurance given on its
behalf as also the statement about the Managing Director
agreeing at one stage to allot the additional work in ques-
tion on the intervention of the Chief Minister. It was
further stated by the Corporation that a large amount of
extracted timber was lying in the area and had to be re-
moved. Admittedly the timber had to be transported to a
distant place through difficult terrain (as has been specif-
ically mentioned by the contractor himself) and was, there-
fore, likely to take a considerable time. The Corporation
said that a decision had been taken not to work the Compart-
ment further till the entire timber already extracted was
removed to its destination, and there was, therefore, no
question of entrusting the remaining work to anybody for the
present. A decision as to how and when the additional trees
will be felled and the timber removed is for the Corporation
to make and it is under no obligation to the contractor in
this regard. So far as the work allotted to the contractor
under the agreement is concerned, it is already complete
without giving rise to any difference between the parties.
3. Reliance has been placed on behalf of the plaintiff
before us on paragraph 41 of the agreement under which the
work contract in respect to 6 lac cft. was obtained by him,
and which says that the terms and conditions of the tender
notice issued by the Corporation will be terms and condi-
tions of the agreement. The 15th paragraph of the tender
notice reads thus:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 16
15. Extension for the additional
volume available in the coupe will not be
claimed as matter of right. But may be consid-
ered by the Management where the achievement
is 100%."
387
The arbitration clause being Clause 42 of the
agreement states thus:
"42. Any dispute, difference or question which
may at any time arise between the parties in
respect of the work to be executed by the
second party under this agreement shall be
referred for arbitration to the Managing
Director, J & K. State Forest Corporation,
whose decision shall be final and binding on
both the parties."
As it appears from the plaintiff’s application before the
High Court, his claim was rounded on "procedure",
"practice," "custom", and "assurances extended to the peti-
tioner to that effect by the respondent Corporation through
its functionaries from time to time." Although it has been
contended before us that since paragraph 15 of the tender
notice refers to additional volume of work to be allotted in
the future, the agreement between the parties including the
arbitration clause must be interpreted to include within its
sweep the present claim of the respondent to the additional
work of extraction, the case for reference pressed before
the High Court rested mainly on the alleged "practice" and
"assurances". The High Court has emphasized in its judgment
the fact that the trees in question had already been marked
for extraction and, therefore, have to be felled "one day or
the other" and deprecated the attitude of the Corporation in
the following words:
"The contention of the learned connsel for the
respondents is that the respondents do not
want the remaining timber to be extracted
presently for unknown reasons and as such the
corporation cannot be compelled for grant of
sanction for extraction of remaining marked
timber. 1 think the attitude of the respondent
corporation is most derogatory to the facts
and circumstances of the case when the peti-
tioner is prepared to accept all sorts of
offers. It cannot be denied that the remaining
timber is to be extracted one day or the other
and simply to put the petitioner to loss would
not be justifiable in any manner."
There was absolutely no justification for the Court to have
commented as above when it was leaving the matter to be
decided by the arbitrator. A court, while considering the
question whether an alleged dispute between the parties has
to be referred for arbitration or not should refrain from
expressing its opinion on the merits of the dispute which
may embarrass the arbitrator. However, the main issue before
us is whether the dispute mentioned in the contractor’s
application
388
could have been referred to arbitration at all.
4. If the foundation of the claim of the respondent be
any alleged assurance or custom or practice, it cannot be
said that such claim arises out of the written agreement
between the parties; and so the prayer for reference has to
be rejected. If the case pleaded is true, the appropriate
forum for the respondent will be a court of law directly
granting the relief in an appropriate legal proceeding. It
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 16
was, however, argued on behalf of the respondent before us
that in view of paragraph 15 of the tender notice, quoted
earlier, which must be treated as a part of the agreement,
the respondent has a right to be considered for allottment
of the additional work since his past performance has been
excellent. We are afraid, the impugned judgment of the High
Court cannot be defended on this basis and the prayer of the
respondent for reference of the dispute, as mentioned in his
application before the High Court, cannot be granted under
the 15th paragraph of the tender notice aforementioned. The
language of the said term is explicit in declaring that the
contractor would not be allowed to claim as a matter of
right additional volume of work. His right extends only to a
consideration of his case by the management when the ques-
tion of allotment of additional work is taken up. But by the
application filed before the High Court the respondent did
not ask for reference of a dispute as to whether he is
entitled to consideration or not; the prayer is for refer-
ence of a higher claim of immediately getting the additional
work, and this prayer has been allowed. This issue cannot be
said to have any connection with the 15th term of the tender
notice or any other provision thereof or of the agreement. A
reference to the decision of this Court in Seth Thawardas
Perumal v. The Union of India, [1955,] 2 SCR 48, will be
helpful. The appellant, a contractor, entered into a con-
tract with the Dominion of India for the supply of bricks. A
Clause in the contract required,
" ..... all questions and disputes relating
to the meaning of the specification and in-
structions hereinbefore mentioned and as to
quality of materials or as to any other ques-
tion, claim, right, matter or thing whatsoever
in any way arising out of or relating to the
contract, specification, instructions, orders
or these conditions, or otherwise concerning
the supplies whether arising during the
progress or delivery of after the completion
of abandonment thereof .... "
emphasis added)
to be referred to arbitration. It was agreed that the bricks
would be
389
prepared in lots and it would be the duty of the Government
to remove the bricks as soon as they were ready for deliv-
ery. In order to keep to the schedule for delivery, the
contractor had to prepare ’kateha’ bricks and place them in
his kilns for baking, and while this lot was baking he had
to prepare another lot of ’kateha’ bricks ready to take the
place of the baked bricks as soon as the Government removed
them. At a certain stage the Government department failed to
remove the baked bricks in time which caused a jam in the
kilns and prevented the contractor from placing a fresh
stock of unburnt bricks in the kilns. Consequently the stock
pile of kateha bricks kept on mounting up when the rains set
in, destroying 88 lacs of katcha bricks. The contractor
claimed the loss arising out of the neglect of the Govern-
ment department in performing its duty in time. The Govern-
ment denied the claim and a reference of the dispute was
made to the arbitrator designated in the agreement who made
an award and filed it in court. On the Constitution coming
into force the Dominion of India was replaced by the Union
of India as the defendant in the case and it was contended
on its behalf that the katcha bricks did not form part of
the contract and that the loss that was occasioned by the
damage to them was too remote to be covered by the arbitra-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 16
tion clause. The second ground of defence was based on
Clause 6 of the agreement which absolved the Government from
any liability for a damage to unburnt bricks. The stand of
the contractor was that the chief reason of the destruction
of the katcha bricks was the failure of the department to
lift the monthly quota of the bricks in accordance with the
written agreement; and, Clause 6 of the agreement referred
only to such cases where the department had no control, and
would not cover a case of its own default. The Supreme Court
did not agree with him and set aside the award, inter alia
observing, that if he chose to contract in the terms includ-
ing Clause 6 of the written agreement he could not go back
on his agreement when it did not suit him to abide by it. In
the case before us, the plaintiff contractor is trying to
connect the allotment of future work by a reference to
paragraph 15 of the tender notice which specifically says
that additional work could not be claimed as a matter of
right. The High Court, therefore, was not correct in inter-
preting the aforementioned Clause 15 in the following words:
"There was clause 15 in the tender
notice according to which extension of addi-
tional volume available in the coupe would not
have to be claimed by the contractor as a
matter of fight but he would have to be con-
sidered by the management where his achieve-
ment was 100%. In the present case the
achievement of the petitioner was 300% and
390
under such circumstances the petitioner had
all the right to claim additional work in the
said coupe."
Besides, if this view be assumed to be correct, what was
there left for the arbitrator to decide? Further, it is not
alleged or suggested that the Corporation has ever indicated
its unwillingness to consider the respondent when it takes
up the question of allotting the additional work. In absence
of a repudiation by the Corporation of the respondent’s
right to be considered, if and when occasion arises, no
dispute can be said to have arisen which may be referred for
arbitration. In order that there may be reference to arbi-
tration, existence of a dispute is essential and the dispute
to be referred to arbitration must arise under the arbitra-
tion agreement. When in the future, the Corporation makes a
decision for the execution of the additional work and takes
up the question of executing a contract for the purpose, the
stage for consideration of the plaintiff-respondent’s claim
would be reached and a dispute may then arise if the Corpo-
ration refuses to consider the claim. Neither the agreement
nor the tender notice deals with the question as to the
conditions and time for grant of any additional work to the
plaintiff and if his claim be interpreted as a demand for
immediate allotment of any future work, the same cannot be
connected with the agreement or the tender notice. We,
therefore, do not agree with the observations of the High
Court that the conduct of the Corporation in not taking up
immediate deforestation of a part of Compartment No. 59-
Marwa is reprehensible, simply for the reason that the trees
in the area concerned are "to be extracted one day or the
other" or that the plaintiff has the right to claim the
additional work on the ground that his achievement in the
past has been more than 100%. We also hold that the claim
raised by the plaintiff in his application before the High
Court is not covered by the arbitration clause and cannot be
referred for a decision of the arbitrator. The order of
reference passed by the High Court, therefore, has to be set
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 16
aside.
5. By the interim order the High Court permitted the
plaintiff to execute the additional work claimed by him
without waiting for the award. On the quashing of the main
order of reference, the interim order automatically disap-
pears, but we would, however, like to briefly indicate the
scope of Court’s power to issue interim orders at the time
of reference of a dispute to arbitration, and point out how
in the present case the High Court was in grave error in
granting the interim relief. The relevant provision in the
Jammu & Kashmir Arbitration Act, 2002 (Smvt.) is in s. 41(b)
which is quoted below:
391
"41. ,Procedure and powers of
Court.--Subject to the main provisions of this
Act and of rules made thereunder-
(a)........................................
........
(b) the Court shall have, for the
purpose of, and in relation to, arbitration
proceedings, the same power of making orders
in respect of any of the matters set out in
the Second Schedule as it has for the
purpose of, and in relation to, any proceed-
ings before the Court:
Provided that nothing in clause (b)
shall be taken to prejudice any power which
may be vested in an arbitrator or umpire for
making orders with respect to any such mat-
ters."
S. 18 deals with the power of Court to. pass interim
orders after award is actually filed in Court. So far as
clause (a) of s. 41 is concerned, it makes only the proce-
dural rules of the Civil Procedure Code applicable. The
source of power to grant interim relief cannot be traced to
clause (a), otherwise as was pointed out in H.M. Kamaluddin
v. Union of India, [1983] 4 SCC 417, clause (b) would become
otiose. So far as clause (b) is concerned, it circumscribes
the Court’s power within the limits indicated in the Second
Schedule and further qualifies it by declaring in the Provi-
so that it cannot be used to the prejudice of any of the
powers of the arbitrator. The interim direction can be
issued only "for the purpose of" arbitration proceedings and
not to frustrate the same. In the present ease the plain-
tiff-contractor was allowed by the High Court to execute the
extraction work which was the subject matter of the arbitra-
tion. Mr. Kacker, appearing for the plaintiff. respondent,
argued that in pursuance of this part of the impugned judg-
ment the plaintiff was able to cut down all the trees in
question before this Court passed an order of stay. In other
words it is claimed on behalf of the plaintiff-respondent
that he was able to completely frustrate the arbitration
proceeding in a very short time on the strength of the
interim order. This statement of fact has been seriously
challenged by the petitioner Corporation; but whatever be
the factual position, the High Court by granting the interim
relief, not in the shape of an injunction in the negative
form, but by a mandatory direction clothing the plaintiff
with the right to do something which he could have been
entitled to, only after a final decision on the merits of
the case in his favour, committed a serious error. Paragraph
1 of the
392
Second Schedule speaks of the preservation of subject matter
of the reference and paragraph 3 also highlights that as-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 16
pect. The 4th paragraph which mentions--"interim injunction
or the appointment of a receiver"--has also to be interpret-
ed in that light specially because of the language of clause
(b) of s. 41 and the Proviso thereto. The second part of the
judgment under appeal is also, therefore, set aside.
6. It has been averred before us on behalf of the plain-
tiffrespondent that all the trees in question were cut down,
and so the plaintiff must be permitted to complete the
remaining work including their transportation to the desti-
nation. The learned counsel for the Corporation placed
reliance on the statements in several affidavits and con-
tended that if the entire circumstances including the period
which could have been available to the respondent for the
purpose of felling the trees, are examined, there is no
escape .from the conclusion that the respondent had felled
the trees or majority of them after service of the stay
order passed by this Court. We do not think it necessary to
examine and decide this controversy as in our view the
respondent, in the facts and circumstances of this case,
cannot take any advantage from or claim compensation for the
hurried steps he alleges to have taken under the strength of
the illegal order interim in nature, which we are setting
aside.
7. In the result, the appeal is allowed. The impugned
judgment the High Court is set aside and the respondent’s
application filed before the High Court for reference is
dismissed. The respondent shall pay the costs of this Court
and of the High Court to the appellantCorporation.
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. I have read the judgment pro-
posed to he delivered by L.M. Sharma, J. with which the
learned Chief Justice has agreed. With great respect, I am
unable to agree with them on the view that there was no
arbitration agreement subsisting covering the dispute in
question between the parties. It is, therefore, necessary to
refer to certain facts, as I view these.
This appeal by special leave is directed against the
judgment- and order of the High Court of Jammu & Kashmir,
dated 4th June, 1987. The Jammu & Kashmir Forest Corporation
is the appellant. The undisputed facts leading to this
appeal are that one Abdul Karim Wani, the respondent No. 1,
filed an application for referring certain matters alleged
to he in dispute to an independent arbitrator; and that for
the last 15 years the respondent had been working as a
contractor for the
393
appellant Corporation, namely, Jammu & Kashmir Forest Corpn.
and was carrying on various activities in different forest
areas in Jammu Province, including felling, machine sawing,
pathroo, paccinali, rope span, mahan and transportation.
It is stated that in February, 1986 the said Corporation
issued tenders for felling, handsawing, pathroo, paccinali
and mahan work of timber to be extracted from compartment
No. 59 Marwah, In response thereto the petitioner to the
original application being the respondent herein, submitted
his quotation and offered the lowest rate of 11.74 per cft.
and thereby secured the contract. A formal agreement was
also executed between the parties. In October, 1987 after
about 7 months from the issuance of first work order the
appellant Corporation through its General Manager (Extrac-
tion) issued a sanction for further quantity of 2 lac cft.
sawn volume in compartment No. 59 Marwah, on the same rates,
terms and conditions as contained in the original contract.
The sanction appears at pages 26 & 28 of the present appeal
papers before us.
It appears that the total marking carried out in com-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 16
partment No, 59 was 10,08,000 cft. standing out of which
only 6 lac cft. was sanctioned in favour of the respondent.
The compartment in question is at a distance of Over 70 kms.
from the nearest road point and the timber extracted from
the compartment had to travel by pathroo, paccinali and
mahan through Chenab river for a total distance of 80 kms.
before it is collected at loading point of Dedpeth.
1t is, further, the case of the respondent that "as per
the procedure, practice, custom and assurances extended to
the respondent by the appellant Corporation through its
functionaries, from time to time," the entire marking con-
ducted in a particular compartment for extraction was re-
quired (emphasis supplied) to be handed over to the respond-
ent in compartment No. 59. As regards sale, it is suggested
that as the compartment is situated in one of the remotest
area of Jammu province where making arrangements for extrac-
tion of timber including cartage/carriage of foodgrains,
saws, tools and implements is very difficult, it was never
intended that the balance work remaining in the compartment
for extraction would be given to any other contractor.
The case of the respondent is that acting upon the
assurances and representations of the appellant Corporation
that the entire work in the aforesaid compartment would be
handed over to him, the respon-
394
dent had made adequate arrangement after investing Rs.5 lacs
by way of provision for rations, saws, tools and implements
etc. All these arrangements at that scale were necessary and
were made just to extract entire marked timber from the
compartment in question and not just initially tendered
quantity. That would have been wholly uneconomical.
It was further asserted that there was also the practice
in the Corporation that once a compartment was handed over
to the contractor for work, it was taken back from him only
after the entire available work in the said compartment
stood concluded. The contractor further alleged that the
appellant Corporation was not allotting rest of the work to
him contrary to the policy adopted and assurances extended,
as mentioned hereinbefore. The respondent furnished in-
stances where such conduct or procedure of making allot-
ments, as alleged by the respondent, had been followed. We
were referred to the sanction in favour of M/s. Ghulam
Hussain, Sukhjinder Singh in respect of compartment No. 82
Lander on 28.4.87, Mst. Jana Begum in respect of compartment
No. 30-B, Dachhan and 62 Marmat dated 10.3.87, Sh. Rehmatul-
lah Bhat for compartment No. 19A Paddar dated 5.5.87, Nas-
sarnllah Malik for compartment No. 16 Ramban on 12.5.87 and
Irshad Ahmed Shah in respect of compartment No. 62 Sewa
dated 4.2.87.
On behalf of the Corporation and others, it was stated
before the learned Judge of the High Court that there was no
assurance and no practice regarding grant of the contract to
the respondent contractor Abdul Karim Wani, in the manner
alleged. Further, it was alleged that the respondent and the
Corporation had decided not to work on the compartment till
the entire extracted timber was removed to sale depot. Once
that decision was there the instances quoted by the contrac-
tor proved useless, according to the appellant. It, however,
very clearly appears that in compartment No. 59 Marwah
marked standing trees were to the extent of 10,08,000 eft.
The second aspect emerging is that out of this volume only 6
lac eft. standing timber had been sanctioned in favour of
the contractor on two different occasions, and such timber
had been extracted, removed and taken to the loading point.
The only dispute subsisting was about the rest of the stand-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 16
ing trees i.e., 4,80,000 cft. It is not disputed that the
said remaining cfts. have been marked. These remained as
marked timber which required to be extracted. The respondent
claims preference for grant of contract of extraction by way
under the clause in the relevant sanction. The only conten-
tion of the appellant was that they had no intention to
extract
395
the said timber till other extracted timber was taken to the
depot. The case of the appellant as noted by the learned
Judge in his judgment, was that the remaining timber to be
extracted presently for ’unknown reasons’ was not to be then
extracted and, as such, the Corporation could not be com-
pelled to grant or sanction extraction of remaining marked
timber.
The learned Judge by his impugned judgment and order
deprecated the conduct of the authorities concerned. He
proceeded on the basis that inasmuch as the remaining timber
had to be extracted one day or the other, the entire work
should have been given to the respondent. In the present
case, the learned Judge noted that the performance of the
respondent contractor as 300%. The respondent was entitled
to the grant of this contract even if his performance had
merely been 100%. The learned Judge found that there were
two different points to be examined. He found that there
existed a dispute between the parties touching the agreement
executed between them. The matter in dispute was referred to
the named arbitrator, namely, the Managing Director of the
State Forest Corporation, who was directed to adjudicate
upon the same and submit his award within the statutory
period of four months.
The learned Judge went further and as an interim measure
directed that the petitioner before him, namely, the re-
spondent herein be allowed to do the remaining work of
extraction of timber of standing marked trees in compartment
No. 59 Marwah and the rates were to be determined by the
arbitrator, after hearing both the parties. This order is
the subject-matter of the appeal.
The main question involved in this appeal is whether
there was any subsisting arbitration agreement in respect of
the matters sought to be referred. The second aspect in-
volved herein is whether the learned Judge was justified in
making the impugned order by directing that the petitioner
be allowed to do the remaining work of extraction of timber
of standing marked trees in compartment No. 59 Marwah, and
the rates be determined by the arbitrator after hearing both
the sides. It was contended on behalf of the appellant that
the learned Judge travelled beyond the scope of his juris-
diction. It was submitted that there was no subsisting
arbitration agreement covering the entire area of 10,08,000
eft. There were only two subsisting contracts one being a
contract for felling trees of 4 lacs eft dated 6th March,
1986, and another for 2 lacs eft in addition, dated 28th
October, 1986. The agreement dated 6.3.86 provided that
dispute in respect of these
396
should be referred to arbitration but there was, according
to the appellant, no subsisting contract in respect of the
remaining 4 lacs cft. The respondent had only a right to be
considered in respect of the rest and yet no contract had
been granted to him. Therefore, there being no subsisting
contract there was no scope for reference to arbitration. In
my opinion, it is not the correct way to look at the facts
of this case. It appears from the first agreement, which is
at page 142 onwards of the present paper-book that it con-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 16
tained, inter alia, the following clauses.
"The quantum of work under each activity/sub-
activity is estimated and as such cannot be
guaranteed and can be increased or decreased
upto 25% by the General Manager Ext. East
Jammu East on the contract rates subject to
prior approval of the Managing Director.
Any subsequently marking carried out in a
section/unit under work with the contractor
shall be included in this increase of 25%."
It also contained clause 15 which was to the
following extent:
"Extension for the additional volume available
in the coupe will not be claimed as matter of
right. But may be considered by the Management
where the achievement is 100%."
Clause 17 of the said agreement which
provided for reference to arbitration was the
following:
"Any dispute, difference, question which may
at any time arise between the parties in
respect of the works to be executed by the
contractor(s) shall be referred for arbitra-
tion to the Managing Director J&K SFC whose
decision shall be final and binding on both
the parties."
In respect of the second contract that similar terms
were there, was not disputed before us. Therefore, even
though where the achievement of the contractor was 100% the
contractor had a right only to be considered for grant of
the additional work. In this case it was contended on behalf
of the appellant-Corporation that the Corporation could not
be compelled by the process of an application under Section
20 of the Arbitration Act to grant additional work to the
contractor. On the other hand, the contractor had pleaded
that where the
397
achievement of the contractor in respect of the subsisting
contract was 100% the contractor had a right to be consid-
ered for grant of the additional work, while in this case
his performance was 300%. Additional volume available in the
coupe was liable to be granted to him or, at least, he was
entitled to be considered in accordance with equity and
justice. The contractor has further alleged that while
others in similar position had been granted this additional
work, he had been wrongfully denied. His claim was that he
having fulfilled 300% performance, was entitled to the
remaining work of the additional work.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant before us
that there cannot be any application for filing of an arbi-
tration agreement for the arbitrator in respect of the
contract which had not been entered into. I am unable to
accept this submission. Clause 17 of the arbitration agree-
ment provided that any dispute, difference, question which
might at any time arise between the parties in respect of
the works to be executed by the contractor(s) should be
referred to the arbitration of the Managing Director of the
Jammu & Kashmir State Forest Corpn. Therefore, it appears to
me that dispute which had arisen between the parties in
respect of the "works to be executed" by the contractor was
a dispute which was referable in terms of the clause 17 and
the dispute was, according to the pleadings, the custom,
practice and procedure of granting additional volume of
available coupe where the timber trees had been marked but
not extracted to be considered by the Government for grant
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 16
of the contract. The contract alleged if such proper consid-
eration or lawful consideration in accordance with the
principles of equity and justice had been made, the contract
would have been granted to the contractor. Therefore, the
contractor claimed that he was entitled to the grant of
additional volume of work. In my opinion, there was a dis-
pute whether the contractor was entitled to the grant of
additional volume of the work. Such dispute was a dispute
between the parties in respect of the "works to be executed
by the contractor."
I am clearly of the opinion that the dispute in this
case was a dispute between the parties in respect of the
"works to be executed by the. contractor". In that view of
the matter and in the light of clause 15 read with clause
17, the dispute in this case was clearly referable to arbi-
tration of the Managing Director, Jammu & Kashmir State
Forest Corpn.
An arbitration agreement is one which is defined in
Section 2(a) of the Arbitration Act, 1940 as a written
agreement to submit present or future differences to arbi-
tration. There was, in this case, an arbitra-
398
tion agreement, that is to say, the parties had been ad
idem. The agreement was in writing. It was not a contingent
or a future contract. It was a contract at present time to
refer the dispute arising out of the present contract en-
tered into by the parties as a result of which the contrac-
tor got a right or a privilege to ask for consideration of
grant of the further work. It was not as sought to be argued
a mere right to get the additional work. Hence, in my opin-
ion, it could not be contended that there was no agreement.
Endeavour should always be to find out the intention of the
parties, and that intention has to be found out by reading
the terms broadly, clearly, without being circumscribed.
This contention of the appellant cannot, therefore, be
accepted.
In the light in which I have read the facts, I am unable
to accept the position that the claim raised by the plain-
tiff in this application before the High Court was not
covered by the arbitration clause. The amplitude of the
arbitration clause, in my opinion, was wide enough and
should be so read for the reasons mentioned hereinbefore. If
that is the position then the order of reference by the High
Court was not bad and cannot be set aside. I am unable to
agree that the decision of this Court in Seth Thawardas
Pherumal v. The Union of India, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 48 indicated
that in the facts of this case, there could not be reference
to the arbitration. That was a case where the appellant, a
contractor, entered into a contract with the Dominion of
India as it then was for supply of bricks. A clause in the
contract required all disputes arising out of or relating to
the contract to be referred to arbitration. Disputes arose
and the matter was duly referred. The arbitrator gave an
award in the contractor’s favour. It was held that it was
not enough for the contract to provide for arbitration but
something more was necessary. An arbitrator only got juris-
diction when either, both the parties specifically agreed to
refer specified matters or, failing that, the court com-
pelled them to do so under the arbitration clause if the
dispute was covered by it. That case was mainly concerned
with a specific question of law. This Court referred to the
decision of this Court in A.M. Mair & Co. v. Gordhandass
Sagarmull, [1950] S.C.R. 792 at 798 where this Court quoted
a passage from Viscount Simon’s speech in Heyman v. Darwins
Ltd., [1942] Appeal Cases 356 at 368. Here in this case the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 16
clause as I read it gave the respondent a right to be con-
sidered. The respondent’s grievance was, if properly consid-
ered his performance being 300% achievement he was entitled
in the facts and circumstances set out hereinbefore to the
grant of the contract and further similarly placed persons
had been so given. That right had not been duly considered.
That is the dispute in the present case and that dispute is
clearly referable to the arbitration
399
clause as mentioned hereinbefore. I am, therefore, unable to
accept the position that the order of reference passed by
the High Court is bad.
The second challenge to the order of the High Court was
that the order so far as it directed under Section 20 of the
Arbitration Act that the petitioner be allowed to do the
remaining work of extraction of timber of standing market
trees in compartment No. 59 Marwah, was wholly without
jurisdiction. For this reference may be made to Section 41
of the Arbitration Act which provides that for the purpose
of and in relation to arbitration proceedings, the Court has
such powers to pass interim orders for detention, preserva-
tion, interim custody and sale of any property--the subject
matter of the reference for preservation or inspection of
any property or thing--the subject-matter of the reference
or as to which any question may arise therein for taking of
samples and making observations and experiments; for secur-
ing the amount in difference in the reference; for granting
an interim injunction and appointing a receiver as the Court
has in relation to any proceeding before it. But though
under Section 41(b) the Court has power to pass an interim
order of injunction or appointment of receiver, in my opin-
ion, the Section does not empower the Court to direct execu-
tion of the contract, the extent of which is in dispute and
is a matter referable to be adjudicated by the arbitrator.
If the Court does so then the decision of the dispute be-
comes academic because the contract is executed. Where the
question is whether the contract was to be executed by the
respondent, if the contract is in fact executed by the
respondent by virtue of the order of the Court, then nothing
remains of the dispute. There is nothing arbitrable any more
and proceedings before the arbitrator cannot, in my opinion,
be forestalled by interim order by ordering execution of the
contract before it is decided whether it had any right to
the contract for additional work in the garb of preservation
of the property.
In that view of the matter, I am clearly of the opinion
that the interim directions given by the High Court that the
"contractor be allowed to do the remaining work of extrac-
tion of timber of standing marked trees in compartment No.
59, Marwah" was beyond the competence of the Court. In this
respect I agree with my learned brothers.
But so far as the Court directed that the rates be
determined by the arbitrator after hearing both the parties,
this direction, in my opinion, was clearly within the juris-
diction provided this dispute was referred to the arbitra-
tion. In this case unfortunately after the order of the High
Court was passed and before any order of stay could be
400
passed by this Court in a petition under Article 136 of the
Constitution, the respondent had done the work of extraction
of timer of standing marked trees in compartment No. 59
Marwah. Therefore, it would be inappropriate to interfere
with this order. The events have overreached the decision of
the Court. It would be unjust to deprive any party of its
dues simply because the work has been done in view of a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 16
wrong order or incorrect order of the Court of justice when
there was no stay. Would it be just to deprive a suitor of
his dues in this manner under Article 136 of the Constitu-
tion? I have no doubt in my mind that it would be unjust.
The work indisputably has been done pursuant to an order of
the Court of law and the party who has done the work must be
paid its remuneration. How would that remuneration be set-
tled, would it be by a decree in the suit or would it be by
adjudication of an award? In the view I have taken that
there was a valid reference on the contention of the re-
spondent, this question which was incidental thereto must be
decided along with that contention. In any view of the
matter, however, for determining the work done pursuant to
the liberty or right given by the Court which was not stayed
by this Court arbitration undoubtedly is a better method of
finding out the dues in respect of that work done. I would
not, therefore, in any event alter this direction of the
High Court.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, in my opinion, it
would be inappropriate to interfere with the interim direc-
tion of the High Court though the direction was beyond
jurisdiction. In the premises I would have disposed of the
appeal by directing the arbitrator to determine the rates in
respect of the extraction of the remaining timber of stand-
ing marked trees in compartment No. 59 Marwah.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, I would have made
no order as to costs.
N.V.K. Appeal al-
lowed.
1
?401