Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
Dr. S. B. DUTT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNIVERSITY OF DELHI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/09/1958
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 1050 1959 SCR 1236
ACT:
Arbitration - Award - Direction for enforcement of contract
of personal service-Validity-Such direction, if an error on
the face of the award-Delhi University Act, 1922 (No. VIII
of 1922),s. 45.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a professor in the respondent University, was
dismissed from service by the respondent. He thereupon
referred the dispute as to his dismissal and certain other
disputes to arbitration under the provisions Of s. 45 of the
Delhi University Act. An award was made on the reference
which among other things decided that the appellant’s "
dismissal was ultra vires, mala fide, and has no effect on
his status. He still continues to be a professor of the
University ". On proceedings to obtain a judgment on the
award:
Held, that the award which purported to enforce a contract
of personal service disclosed an error on the face of it and
must be set aside.
High Commissioner for India v. I. M. Lall, (1948) L. R. 75
I. A. 225 and Ram Kissendas Dhanuka v. Satya Charan Law,
(1949) L. R. 77 I. A. 128, distinguished.
An award may disclose an error on its face though the reason
for the erroneous decision was not set out in it.
Champsey Bhara & Co. v. jivraj Balloo Spinning and Weaving
Co. Ltd., (1923) L.R. 50 I.A. 324, explained.
Held, further, that an award made under S. 45 Of the Delhi
University Act to which the section itself makes the
provisions of the Arbitration Act, 1940, applicable, is not
the same thing as an award under the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947, and there can be no analogy between the two and
the words ’any dispute ’ occurring in that section cannot
include a dispute relating to reinstatement or authorise the
passing of any such direction by the arbitrator.
Western India Automobile Association v. Industrial Tribunal,
Bombay, [1949] F. C. R. 321, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : CiVil Appeal No. 229 of 1956.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated January 15, 1955,
of the Punjab High Court in F. A. O. No. 119-D of 1954,
arising out of the judgment and decree
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dated May 27, 1954, of the Court of Sub-Judge Class III,
Delhi, in Suit No. 206 of 1953.
N. C. Chatterjee, A. N. Sinha and P.K. Mukherjee, for the
appellant.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, A. B. Rohatgi and
B. P. Maheshwari, for the respondent.
1958. September 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SARKAR J.-This appeal arises out of a proceeding for filing
an award in Court and obtaining a judgment thereon.
The award was made in respect of disputes between the
appellant, a professor of the respondent, the University of
Delhi, and the respondent. The dispute originally started
many years ago and with the passage of time, increased in
volume. A narrative of the disputes is necessary for the
proper appreciation of the questions arising in this appeal
and this we now proceed to give.
On May 10, 1944, the appellant was appointed Professor of
Chemistry by the respondent. In August 1948 the Government
of India appears to have sanctioned a scheme called the
Selection Grade for a higher grade of pay for certain
professors. The appellant claimed to be entitled to the
benefit of this scheme but it was not given to him by the
respondent. This was the first dispute between the parties.
In March, 1949, another professor, Dr. Seshadri, was
appointed by the respondent the Head of its Department of
Chemistry. The appellant contended that he was the Head of
the Department and had been wrongfully superseded by the
appointment of Dr. Seshadri as the Head. This gave rise to
another dispute. The appellant’s case is that he tried to
get this dispute solved by arbitration under the provisions
of the Delhi University Act, 1922, but was unable to do so
owing to the obstructive attitude of the University
authorities, and was, therefore, on October 18, 1949, forced
to file a suit for a, declaration that his removal from his
position of the Head of the Department of Chemistry was
illegal. The respondent in its turn also had certain
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complaints against the appellant for misconduct of more or
less serious character into the details of which it is not
necessary to enter. It appears to have been agreed between
the parties in October 1950 that the mutual grievances would
be investigated by Sir S. Vardachariar and Bakshi Sir Tek
Chand and their decision was to be accepted as final and
binding. In view of this agreement the appellant withdrew
his aforesaid suit on November 3, 1950. The investigation
was thereafter held and a report submitted on March 1, 1951,
which appears to have gone substantially against the
appellant. The appellant contended that the investigation
had not been fairly held and that the report was for this
and other reasons defective and not binding on him. He
actually made an application on March 26, 1951, to the Sub-
Judge, Delhi, under s. 33 of the Arbitration Act, 1940, for
a declaration that there was no arbitration agreement and
hence the two referees had no jurisdiction to act or to make
an award and, in the alternative, if there was an award, for
an order setting it aside. While this application was
pending, the Executive Council of the respondent passed a
resolution on April 26, 1951, terminating the appellant’s
service as a professor of the University in view of the
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findings against him in the report of the investigators. On
February 11, 1952, the Sub-Judge, Delhi, dismissed the
application under s. 33 on the ground that the agreement as
to the investigation by Sir S. Vardachariar and Bakshi Sir
Tek Chand of the mutual grievances ",as not a submission to
arbitration and, therefore, no application under s. 33 of
the Arbitration Act lay. An appeal to the High Court was
dismissed on April 22, 1953, for the same reason.
What we have stated so far gives the history of the disputes
between the parties. We now proceed to the events with
which we are immediately concerned in this appeal.
On April 28, 1953, the appellant wrote a letter to the
respondent claiming, under the provisions of s. 45 of the
Delhi University Act, an arbitration with regard to various
disputes mentioned in it. That section is in these terms:
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" Section 45.
Any dispute arising out of a contract between the University
and any officer or teacher of the University shall, on the
request of the officer or teacher concerned, be referred to
a Tribunal of Arbitration consisting of one member appointed
by the Executive Council, one member nominated by the
officer or teacher concerned, and an umpire appointed by the
Chancellor. The decision of the Tribunal shall be final and
no suit shall lie in any Civil Court in respect of the
matters decided by the Tribunal. Every such request shall
be deemed to be a submission to arbitration upon the terms
of this section, within the meaning of the Arbitration Act,
1940, and all the provisions of that Act, with the exception
of section 2 thereof, shall apply accordingly."
By that letter the appellant appointed Professor M. N. Saha,
the celebrated scientist, now deceased, an arbitrator and
called upon the respondent to nominate another arbitrator.
The disputes raised in this letter were, (a) that the
appellant had been wrongfully deprived of the selection
grade; (b) that by the appointment of Dr. Seshadri, as the
Head of the Department of Chemistry, the appellant had been
wrongfully superseded; (c) that his dismissal was wrongful.
A copy of this letter was sent to Professor Saha. On May 2,
1953, the appellant again wrote to the respondent calling
attention to the fact that he had already appointed
Professor Salia an arbitrator and requiring it to appoint an
arbitrator within fourteen days as provided under the law.
On May 7, 1953, the respondent wrote to the appellant that
his letter of April 28, 1953, had been considered by its
Executive Council on April 30, 1953, and that the Council,
for the reasons mentioned, to which it is not necessary to
refer, did not propose to take any action in the matter.
Thereafter, on May 18, 1953, the appellant addressed a
further letter to the respondent in which he stated, " as
the said University had failed for 15 clear days to appoint
after the service of my said notice ", meaning his notice of
May 2, 1953, " on the University, please take notice that I
hereby
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appoint Professor M. N. Saba arbitrator appointed by me to
act as the sole arbitrator and give his award." The
appellant also wrote in similar terms to Professor Saba
asking him to proceed with the reference as he had become
the sole arbitrator. On May 24, 1953, Professor Saba wrote
to the respondent stating that as he had been appointed the
sole arbitrator by the appellant, he fixed June 15, 1953,
for the hearing of the case. On June 12, 1953, the
respondent wrote to Professor Saba intimating that it had
been advised that the appellant had no right to call for an
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arbitration and that the respondent did not recognise him
(Professor Saba) as an arbitrator and also that he had no
jurisdiction to act as one. Notwithstanding this Professor
Saba started the arbitration proceedings on June 16, 1953.
The respondent appeared by a lawyer before Professor Saba
and repeated its objection to his jurisdiction to act as an
arbitrator. Professor Saba overruled the respondent’s
objection and held that he had jurisdiction to act as the
sole arbitrator whereupon the representatives of the
respondent retired from the proceedings which were then
continued in their absence.
Professor Saba made an award which is dated June 17, 1953.
The material portion of the award is in these terms
The points requiring determination by me are as follows:-
1.Whether the Selection Grade of Professors was rightly
withheld in the case of Dr. S. B. Dutt when it was given to
all other professors of his standing and seniority.
2. Whether Dr. S. B. Dutt was appointed Professor and Head
of the Chemistry Department of the University and was
rightly removed from the Headship.
3 Whether the dismissal of Dr. Dutt by a resolution
passed by the Executive Council on the 26th April, 1951, was
mala fide and illegal and therefore wrongful and
ineffectual.
4.Whether Dr. Dutt was harassed by the officials of the
University and its effect.
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After giving the case my careful and earnest attention I
find:
(a) The steps for giving the Selection Grade of Professors
of the University to Dr. S. B. Dutt were wrongfully and
without just cause not taken by the University and he has
therefore been wrongfully deprived of the Selection Grade.
(b) The terms of appointment of Dr. Dutt were that be would
be also the Head of the Chemistry Department. His removal
from Headship was wrongful.
(c) Dr. Dutt was wrongfully dismissed. His dismissal was
ultra vires, mala fide and has no effect on his status. He
still continues to be a professor of the University.
(d) He has been subjected to harassment."
At the request of the appellant, Professor Saha filed the
award in the Court of the Sub-Judge, Delhi, on June 24,
1953. The respondent took various objections to it. The
Sub-Judge overruled these objections and passed a decree on
May 27, 1954, making the award, excepting a small portion
thereof with which this appeal is not concerned, a rule of
Court. The respondent filed two appeals from this decree,
one in the Court of the senior Sub-Judge, Delhi, and the
other in the Court of the District Judge, Delhi, as it was
in doubt as to which was the proper Court to which the
appeal lay. By an order made on November 26, 1954 the High
Court withdrew both these appeals to itself for trial, and
by its judgment dated January 15, 1955, allowed the appeals
and set aside the award on the ground that it disclosed an
error on the face of it. The present appeal is against this
judgment.
Two points have been raised in this appeal, one by the
appellant and the other by the respondent on a matter
decided against it which will be referred to later.
The appellant contends that the High Court was wrong in its
view that the award disclosed an error on the face of it.
The High Court had held that it was not open to the
arbitrator "to grant Dr. Dutt a declaration that he was
still a professor in the Univer-
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sity which no Court could or would give him." The High Court
felt that this declaration amounted to specific enforcement
of a contract of personal service which was forbidden by s.
21 of the Specific Relief Act and therefore disclosed an
error on the face of the award.
We are in entire agreement with the view expressed by the
High Court. There is no doubt that a contract of personal
service cannot be specifically enforced. Section 21, Cl.
(b) of the Specific Relief Act, 1877, and the second
illustration under this clause given in the section make it
so clear that further elaboration of the point is not
required. It seems to us that the present award does
purport to enforce a contract of personal service when it
states that the dismissal of the appellant " has no effect
on his status", and " He still continues to be a Professor
of the University ". When a decree is passed according to
the award, which if the award is unexceptionable, has to be
done under s. 17 of the Arbitration Act after it has been
filed in Court, that decree will direct that the award be
carried out and hence direct that the appellant be treated
as still in the service of the respondent. It would then
enforce a contract of personal service, for the appellant
claimed to be a professor under a contract of personal
service, and so offend s. 21 (b).
It was said that this might make the award erroneous but
that was not enough; before it could be set aside, it had
further to be shown that the error appeared on the face of
the award. The learned counsel contended that no error
appeared on the face of the award as the reasoning for the
decision was not stated in it. It was said that this was
laid down in the well-known case of Champsey Bhara & Co. v.
Jivraj Balloo Spinning and Weaving Co. Ltd. (1). We were
referred to the observations occurring in the judgment at p.
331 to the following effect:
" An error in law on the face of the award means, in their
Lordship’s view, that you can find in the award or a
document actually incorporated thereto, as for instance a
note appended by the arbitrator stating
(1) (1923) L.R. 50 1. A. 324.
1243
the reasons for his judgment, some legal proposition which
is the basis of the award and which you can then say is
erroneous."
We are unable to agree that the Judicial Committee laid down
the proposition that the learned counsel for the appellant
ascribes to them. When they referred to the reasons for the
judgment, they were contemplating a case where the judgment,
that is, the award itself, did not disclose an error but the
reasons given for it in an appended paper, did. They did
not intend to say that no error can appear on the face of an
award unless the reasons for the decision contained in the
award were given in it. In our view, all that is necessary
for an award to disclose an error on the face of it is that
it must contain, either in itself or in some paper intended
to be incorporated in it, some legal proposition which on
the face of it and without more, can be said to be
erroneous. This was the decision of the Judicial Committee
in the Champsey Bhara & Co. case (1). As the award in this
case directs specific enforcement of a contract of personal
service, it involves a legal proposition which is clearly
erroneous.
Another point raised on behalf of the appellant was that the
portion of the award which held that his dismissal had no
effect on his status and that he continued to be a professor
was merely consequential and hence a surplusage and
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therefore an error disclosed in it would not vitiate the
award. This contention seems to us to be unfounded. The
award held that the appellant had been dismissed wrongfully
and mala fide. Now, it is not consequential to such a
finding that the dismissal was of no effect, for a wrongful
and mala fide dismissal is none the less an effective
dismissal though it may give rise to a claim in damages.
The award, no doubt, also said that the dismissal of the
appellant was ultra vires but as will be seen later, it did
not thereby hold the act of dismissal to be a nullity and,
therefore, of no effect. We are also clear in our mind that
the contention about the offending portion of the award
being a mere surplusage affords
(1) (1923) L.R. 50 I.A 324.
158
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no assistance to the appellant for it was not said on his
behalf that the offending portion was severable from the
rest of the award and should be struck out as a mere
surplusage. It, therefore, has to remain as a part of the
award and so long as it does so, it would disclose an error
on the face of the award and make it liable to be set aside
as a whole.
It was then contended that a declaration that the appellant
continued in his service under the respondent in spite of
his dismissal by the latter was a declaration which the law
permitted to be made and was not therefore erroneous. It
was said that such a declaration had in fact been made by
the Judicial Committee in The High Commissioner for India v.
I. M. Lall (1). This contention, in our view, also lacks
substance. That was not a case based on a contract of
personal service. Indeed the contract of the respondent in
that case provided that the service was " to continue during
the pleasure of His Majesty, His Heirs and Successors, to be
signified under the hand of the Secretary of State for India
". The respondent had been dismissed by an order made under
the hand of the Secretary of State for India, and as he was
liable to be dismissed at the pleasure of the Crown, he
could base no complaint against his dismissal on the con-
tract of service and did not, in fact, do so. He founded
his suit on the claim that his dismissal by the Crown from
the Indian Civil Service of which he was a member, was void
and of no effect as certain mandatory provisions of the
Government of India Act, 1935, had not been complied with.
The Judicial Committee accepted this claim and thereupon
made the declaration that the purported dismissal of the
respondent was void and inoperative and he remained a member
of the Service at the date of the institution of his suit.
The declaration did not enforce a contract of personal
service but proceeded on the basis that the dismissal could
only be effected in terms of the statute and as that had not
been done, it was a nullity, from which the result followed
that the respondent had continued in service. All that the
Judicial Committee did in
1245
this case was to make a declaration of a statutory
invalidity of an act, which is a thing entirely different
from enforcing a contract of personal service.
The learned counsel for the appellant also referred, up, to
Ram Kissendas Dhanuka v. Satya Charan Law (1), in support of
his contention that the declaration in the form made in the
award was legal. That was a case of a suit by the minority
shareholders in a company against its directors for a
declaration that an ordinary resolution of the company
terminating the appointment of its Managing Agent was void
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and inoperative inasmuch as under art. 132 of the Articles
of Association of the Company the Managing Agents could be
removed by an extraordinary resolution only. The High Court
had declared the resolution to be void and inoperative. The
Judicial Committee maintained that declaration and rejected
the argument that " to affirm the continuance in force of
the Managing Agent’s appointment amounted to specific
enforcement of the contract of personal service and was a
violation of s. 21(b) of the Specific Relief Act, 1877." It
is quite clear to us that this decision has no application
to the case in hand. That was not a case in which specific
performance of a contract of service was sought. In fact
the servant, that is to say, the Managing Agent, was not a
party to the action at all. As the Judicial Committee
observed: " It (the decree) merely prevents dismissal of the
managing agents or termination of their appointment at the
instance of a majority in violation of the articles of
association of the company which the minority are entitled
to have observed. As between the company and the managing
agents it certainly has not the effect of enforcing a
contract of personal service." It was a case, as the Chief
Justice of the Calcutta High Court said in his judgment, in
Ram Kissendas v. Satya Charan (2) at p. 331 " not to enforce
a claim to employment with an employer, but a suit to
prevent third persons interfering with the Company’s
employees who are carrying out their contract of service
with the company. In other words, it is not a suit to
enforce a contract, but a suit to prevent the procurement of
a breach of contract." To
(1) (1949) L. R. 77 1. A. 128.
(2) (1945) 50 C.W.N. 331.
1246
such a suit, of course, s. 21 of the Specific Relief Act has
no application.
The learned counsel for the appellant also contended ;that
the present case was a case of an ultra vires act as I. M.
Lall’s case (1) was and therefore governed by the same
considerations. He relied for this purpose on that portion
of the award which held that the " appellant’s dismissal was
ultra vires ". We find no basis for this contention. No
point as to the dismissal of the appellant being ultra vires
bad been referred to the arbitrator. The points for
decision set out by the arbitrator do not refer to any
question of the dismissal being ultra vires. Again the
letter of the appellant, dated April 28, 1953, setting out
the disputes of which he required decision by arbitration
does not make out any case that the dismissal of the
appellant by the respondent was ultra vires the latter’s
incorporating statute. His point about the dismissal was
that it had been malicious and therefore wrongful ; that it
had been brought about by a resolution of the Executive
Council of the respondent on the basis of the report (also
called award) of the investigators, Sir S. Vardachariar and
Bakshi Sir Tek Chand, procured by the Vice-Chancellor, Dr.
Sen, by denying to the members of the Council any
opportunity to discuss the merits of that report. His case
on this point in his own words was this:
" When the award was put before the Executive Council Dr.
Sen definitely prohibited all discussions of it on the
ground that it was an award and suppressed those who desired
to comment on it, feeling as they did that the decision,
specially in the matter of the supposedly altered telegram
was open to grave doubts. In regard to this, questions were
asked but not answered.
If Dr. Sen had not wrongly disallowed discussion, I venture
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to say that the Council would not have agreed to a
dismissal, or at any event any allegation of moral
turpitude."
It is clear therefore that the appellant was challenging his
dismissal on the ground that the Vice-Chancellor, Dr. Sen,
who, he said, was inimically disposed towards
(I) (1948) L.R. 75 I.A. 225.
1247
him, had shut out all discussion on the question and
procured a resolution for the dismissal of the appellant,
and that because of such malicious and wrongful barring of
discussion, the resolution was wrongful. It was not the
appellant’s case before the arbitrator that the dismissal
was ultra vires the statute or otherwise a nullity. We also
find that this point was not advanced in the courts below.
The last point raised on behalf of the appellant was based
on s. 45 of the University Act. The terms of that section
have been earlier set out. The contention of the learned
counsel is that since the section says that any dispute
arising out of a contract between the University and any
officer or teacher of the University shall, on the request
of the officer or teacher concerned, be referred to a
Tribunal of Arbitration, a dispute as to dismissal and a
claim to reinstatement might be referred to arbitration
under it, and if that could be done, then, the award might
properly direct the dismissed professor to be reinstated.
For this part of his argument the learned counsel referred
us to Western India Automobile Association v. Industrial
Tribunal, Bombay (1). It had been held there that an
Industrial Tribunal had power in an award made on a
reference under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, to direct
reinstatement of discharged employees. The learned counsel
referred us to the following observation occurring in -the
judgment of the Federal Court at p. 332 :
" Any dispute connected with the employment or non-
employment would ordinarily cover all matters that require
settlement between workmen and employers, and whether those
matters concern the causes of their being out of service or
any other question and it would also include within its
scope the reliefs necessary for bringing about harmonious
relations between the employers and the workers."
It was contended that, as in the Western India Automobile
Association case (1), the words " any dispute " in s. 45 of
the University Act would include a dispute as to a claim for
reinstatement and would therefore give the arbitrator power
to order reinstatement. We do not think that any analogy
can be drawn from the,
(1) [1949] F.C.R. 321.
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wording of the Industrial Disputes Act. That Act is
concerned with considerations which are peculiar to it. The
proceedings before a Tribunal constituted under that Act
cannot be said to be arbitration proceedings nor its
decision an award, though called an award in the Act, in the
sense in which the words " arbitration proceedings " and "
award " are used in the Arbitration Act. An award under the
Industrial Disputes Act cannot be filed in Court nor is
there any provision for applying to Court to set it aside.
All considerations that apply to an award under the
Industrial Disputes Act, cannot be said to apply to an award
made under the Arbitration Act. Furthermore, under s. 45 of
the University Act, the arbitration held under it is to be
governed by the provisions of the Arbitration Act, 1940, and
the validity of an award made under such an arbitration has,
therefore, to be decided by reference to the rules applying
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to that Act, one of such rules being that the award should
not disclose an error on its face. For these reasons, in
our view, this argument is unfounded.
This disposes of all the points raised on behalf of the
appellant and brings us to the contention raised on behalf
of the respondent. That contention was that the appointment
of Professor Saha as the sole Arbitrator was illegal. It
was said that the respondent claimed to appoint Professor
Saha the sole arbitrator under s. 9 of the Arbitration Act
but that section could only apply where the reference was to
two arbitrators, one to be appointed by each party, while
the proper interpretation of s. 45 of the University Act was
that the arbitration was to three Arbitrators, one nominated
by each of the parties and the third by the Chanceller of
the University. This point was decided against the
respondent by the High Court. As, however, the appeal must
be dismissed for the reason that the award contains an error
on the face of it, as we have earlier found, it becomes
unnecessary to decide the point raised by the respondent.
We, therefore, do not express any opinion on this question.
In the result this appeal is dismissed with costs
throughout. Appeal dismissed.
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