Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GAYA ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO., LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE-STATE OF BIHAR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/02/1953
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1953 AIR 182 1953 SCR 572
CITATOR INFO :
E&D 1985 SC1156 (49,52)
ACT:
Indian Arbitration Act (X of 1940), s. 34- Contract
containing arbitration clause-Rescission of contract and
suit by one party--Application for stay of suit-Scope of
arbitration clause-Construction of clause.
HEADNOTE:
If the arbitration agreement is broad and, comprehensive and
embraces any dispute between the parties in respect of the
agreement, or in respect of any provision in the agreement,
or in respect of anything arising out of it, and one of the
parties seeks to avoid the contract, the dispute is
referable to arbitration if the avoidance of the contract
arises out of the terms of the contract itself. Where,
however, the party seeks to avoid the contract for reasons
dehors it, the arbitration clause cannot be resorted to as
it goes along with other terms of the contract. In other
words, a party cannot rely on a term of the contract to
repudiate it and still say the arbitration clause should not
apply.
Where, however, an arbitration clause is not so comprehen-
sive and is not drafted in the broad language namely " in
respect of " any agreement, or "in respect of something
arising out of it", that proposition does not hold good.
The arbitration clause is a written submission agreed to by
the parties in a contract and like every written submission
to arbitration must be considered according to its language
and in the light of the circumstances in which it is made.
Disputes which arose between the State of Bihar and an
Electric Supply Company whose licence had been revoked by
the State were settled by an agreement which provided that
the State should make an advance payment of Rs. 5 lakhs to
the company, and the company should hand over the
undertaking to the State. The undertaking was to be valued,
within 3 months and if any money was found due to the
company as per the Government valuation over 5 lakhs it will
be paid to the company and if the valuation was less than 5
lakhs the company would refund the excess received by it.
The agreement, contained an arbitration clause which ran as
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follows: " In the case of any difference or dispute between
the parties over the valuation as arrived at by the
Government and that arrived at by the company any such
difference or dispute including the claim for additional
compensation of 20% shall be referred to arbitration." The
company instituted a suit against the State alleging that
the State bad failed to make its
valuation. and to make, payment of the excess within the
time fixed and as time was of the essence of the contract,
it had rescinded the agreement, and praying for a
declaration that the undertaking belonged to it, for damages
and appointment of a receiver. The State applied under s.
34 of the Arbitration Act for stay of the suit:
Held, that the scope of the arbitration clause was very
narrow; -it conferred jurisdiction on the arbitrator only on
the question of valuation of the undertaking pure and
simple. Questions relating to the breach of contract or its
rescission were outside the scope of the clause and the suit
could not be stayed under s. 34.
Heyman v. Darwins Ltd. (119421 A.C. 356) referred to.
Harinagar Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Skoda (India) Ltd. (A.I.R.
1948 Cal. 230) and Governor-General in Council v. Associated
Livestock Farm Ltd. ([1937] 41 C.W.N. 563) distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 175 of 1951.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Order and Decree dated the
30th March, 1951, of the High Court of Judicature at Patna
(Ramaswami and Rai JJ.) in Miscellaneous Appeal No. 19 of
1951 arising out of the Order dated the 18th December, 1950,
of the ’Court of the Additional Sub-Judge Second at Gaya in
Title Suit No. 47 of 1950.
N. C. Chatterjee (Rameshwar Nath, with him) for the
appellant.
M. C. Setalvad Attorney-General for India, and Mahabir
Prasad, Advocate- General of Bihar (B. J. Umrigar with
them) for the respondent.
1953. February 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
MAHAJAN - J. This appeal by special leave arises out of an
application made by the State of Bihar against the Gaya
Electric Supply Co. Ltd. under section 34 of the Indian-
Arbitration Act for stay of proceedings in a suit filed by
the company on 28th September, 1950. The facts relevant to
this enquiry are these.
574
A licence of or the supply of electric energy in the town of
Gaya was obtained by one Khandelwal in the year 1928 under
the Indian Electricity Act, 1910. With the required
sanction of the Government the licence was transferred to
the company in 1932. By a notification dated 23rd June,
1949, the licence was revoked by the Government with effect
from 9th July, 1949. Thereupon the company filed a suit
against the State for a declaration that the revocation of
the licence was arbitrary, mala fide and ultra vires.
During the pendency of the suit negotiations started between
the company and the State for a settlement of the dispute
and ultimately on 28th October, 1949, a deed of agreement
was arrived at between them. The effect of the agreement
and the correspondence referred to therein was substantially
as; follows :-
(a) That the company would withdraw the suit No. 58 of 1949
unconditionally on 25th October, 1949.
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(b) That within three days of the withdrawal of ,the suit
the State of Bihar would make an advance payment of rupees
five lakhs to the company, and, simultaneously the company
would formally hand over the possession of the undertaking
to an authorized officer of the Government.
(c) That both parties will make their respective valuations
within three months of talking over the undertaking and any
balance of money found due to the company as per Government
valuation will be paid to the company and in case of
overpayment the excess paid to the company on account of the
" on account -payment " of rupees five lakhs will be
refunded to the, Government.
(d) That in the case of any difference or dispute
between,the parties over the payment of the balance which
may be found due after valuation such dispute shall be
submitted to the-sole arbitration of a single arbitrator who
should be a high government officer of the provincial
government of rank equal to or higher than a Divisional
Commissioner and his award shall be binding and final on
both parties.
575
The arbitration clause is contained in a letter dated 13th
October, 1949, and was substantially accepted by the company
in its letter dated 17th October, 1949. As set out by the
State Government in its application under section 34, it
runs as follows
" In the case of any difference or dispute between the
parties over the valuation as arrived at by the Government
and that arrived at by the company, such difference or
dispute, including the claim for additional compensation of
20 % shall be referred to arbitration..."
In pursuance of the agreement the respondent took over the
undertaking on 28th October, 1949, and also made a payment
of rupees five lakhs to the company.
On the 19th January, 1950, the company sent a statement of
valuation of the assets amounting to RS. 22,06,072, to the
Chief Electrical Engineer, Bihar. The Chief Electrical
Engineer characterized the valuation of 22 lakhs by the
company as fantastic and stated that according to a rough
valuation the amount would be’ approximately five lakhs and
that the final valuation would be settled after the company
-had furnished a detailed history of the plants and
machineries. The company declined to give any further
details and stated that time was of the essence of the.
contract and it would be extended from 28th January, to 15th
February, 1950 On 6th April, 1950, the Chief Electrical
Engineer intimated that the ’valuation amounted to Rs.
6,56,221. No reply to this letter was received and the
State Government intimated to the company that as difference
and dispute had arisen relating to valuation, Mr. M. S. Rao,
I.C.S. -was being appointed as sole arbitrator to decide the
dispute.
On 28th September, 1950, the company instituted the suit,
the subject-matter the application for stay, after
necessary notice under section 80 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. In the plaint it was alleged ,that as the State
Government had failed and neglected to make its valuation or
to make payment to the
576
company by -the 15th March, 1950, it committed a breach of
the agreement and by reason of this breach the company had
rescinded the agreement and had forfeited the sum of five
lakhs paid as advance by the State. The company prayed
inter alia for the reliefs of declaration that the,
electrical undertaking belonged to them, for damages, for
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appointment of receiver and for injunction. On the 9th
October, 1950, the State Government filed the present appli-
cation under section 34, of the Indian Arbitration Act. It
was stated therein that the company had with a, dishonest
and mala fide motive and with a view to avoid the decision
of the matter in dispute in arbitration instituted the suit
on incorrect and false allegations. that the arbitration
agreement was still subsisting and valid and binding on the
parties and could not be taken as having been rescinded as
alleged by the company, that the cause of action as alleged
in the plaint being noncompliance with the agreement the
suit arose out of and related to the agreement and was
covered by the arbitration clause and that the State
Government was ready and willing to have the dispute settled
by arbitration. The company denied the allegations of mala
fides and pleaded that the arbitration clause was no longer
in existence and that even assuming it to be in existence,
the suit was in no way connected with the ’same and it was
contended that the suit should not be stayed.
The subordinate judge held that the suit was no in respect
of any matter agreed to be referred, and that the court had
no’ jurisdiction to stay the proceedings. In the result
the stay application was dismissed. Against this order the
State Government appealed to the High Court. The High
Court held that the dispute in the suit was one which
arose out of or was in respect of the agreement and that the
question in the suit was directly within the scope of the
arbitration clause. By an order of this court dated 22nd
May, 1951, the company was granted special leave’ under
article 136(1) of the Constitution.
’ 577
Section 34 of, the Indian Arbitration Act runs thus -
"Where any party to an arbitration comment Cost any legal
proceedings against any other party to the agreement in
respect of any matter agreed to be ,referred, any party to
such legal proceedings may, apply to the judicial authority
before which the proceedings are pending to stay the
proceedings, and if satisfied that there is no sufficient
reason why the matter should not be referred in accordance
with the arbitration agreement and that the applicant was,
at ,the time when the proceedings were commenced, and still
remains, ready and willing to do all things necessary to the
proper conduct of ’the arbitration, such authority may make
an order staying the proceedings."
From the language of the section it is quite clear that the
legal proceeding which is sought to be stayed must be in
respect of a matter which the parties have agreed to refer
and which comes within the ambit of the arbitration
agreement. Where, however, a suit is commenced as to a
matter which lies outside the submission, the court is bound
to refuse a stay. In the words of Viscount Simona L. C. in
Heyman v. Daruins Ltd’ (1). the answer to the question
whether a dispute falls within an arbitration clause in a
contract must depend on (a) what is the dispute, and (b)
what disputes the arbitration clause covers. If the
arbitration agreement is broad and comprehensive and
embraces any dispute between the parties "in respect of" the
agreement, or in respect of any provision in the agreement,
or in respect of anything arising out of it, and one of the
parties seeks to avoid the contract, the dispute is
referable to arbitration if the avoidance of the contract
arises out of the terms of the contract itself.’ Where,
however, the party soaks to avoid the contract for reasons
dehors it, the arbitration clause cannot be resorted to as
it goes along with other terms of the contract. In other
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words, a party cannot rely on a term of the contract
(1) [1942] A.C. 356,
578
to repudiate it and still say the arbitration clause should
not apply. If he relies upon a contract, be must, rely on
it for all purposes . Where, however, an arbitration clause
is not so comprehensive and is not drafted in the broad
language which was, used in the House of Lords,case, namely’
"in respect of" any agreement, or in respect of something,
arising out of it", that proposition does not hold good.
The arbitration clause is a written submission agreed to by
the parties in a contract and like -every written submission
to arbitration must be considered according to its language
and in the light of the circumstances in which it is made.
Now as regards the first question, viz., what is the present
dispute about, the answer is to be gathered from paragraphs
14 to 17 of the plaint. It is averred therein that the
Government of Bihar committed breach of the agreement and
failed to make any, valuation of the undertaking or pay the
balance of the compensation money, that time being of the
essence of the contract, the defendant failed and neglected
to complete the valuation within the time originally fixed
or the extended time, and that by reason of the breach of
contract the plaintiff rescinded the agreement and forfeited
the sum of rupees five lakhs and that it is entitled to
compensation for the wrongful deprivation of the use of its
property. No claim has been made in the plaint for the
valuation of the undertaking or for the payment of any
compensation for the undertaking; on the other hand, the
claim in the suit is founded on the rescission of the
agreement containing the arbitration clause and on a breach
of that agreement. These are matters which may well be said
to arise out of the agreement and if the arbitration clause
was broadly worded and stated that all disputes arising out
of the agreement would be referred to arbitration, it could
then probably have been said that the scope of the suit was
within the ambit of the arbitration clause, but the clause
here is differently worded.
The clause here is that if any difference. or dispute arises
between the parties over the payment of the
579
balance which may be found due after valuation such dispute
shall be submitted to the sole arbitration of a single
arbitrator. The scheme of the agreement is that the
Government was to make a valuation as laid’ down in the
Indian Electricity Act within three, months of taking over
the undertaking and any balance of money found due to the
company as per Government valuation was to be paid by the
Government, and in case of over-payment, the excess paid to
the company on account of the "on account payment" of rupees
five lakhs mentioned in paragraph 1 had to be refunded to
government. In the case of any difference between the
parties over the valuation as arrived at by the Government
and that arrived at by the company, such difference or
dispute, including the claim for additional compensation of
twenty per cent. had to be referred to arbitration a scope
of it is arbitration clause is a very narrow one. It only
confers jurisdiction on the arbitrator on the question of
valuation of the undertaking pure and simple and does not
say that all disputes arising out of the agreement or in
respect of it will be decided by arbitration. Questions
relating to the breach of contract or its rescission are
outside the reach of this clause. The arbitrator has not
been conferred the power by this clause to pronounce on the
issue whether the plaintiff was justified in claiming that
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time was of the essence of the contract and whether the
State Government committed a breach of the contract by not
making a valuation within the time specified. This clause
is therefore no answer to the company’s querry "Show me that
I have agreed to refer the subject-matter of the suit to an
arbitrator." Besides this clause in the agreement there is
nothing else which can deprive the court of its jurisdiction
to decide the plaintiff’s suit as brought.
Ramaswami J., with whom Rai J. concurred, held that upon a
perusal of the term,; of the contract and of the
correspondence it was obvious that no stipulation was made
that the compensation money
75
580
should be paid within the period of three months, that on
the contrary, the intention of the parties that the
Government would pay compensation money only after the award
had been made by the arbitrator. Now this is the very point
which would be in issue in the suit itself, and the learned
Judge was in error in considering and deciding this point in
this enquiry under section 34. The validity of the
plaintiff’s contention in the suit cannot be gone into by
that court exercising jurisdiction under this section as its
function is a very limited one. The only point in such
cases to be decided is whether the claim which is brought-
whether it is good, bad or indifferent comes within the
submission to arbitration. It may be that there are grounds
upon which the defendant would be able to satisfy the proper
tribunal that the plaintiff’s claim was frivolous and
vexatious, but those considerations, as pointed out by Banks
L. J in Monro v. Bognor Urban Council (1), are material only
if the question to be considered is whether the case made
was a frivolous and vexatious one and ought to have had no
weight at all upon the question of what the plaintiff’s
claim in fact was and one can only find out what his claim
is by looking at the plaint.
The learned Judges in the High Court seem to have thought
that the arbitration clause here had been drafted broadly
and that all "disputes arising out of or in respect of the
agreements were referable to arbitration. Their reliance on
the decision of the Calcutta High Court in Harinagar Sugar
Mills Ltd. v. Skoda India Ltd.(") in support of the decision
indicates the error. In that case the arbitration clause
was drafted in a comprehensive language and stated that a
dispute arising out of the agreement had to be referred to
arbitration. Their reference to the case of Governor-
General in Council v. Associated Livestock Farm Ltd. (3)
also shows that they were under the same erroneous
impression. In this case the arbitration clause was in
these terms :-
(1) [1915] 3 K.B. i67.
(2) (1937) 41 C.W.N. 563.
(3) A.I.R. 1948 Cal, 230,
581
"Any dispute or difference arising out of the contract shall
be referred to the arbitration of the officer sanctioning
the contract whose decision shall be final and binding."
It is obvious that these decisions could have no relevance
to the arbitration clause as drawn up in the present case.
If the nature of the claim is as we have indicated above, it
seems plain that it does not come within the scope of the
submission.
In our judgment, therefore, the decision of the learned
Subordinate Judge was right and the Judges of the High Court
were in error in reversing it. In the result the only
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course open to us is to allow the appeal with costs and to
say that the plaintiff’s claim is not within the scope of
the submission and that the petition under section 34 was
rightly dismissed by the Subordinate Judge.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the appellants Rajinder Narain.
Agent for the respondent P. K. Chatterji.