Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STERLING GENERAL INSURANCE CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PLANTERS AIRWAYS PVT. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/12/1974
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BHAGWATI, P.N.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 415 1975 SCR (3) 136
1975 SCC (1) 603
ACT:
Arbitration Act, 1940, Section 37(4)-"Undue hardship",
meaning of-Extension of time for referring the dispute to
arbitration-"Undue hardship", if could be given a liberal
interpretation.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent , a common carrier of goods, had taken out
three transit policies of insurance renewable every year
from the appellant. The freight policy taken out in January
1969, was against risk of loss or damage to any goods or
merchandise during transit. In June 1971. the respondent
declared to the appellant that it had received for transit a
consignment of 185 packages of general merchandise alleged
to be of the total value of Rs. 1,10,000/(approx) for
transportation from Calcutta to various places in Assam and
Tripura and paid the requisite premium on the value of goods
and the goods stood insured under the said policy.
According to the respondent on the evening of 29-6-71, the
consignment of 185 packages was loaded in Truck No. WGH-
8261, and the truck left Calcutta on the same day for
Gauhati. It is alleged that the owner of the truck reached
Barasat on the night of 29th June, 1971, there was a robbery
and neither the truck, nor the driver, nor the merchandise
could be traced. On 1-7-1971, the respondent sent letters
to the officer incharge of Jorabagan Police Station, the
Assistant Commissioner of Police, Intelligence Branch, Lall
Bazar. Calcutta and the Deputy Commissioner of Police
Intelligence Branch intimating them that the truck, the
driver, the assistant and the merchandise could not be
traced. A copy of the letter sent to the Assistant
Commissioner of Police. Lall Bazar, Calcutta was sent to
the appellant and it was received by the appellant on 2-7-
1971. On 1-7-1971 and 21-9-1971, the respondent lodged the
claim for loss with the appellant on the basis that the loss
was covered by the policy. On 3-7-1971, the appellant sent
a, letter to the respondent calling upon the respondent to
furnish the particulars as regards the name and address of
the owner of the vehicle, the name and’ address of the
driver and other particulars. On 21-9-1971 the respondent
informed the appellant by a letter that the information and
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the records asked for in the letter dated 3-7-1971 were
already supplied to Mr. A. L. Chopra, the agent of the
appellant on 5-7-1971 when he called upon the respondent for
that, purpose. On 10-10-1971. the appellant wrote to the
respondent informing that until the report of the
investigation by the police was produced by the respondent,
it would not be possible for the appellant to proceed
further in the matter. The appellant received a copy of the
investigation report by the police at Barasat on 12-5-1972.
The report was to the effect that the alleged episode, of
robbery was false. On this basis, the appellant sent to the
respondent a letter dated 4-8-1972 stating the contents of
the investigation report of the police at Barasat asking for
the investigation report of Jambagan Police Lall Bazar
Police. Thereafter the appellant intimated the respondent
by letter dated 16-2-1973 disclaiming its liability under
the freight policy as regards the loss of the consignment of
185 packages. On receipt of the letter, the respondent
wrote to the appellant on 30-3-73 asking for the ground on
which the appellant disclaimed its liability. The appellant
sent a letter after two months on May 30, 1973, stating that
it had nothing to add to what had been stated in its letter
dated February 16, 1973. Thereafter, the respondent took
the advice of solicitors and counsel. On 17-8-1973, the
respondent filed the application before the High Court under
s. 37(4) of the Act for extension of time for referring the
dispute to arbitration till a date 15 days after the order
of the High Court. In the application the respondent stated
the reasons for the delay in filing the application in court
after receiving the letter dated May 30, 1973. In answer to
the application, the appellant contended that s. 37(4) of
the Act had no application that the Court had no
jurisdiction to extend the time and that even if the court
had
137
jurisdiction, there were no valid grounds for extension.
The learned Judge of the High Court passed the order
extending the time to refer the dispute to arbitration
within a fortnight from 14-1-1974.
In this appeal by special leave, it was contended for
appellant that there would be no undue hardship to the
respondent if the time for preferring the claim to
arbitration is not extended and, therefore, the High Court
went wrong in exercising its discretion by extending the
time.
Rejecting the contention and dismissing the appeal,
HELD ; (i) Court has to take a liberal view of the meaning
of the words "undue hardship" occurring in section 37(4) of
the Arbitration Act, 1940. ’Undue’ must mean something
which is not merited by the conduct of the claimant, or is
very much disproportionate to it. [143E-F]
Steamship Co. of 1912, etc. v. Anglo-American Grain Co.
[1958] 2 Llyod’s Rep. 341; Watney, Comba, Raid & Co. v. E.
M. Dower & Co. etc. [1956] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 129, 13 1; F. E.
Hookway & Co. Ltd. v. H. W. H. Hopper & Co. [1950] 2 All
E.R. 842; Stanhope Steamship Co. Ltd. v. British Phosphate
Commissioners [1956] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 325; and Librarian
Shipping etc. v. A King & Sorts [1967] 1 All E.R. 934.
referred to
(ii) The respondent was having dealings with the appellant
in the business of insurance from 1958 onwards and in no
instance was the claim made by the respondent rejected by
the appellant. The conduct of the respondent in enquiring
of the appellant the grounds on which the claim was rejected
was quite reasonable. It was only after the grounds of
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rejection were known that the respondent could have decided
whether to resort to arbitration or not. If the grounds of
rejection would come within the clause of exclusion of
liability under the Policy, it would serve no purpose to
incur the expense and hardship involved in resorting to
arbitration. The appellant did not give the reason for
disclaiming liability even in its letter dated 30-5-1973.
We do not think that there was any lack of promptness on the
part of the respondent in waiting for the reply to its
letter dated 30-3-1973. In the facts and circumstances of
the case it is clear that the High Court exercised its
discretion properly in extending the time. The conduct of
the respondent was reasonable. It took all steps it could
when it knew about the alleged robbery to inform the police
and the appellant. The fact that the Barasat police
reported that the case was false does not necessarily mean
that the respondent tried to practise any fraud on the
appellant. The respondent had filed a suit against the owner
of the truck in question in July 1972 for the recovery of
the amount of loss. It also paid the claims arising out of
the loss of goods which were transported through the truck.
All these go to show the bona fides and reasonableness of
the conduct of the respondent. Both the amount at stake and
the reasons for delay are material in considering the
question of undue hardship. It cannot be said that any
material prejudice would be caused to the appellant by
extending the time. There would be undue hardship if time
is not extended, as the consequence of non-extension would
in any event be excessive and out of proportion to the fault
of the respondent, if any, in not being prompt. It also
cannot be, said that the mere fact that a claim would be
barred would be undue hardship. [144B-C; 14; 145A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 535 of 1974.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and order dated
the 14th January, 1974 of the Calcutta High Court in Award
Case No. 181/1973.
S. T. Desai, B. P. Maheshwari, Sharad Manohar and Suresh
Sethi, for the appellant.
Somnath Chatterjee, and P. K. Mukherjee, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
138
MATHEW, J.-This appeal. by special leave, is directed
against an order of a learned judge of the’ Calcutta High
Court allowing an application filed under s. 37(4) of the
Arbitration Act, 1940 (hereinafter called the Act) for
extension of time to refer the matter of arbitration.
The facts are these. The appellant is a company doing
business in general insurance. The respondent carries on
business as a common carrier of goods. The respondent had
taken out three transit policies of insurance renewable
every year. The policy which is relevant for the purpose of
the present appeal is freight policy No. CL1/RE-P/257 taken
by the respondent in January, 1969 from the appellant
against risk of loss or damage to any goods or merchandise
during transit.
In June 1971, the respondent declared to the appellant that
it had received for transit a consignment of 185 packages of
general merchandise alleged to be of the total value of Rs.
1,10,000 (approx) for transportation from Calcutta to
various places in Assam and Tripura and paid the requisite
premium on the value of goods and the goods stood insured
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under the said policy. According to the respondent, on the
evening of 29-6-71, the consignment of 185 packages was
loaded in Truck No. WGH-8261, and the truck left Calcutta on
the same day for Gauhati. It is alleged that the owner of
the truck informed the respondent that after the truck
reached Barasat on the night of 29th June, 1971, there was a
robbery and neither the truck, nor the driver, nor the
merchandise could be traced. On 1-7-1971, the respondent
sent letters to the officer-incharge of Jarabagan Police
Station, the Assistant Commissioner of Police, Intelligence
Branch, Lall Bazar Calcutta and the Deputy Commissioner of
Police, Intelligence Branch intimating them that the truck
which left Calcutta on 29th June 1971 had not reached
Beniagram at the scheduled time and that the truck, the
driver, the assistant and the merchandise could not be
traced. A copy of the letter sent to the Assistant
Commissioner of Police, Lall Bazar, Calcutta was sent to the
appellant and it was received by the appellant on 2-7-1971.
On 1-7-1971 and 21-9-1971, the respondent lodged the claim
for loss with the appellant on the basis that the loss was
covered by the policy. On 3-7-1971, the appellant sent a
letter to their respondent calling upon the respondent to
furnish the particulars as regards the name and address of
the owner of the vehicle, the name and address of the driver
and other particulars. On 21-9-1971, the respondent informed
the appellant by a letter that the information and the
records asked for in the letter dated 3-7-1971 were already
supplied to Mr. A. L. Chopra, the agent of the appellant on
5-7-1971, when he called upon the respondent for that
purpose. On 10-10-1971, the appellant wrote to the
respondent informing that until the report of the
investigation by the police was produced by the respondent,
it would not be possible for the appellant to proceed
further in the matter. The appellant received a copy of the
investigation report by the police at Barasat on 12-5-1972.
The report was to the effect that the alleged episode of
robbery was false. On this basis, the appellant sent to the
respondent a letter dated 4-8-1972 stating the contents of
the investigation report of the police at Barasat asking for
the investigation report of Jarabagan
139
Police Lall Bazar Police-. Thereafter the, appellant
intimated the respondent by letter dated 16-2-1973
disclaiming its liability under the freight policy as
regards the loss of the consignment of 185 packages. On
receipt of the letter, the respondent wrote to the appellant
on 30-3-1973 asking for the grounds on which the appellant
disclaimed its liability. The appellant sent a letter after
two months on May 30, 1973, stating that it had nothing to
add to what had been stated in its letter dated February 16,
1973. Thereafter, the respondent took the advice of
solicitors and counsel. On 17-8-1973, the respondent filed
the application before the High Court under s. 37(4) of the
Act for extension of time for referring the dispute to
arbitration till a date 15 days after the order of the High
Court. In the application, the respondent stated the
reasons for the delay in filing the application in court
after receiving the letter dated May 30, 1973. In answer to
the application, the appellant contended that s. 37(4) of
the Act had no, application, that the court had no
jurisdiction to extend the time and that even if the court
had jurisdiction, there were no valid grounds for extension.
The application came up for hearing before a learned Judge
and lie passed the order extending the time to, refer the
dispute to arbitration within a fortnight from 14-1-1974.
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The, question that arises for consideration is whether the
High Court had power to extend the time and if it had power,
whether it exercised its power properly in extending the
time for preferring the claim to arbitration. That will
depend upon a correct interpretation of the relevant clauses
of the policy and of s. 37(4) of the Act.
Clause I of the policy states that notice of any accident,
loss or damage affecting the insurance shall be given to the
Company at the earliest possible date and not later than 30
days from the date of the accident, loss or damage. Clause
2 of the policy provides that in the event of any loss or
damage covered by the insurance shall produce and give to
the Company all evidence as may be reasonably required by
the Company. Clause 9 provides that if the insured shall
make any claim knowing the same to be false or fraudulent as
regards the amount or otherwise the insurance shall become
void and all claims thereunder shall be forfeited. Clause
11 states that all differences arising out of the contract
shall be referred to the decision. of an arbitrator to be
appointed in writing by the parties or if they cannot agree
upon a single arbitrator, to the decision of two
arbitrators, one to be appointed in writing by each of the
parties within one calendar month after having been required
in writing so to do by either of the parties. It further
provides that the making of an award by the arbitrator or
arbitrators shall be a condition precedent to any right of
action against the Company. Clause 12 which is the
material’. clause for the purpose of this case reads :
"If the Company shall disclaim liability to
the Insured for any claim hereunder and such
claim shall not within three calendar months
from the date of such disclaimer have been
140
preferred to Arbitration under the provisions
herein contained, then the claim shall for ill p
urposes be deemed to have been abandoned
and shall not thereafter be recoverable
hereunder."
Section 37(4) of the Act reads as follows
"Whether the terms of an agreement to refer
future differences to arbitration provide that
any claims to which the agreement applies
shall be barred unless notice to appoint an
arbitrator is given or an arbitrator is
appointed or sonic other step to commence
arbitration proceedings is taken within a time
fixed by the agreement and a difference arises
to which the agreement applies, the Court, if
it is of opinion that in the circumstances of
the case undue hardships would otherwise be
caused, and notwithstanding that the time so
fixed has expired, may on such terms, if any,
as the justice of the case may require, extend
the time for such period as it thinks proper."
_
It was not seriously contended that s. 37(4) of the Act was
not applicable to the agreement embodied in the policy in
question and the High Court had no jurisdiction to extend
the time. The only contention pressed on behalf of the
appellant was that in the circumstances of the case, there
would be no undue hardship to the respondent if the time for
preferring the claim to arbitration is not extended and,
therefore, the High Court went- wrong in exercising the
discretion by extending the time.
There are no decisions of this Court or of the High Courts
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concerning the relevant consideration to be taken into
account in exercising the jurisdiction for extending time
under S. 37(4) of the Act. Section 16(6) of the English
Arbitration Act, 1934 which is practically the same as s. 27
of the English Arbitration Act of 1950 is in pari materia
with s. 37(4) of the Act. Therefore, the interpretation
placed by English Courts upon s. 16(6). and s. 27 of the
respective ,Acts has great persuasive value.
The English courts originally took a very strict and narrow
view ,of the words "undue hardship". In Steamship Co. of
1912 etc. v. Indlo-American Grain Co. etc.(1) Lord Parkar,
C.J. said :
"It has been said, over and over again by this
Court, that there must be very special
circumstances for extending the time. Of
course, if a valid claim is barred, there is
hardship, but that is not what is provided for
by the clause, and before this Court can
extend the time they must be satisfied that
the hardship amounts in the particular case to
undue hardship...........
In Watney, Comba, Raid & Co. v. E. Al. Dower & Co. Ltd.(2)
Goddard, C.J. said :
"I desire to say in the clearest possible
terms that the mere fact that the claimant is
barred cannot be held to be an
1. (1958) 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 341.
2. (1956) 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 129, 131.
141
undue hadship, which is what the section
requires to be found by the court before it
extends the time. The section does not mean
that this Court can take out of the contract
the provision which will bar the claim if it
is not pursued in time. They have no power to
do that. The only thing they have power to do
is to extend the time if undue hardship is
caused. One, can visualise certain cases of
undue hardship.".
In F. E. Hookway & Co. Ltd. v. H. W. H. Hopper & Co.(1)
where the buyers made an application for extension of time
under S. 16(6) of the English Act of 1934, Denning, L.J.
observed That the extent of delay in a relevant
circumstances to be considered, that if the delay is not on
account of the fault of the buyer, it would no doubt, be an
undue hardship on him to hold the clause against him but, if
the delay is his own fault, the hardship may not be undue as
it may be a hardship which it is due and proper that he
should bear. He further said that another relevant
circumstance was whether there was evidence of any loss on
any sub-contracts and claims by sub-buyers or any complaints
by them and if there was evidence of such loss or claims,
then the court would take a lenient view of the delay and
bold that, notwithstanding it, there was undue hardship on
the buyer.
In Stanhope Steamship Co. Ltd. v. British
Phosphate Commissioners(2), Singleton. J., in
delivering the judgment said
"What, then, is the meaning of "undue
hardship" ? "Undue", it is said by Mr.
McCrindle, means something which is not
merited by the conduct of the claimant. That
may be right. If the result of claimant’s
being perhaps a day late is so oppressive, so
burdensome, as to be altogether out of
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proportion to the fault, I am inclined to
think that one may well say that there is
undue hardship. Both the amount at stake and
the reasons for the delay are material
considerations-"
In Librarian Shipping etc. v. A King & Sons(3), the facts
were these. A vessel was let on a voyage charter party in
Centrocon from containing an arbitration clause under which
any claim had to be made in writing and the claimant’s
arbitrator had to be appointed within three months of final
discharge. A fire occurred on board the vessel during
leading. Both the owners and the charterers had claims
against each other. The time limit was to expire on June
26, 1966. The parties were negotiating and. after
considerable correspondence. a meeting between both parties
was arranged for June 27, 1966, with a view to settlement.
The meeting did not result in a settlement. The charterers
first realised that time had expired which the owners sought
an extension of it by consent, nine days after the expiry.
The charterers had not contributed to the delay on the part
of the owners in relation to the arbitration clause. The
charterers did not consent to the time being extended. The
owner-, applied under s. 27 of the Arbitration Act. 1950 for
an extension of time on the ground that "undue hardship"
would otherwise be caused to them. Their claim
1. [1950] 2 All E.R. 842. 2. (1956) 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 325.
3. [1967] 1 All E.R. 934
142
amounted to about pound 33.000. The master granted an
extension of time, but on appeal the judge refused it. On
further appeal the court by a majority said that if the time
were not extended, undue hardship would be caused to the
owners since they would be deprived of what might be a valid
claim for pound 33,000 by a delay of only a few days due to
excusable inadvertence, that the charterers would not in any
way be prejudiced by time being extended and so the court
would exercise the discretion conferred by s. 27 of the
Arbitration Act, 1950, and ’Would extend the time. In the
course of his judgment Lord Denning, M. R. observed that in
the past the courts had been inclined to emphasize the word
"undue" and to say that if a man does not read the contract
and is a day or two late, it is a "hardship": but it is not
an "undue hardship", because, it is his own fault but that
the interpretation was narrow. He said that these time-
limit clauses used to operate most unjustly on claimants
for, they found their claim barred by some oversight and it
was to. avoid that injustice the legislature intervened so
as to enable the courts to extend the time whenever "in ,the
circumstances of the case undue hardship would otherwise be
caused". He also said that the word "undue" in the context
simply means excessive hardship greater than the
circumstances warrant and that even if a claimant has been
at fault himself, it is an undue on him if the consequences
are-put of proportion to his fault. He further stated that
even if a claimant makes a mistake which is excusable, and
is in consequence a few days out of time, then if there is
no prejudice to the other side, it would be altogether too
harsh to deprive him of ,all chance for ever of coming and
making his claim and that is all the more so,, if the
mistake is contributed or shared by the other side. He ,-
then observed
"It was said that this was a matter for the
Judge’s discretion. True enough.
We have,
however, said time and again that we will
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interfere with a Judge’s discretion if
satisfied that the discretion was wrongly
exercised. In any case the judge was, not
exercising an unfettered discretion. He felt
himself fettered by the. trend of the
authorities to give the words "undue hardship"
a narrow meaning. I think that we should
reverse that trend and give the words their
ordinary meaning, as Parliament intended. It
would be "undue hardship" on the owners to
hold them barred by the clause."
In the same case, Salmon, L.J. said that the arbitration
clause put it out of the power of the court to grant any
relief to a claimant who bad allowed a few days to run
beyond the period specified in the clause even although the
delay could have caused no conceivable harm to the other
side. He said that it would be hard and unjust if a man
with a perfectly good claim for thousands of pounds worth of
damage for breach of contract inadvertently allowed a day or
two to go by was deprived of the right to be compensated for
the loss which he -bud suffered, even though the other
party bad not been in any way affected by the delay and
might perhaps have been guilty of a deliberate breach of
contract and that it was to remedy this hardship and
injustice that the legislature intervened to alter the Law.
He further said
143
"This enactment was a beneficent reform,
liberalising the law in an admittedly narrow
sector of the commercial field. I have heard
it said that when people have spent their
lives in chains and the shackles are
eventually struck off, they cannot believe
that their claims are no longer there. They
still feel bound by the shackles to which they
have so long been accustomed. To my mind,
that factor may explain the court’s approach
in some of the cases to the problem with which
we are now faced.
He then summed up his conclusion as follows
"In considering this question the court must
take all the relevant circumstances of the
case into account; the degree of
blameworthiness of the claimants in failing to
appoint an arbitrator within the time; the amoun
t at stake, the length of the. delay;
whether the claimants have been misled,
whether through some circumstances beyond
their control it was impossible for them to
appoint an arbitrator in time. In the last
two circumstances Which I have mentioned,
which do not arise here, it is obvious that
normally the power would be exercised; but
those are not the only circumstances and they
are not, to my mind, necessary circumstances
for the exercise of the power to exte
nd time.
I do not intend to catalogue the circumstances
to be taken into account, but one very
important circumstance is whether there is any
possibility of the other side having been
prejudiced by the delay. Of course’ if there
is such a possibility, it might be said that
it is no undue hardship on the owners to
refuse an extension of time because, if the
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hardship is lifted from their shoulders, some
hardship will fall on the shoulders of the
charterers, and, after all, the delay is the
owners’ fault."
Therefore, we will have to take a liberal view of the
meaning of the words "undue hardship." "Undue" must mean
something which is ’not merited by the conduct of the
claimant, or is very much disproportionate to it.
Keeping in view these principles, it has to be seen whether
in the facts and circumstances of this case, there was
reasonable and sufficient ground for not preferring the
claim to arbitration within the time specified in clause 12
of the policy and whether there would be "undue hardship" to
the respondent if time not extended.
It may be recalled that it was on July 1, 1971 and September
21, 1971 that the respondent lodged its claim with the
appellant to recover the loss suffered. Thereafter, various
letters passed between the parties. Ultimately, on February
16, 1973, the appellant wrote the letter to the respondent
stating that the claim papers submitted in connection with
the claim had been scrutinized by the appellant but that it
was unable to accept liability for the loss. The respondent
then wrote a letter to the appellant on 30-3-1973
complaining about the uncertain language used in the letter
dated February 16, 1973 and calling upon the respondent to
point out specifically under which clause of exclusion of
liability in the policy and the appellant disclaim the
liability. The appellant kept quiet for 2 months and then
on May
144
30, 1973, seat a letter stating that it had I nothing
further to add to what had been stated in its letter dated
February 16, 1973.
The respondent was having dealings with the appellant in the
business of insurance from 1958 onwards and in no instance
was the claim made by the respondent rejected by the
appellant. The conduct of the respondent in enquiring of
the appellant the grounds on which the claim was rejected
was quite reasonable. It was only after the grounds of
rejection were known that the respondent could have decided
whether to resort to arbitration or not. If the grounds of
rejection would come within the clause of exclusion of
liability under the policy, it would serve no purpose to
incur the expense and hardship involved in resorting to
arbitration. The appellant did not give the reason for
disclaiming liability even in its letter dated 30-5-1973.
We do not think that there was any lack of promptness on the
part of the respondent in waiting for the reply to its
letter dated 30.3.1973. And, in the first week of June,
1973, the respondent made over the papers to the solicitors
viz., M/s. Banerji & Co. for the purpose of taking
necessary steps for referring the dispute to arbitration in
terms of the arbitration clause in the policy. On or about
June 15, 1973, the respondent received the written opinion
from the Solicitors wherein they stated that since the
letter of the appellant disclaiming liability was vague and
since the appellant gave no reason for rejection of the
claim even in their letter dated 30-5-1973, the appellant
might rely upon clause 12 of the policy of insurance and
contend that the reference to arbitration would be beyond
time. The solicitors, however, advised that in view of the
delay on the part of the appellant and its failure to
specify any reason for the disclaimer, the respondent might
take steps for nominating an arbitrator and proceed with the
reference. When the written opinion was received from the
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solicitors, the respondent had some doubt, because the
solicitors did ’,lot give a definite opinion. So, it
instructed the solicitors to take the opinion of counsel.
After preparing the necessary case for the opinion, the
solicitors briefed counsel for opinion, on June 28, 1973.
The opinion of counsel was to the effect that the respondent
should apply for extension of time under S. 37(4) of the
Arbitration Act and that was received by the solicitors on
16-7-1973. The respondent was informed of the opinion of
counsel and it received a copy thereof on 18-7-1973. After
gathering the facts from the records mentioned in the
opinion of the counsel the respondent instructed the
solicitors to take steps for filing a petition for extension
of time. It, however took some time to gather the facts
indicated in the opinion of counsel. On 25-7-1973 the
respondent’s solicitors sent the brief to counsel to draft
the petition and the petition was received by them on 30-7-
1973. Thereafter it took sometime to prepare a statement
from available records.
In the facts and circumstances of this case, we think the
High Court exercised its discretion properly in extending
the time. The conduct of the respondent was reasonable. It
took all steps it could when it knew about the alleged
robbery inform the police and the appellant The fact that
the Barasat police reported that the case was false does not
necessarily mean that the respondent tried to prac-
145
tise any fraud upon the appellant. The respondent had filed
a suit against the owner of the truck in question in July
1972 for recovery of the amount of loss. The respondent
also paid a suit against the owner of the truck in question
in July 1972 for recovery of the amount of loss. The
respondent also paid the claims arising out of the loss of
goods which were transported through the track. All these
go to show the bonafides and reasonableness of the conduct
of the respondent. Both the amount at stake and the reasons
for delay are material in considering the question of undue
hardship. We do not think that any material prejudice would
be, caused to the appellant by extending the time. There
would be undue hardship if time is not extended, as the
consequences of non-extension would in any event be
excessive and out of proportion to the fault of the
respondent, if any, in not being prompt. We do not say that
the mere fact that a claim would be barred would be undue
hardship. But considering the amount involved and the
reasons for the delay, we think it would be undue hardship
to the respondent if time is not extended.
We dismiss the appeal but in the circumstances, it is
necessary that further time should be given to the appellant
to nominate an arbitrator. We, therefore, extend the time
one month from the date of this judgment to enable the
appellant to nominate its arbitrator. We also think that
this is a fit case in which the parties should suffer their
own costs of the application in the High Court and of the
appeal here.
V.M.K. Appeal dismissed.
1-L379SupCI/75
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