Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JIVARAJBHAI UJAMSHI SHETH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHINTAMANRAO BALAJI AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/11/1963
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 214 1964 SCR (5) 480
CITATOR INFO :
D 1984 SC1072 (30)
R 1988 SC2018 (30)
RF 1989 SC 606 (7)
R 1989 SC 890 (18,30)
R 1990 SC1426 (17)
D 1991 SC 945 (6)
F 1992 SC 232 (23,29)
ACT:
Arbitration-Partnership Agreement-Arbitration clause-Formula
of valuation on dissolution-Arbitrator appointed by deed of
reference-Validity of award questioned-Grounds on which
award can be set aside-Error apparent on the face of the
records Arbitrator exceeding jurisdiction-Validity of Award-
Severability Indian Arbitration Act, 1940 (X of 1940), s.
30.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants and the respondents entered into a
partnership in the business of manufacturing bidis. Under
the agreement a partner was entitled to retire after giving
notice of six months to all partners. It contained a clause
for reference of disputes between the partners relating to
the business or dissolution of the firm to arbitration. It
also contained a clause providing how four items including
goodwill should be valued. According to this clause
goodwill was equal to five years net profits for debts due
to the firm were to be taken not at their book value but at
85% of that value, stocks of raw materials were to be valued
at book value and immovable properties were to be valued at
their purchase price or, their book value. About two years
later the appellants desired to retire from the partnership
and a deed ,of reference was executed and a sole arbitrator
was appointed. This provided that the remaining partners
shall continue the firm and they shall make full payment to
the retiring partners of such amounts in such manner and on
such conditions as shall be decided upon by the arbitrator.
The arbitrator gave the award. He fixed the value of the
goodwill of the firm at Rs.32 lakhs including in that amount
the "depreciation and appreciation of the property, dead
stock and dues to be recovered." The award was filed in the
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Court under s. 14(2) of the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940.
481
The respondents applied for an order setting aside the award
on diverse grounds, two out of which survived for
consideration in the present appeal. The first was that the
arbitrator in making this award exceeded his jurisdiction
because in fixing Rs. 32 lakhs as the value of the devisable
assets of the firm he included therein the depreciation and
appreciation of the property dead stock and outstandings;
secondly that the arbitrator was guilty of misconduct. The
trial court upheld these and certain other objections and
set aside the award. The High Court confirmed the decision
of the trial court insofar as it related to the two
contentions. The present appeal is on a certificate granted
by the High Court.
Held:(i) An award made by an arbitrator is conclusive as a
judgment between the parties and the court is entitled to
set aside an award if the arbitrator has misconducted
himself in the proceeding or when the award has been made
after the issue of an order by the Court superseding the
arbitration or after arbitration proceedings have become
invalid under s. 35 of the Arbitration Act or where an award
has been improperly procured or is otherwise invalid under
s. 30 of the Act. An award may be set aside by the Court on
the ground of error on the face of the award, but an award
is not invalid merely because by a process of inference and
argument it may be demonstrated that the arbitrator has
committed some mistake in arriving at his conclusion.
Champser Bhara and Company v. Jivrai Balloo Spinning and
Weaving Company Ltd., L.R. 50 I.A. 324 and Cruikshank and
others v. Sutherland and others, (1923) 92 L.J. Ch. 136,
distinguished.
(ii)It is not open to the Court to speculate, where no
reasons are given by the arbitrator, as to what impelled the
arbitrator to arrive at his conclusions.
(iii)In the present case the arbitrator had included
depreciation and appreciation of certain assets in the value
of the goodwill which he was incompetent to include by
virtue of the limits placed upon his authority by the deed
of reference. This was not a case in which the arbitrator
has committed an error of fact or law in reaching his
conclusions on the disputed questions submitted for
adjudication. It was a case of assumption of jurisdiction
not possessed by him and that rendered the award to the
extent to which it was beyond the arbitrators’ jurisdiction,
invalid. It is, however, impossible to sever from the
valuation made by the arbitrator the value of the
depreciation and appreciation included by the arbitrator.
The award must therefore fail in its entirety.
Per Hidayatullah, J.-(i) If the parties set limits to action
by the arbitrator, then the arbitrator had to follow the
limits set for him and the court can find that he exceeded
his jurisdiction on proof of such excess.
(ii)In the present case the arbitrator in working out net
profits for four years took into account depreciation of
immovable
1/SCI/64-31
482
property. For this reason he must be held to have exceeded
his jurisdiction and it is not a question of his having
merely interpreted the partnership agreement for himself as
to which the Civil Court could have had no say, unless there
was an error of law on the face of the award.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 717 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 30, 1962, of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court at Jabalpur in Misc. Appeal
No. 75 of 1961.
S.T. Desai and LN. Shroff, for the appellants.
G.S. Pathak and Remeshwar Nath, for respondents Nos. 1 to
3.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and Remeshwar Nath, for respondents
nos. 4 and 5.
November 19, 1963. The Judgment of A.K. Sarkar and J.C.
Shah, JJ. was delivered by Shah, J. M. Hidayatullah, J.
delivered a separate Opinion.
SHAH, J.---Vrajlal Manilal & Company, a firm consisting
originally of four partners (1) Manilal Anandji, (2)
Jivrajbhai Ujamshi Sheth, (3) Punjabhai S. Patel, and (4)
Chintamanrao, has been doing business of manufacturing bidis
at Sagar and Delhi since 1944. From time to time fresh
partnership deeds were executed readjusting the shares of
the partners admitting new partners and adjusting the shares
of the partners. In 1954 Manilal Anandji retired from the
firm and on January 27,1955, Punjabhai
S. Patel died.
On February 16, 1956, a fresh deed of partnership was
executed. The firm then consisted of eight partners-Jivraj
and his two sons being entitled in the aggregate to annas
-/4/3 share in a rupee in the profits, Chintamanrao and his
two sons to annas -/7/6 share in a rupee, and the two sons
of Punjabhai S. Patel to the remaining annas -/4/3 share.
By paragraph-7 the books of account were to be maintained by
the managing partner, the financial year of the firm
483
being from Diwali to Diwali, and profits and losses were to
be ascertained at the close of the year and a copy of the
balance-sheet with profits and loss statement was to be
supplied to each partner, and if no objection regarding the
accounts was raised within four months from the end of the
year, the’ accounts were to be deemed conclusive and binding
unless vitiated by fraud. By paragraph-12 it was stipulated
that a partner desiring to retire from the partnership may,
unless the other partners agreed to’ his retirement
otherwise, do so after giving six months notice to all the
partners in writing terminable at the’ end of the year i.e.,
the Diwali immediately following the date of the notice.
Paragraph-13 provided:
"In case of retirement of any partner the
valua-, tion of the Firm will be made on the
following, basis for the purpose of settling
the account of the retiring partner:-
"(a) Goodwill of the Firm:-That is, right to
use the trade marks, trade labels and the name
of the Firm.
In making the valuation of the above the net
profits of the last five years will be taken
as the value of the Goodwill of the Firm.
(b) Outstandings, Udhari (Recoveries) :-That
is, loans and debts outstanding against
persons other than partner will be calculated
at 85 % of the book value of the Firm.
(c) Stock of Raw Materials:-That is,
tobacco, bidis, bidi leaves, labels and other
moveable property will be valued at the book
value of these in the books of the Firm and
all, such stock and moveables, thus valued
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shall be given to the remaining partners.
(d) Immoveable Property:-Such as buildings,
godowns, gardens, lands etc. will be valued at
the parchase price or their book value in the
books of the Firm as the case may be, and all
these shall be given to the remaining
partners."
484
Paragraph-16 incorporated a clause for reference of disputes
between the partners relating to the business or dissolution
of the firm to arbitration.
In April 1958 Jivraj and his two sons -appellants in this
appeal desired to retire from the partnership, and a deed of
reference was executed on April 16, 1958, appointing Ambalal
Ashabhai, Becharbhai Somabhai and Chaturbhuj Jasani as
arbitrators to decide the dispute. It was recited in the
deed of reference that since Jivraj and his two sons had
expressed a desire to retire and the remaining five partners
had agreed to take over the entire business of the firm, it
was "necessary to effect the final account of the retiring
partners with regard to the matters mentioned below, as far
possible, according to and taking into consideration the
terms and conditions of the Partnership Agreement.
1. Goodwill of Trade Mark.
2. Property.
3. Credits (Udhari)
4. Dead-stock.
5. Stock-in-trade i.e. the raw material, or
the finished goods invested in the business.
6. Other matters connected with these
transactions.
7. Profit and Loss Account.
8. The Receipt ond Payments account of the
amounts of the partners.
By Paragraph 6 it was provided that the firm shall be
continued by the remaining five partners and that those five
partners shall make full payment to the retiring partners
Jivraj and his two sons of such amounts, in such manner, and
on such conditions, as shall be decided upon by the
arbitrators. Paragraph 7 set out the powers exercisable by
the arbitrators in the matter of calling for production of
account books and documents and other information from the
parties.
The deed of reference was subsequently modified, and the
parties agreed that the reference be
485
" carried out by the sole arbitrator Shri Jasani". Pursuant
to this modified agreement, Jasani entered upon the
reference, and made his award on January 9, 1959. By his
award he fixed the value of the goodwill of the entire firm
at Rs. 32 lakhs including in that amount the "depreciation
and appreciation of the property, dead-stock and dues to be
recovered". He also fixed the profits for the broken period
of Samvat year 2014 from the commencement of the year till
April 19, 1958 at Rs. 2,80,000 and after adjusting the
personal accounts of the three retiring partners awarded to
Jivraj Rs. 3,46,223.58 nP. to Amritlal son of Jivraj Rs.
4,04,519.99 nP. and to Bhagwandas son of Jivraj Rs.
3,86,019.14 nP, and directed that the ownership over the
assets of the firm i.e. property-moveable and
immoveable,--Trade mark, labels, stock-in-trade, long-term
leases and contracts etc. shall remain with the remaining
partners, subject to the liabilities of the firm, the
retiring partners not being responsible for the liabilities
of the firm, nor having any interest in the firm or its
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business. This award was filed in the Court of the
Additional District Judge, Sagar, under s. 14(2) of the
Indian Arbitration Act, 1940.
Chintamanrao and his sons then applied for an order setting
aside the award on diverse grounds. In this appeal by the
retiring partners, two heads of objections only survive for
determination and we propose to refer only to those two
heads, viz:
(1) That the arbitrator in making his award
travelled outside. his jurisdiction delimited
by the agreement of reference in that in
fixing Rs. 32 lakhs as the value of the di-
visible assets of the firm he included therein
the depreciation and appreciation of the
property, dead-stock and outstandings, which
he was by the terms of the reference incom-
petent to include.
(2) That the arbitrator was guilty of legal
misconduct in that he had in the course of
arbitration proceedings admitted in his record
486
a statement of account prepared by Jivraj and
his sons without the knowledge of the other
partners and without giving them an
opportunity to make their submissions
thereto.
The retiring partners resisted the petition to set aside
the award and submitted that they were entitled to have the
assets of the firm in which they had a share, fixed at an
amount much in excess of Rs. 32 lakhs and that the
arbitrator had not overstepped his jurisdiction in fixing
the value of the goodwill at Rs. 32 lakhs, and that the
statement of account referred to by the applicants was
prepared under the directions of the arbitrator and in his
presence and it was admitted in the record of the arbitrator
-to the knowledge of the remaining partners who had assented
thereto.
The Trial Court upheld these and certain other objections,
and set aside the award. The High Court confirmed the
decision of the Trial Court, insofar as it related to the
two objections hereinbefore set out.
The question which we propose to consider first is: whether
in making the valuation of the firm" for determining the
share to be paid to the retiring partners, did the
arbitrator overstep the limits of his authority under the
agreement of reference? It may be recalled that by cl. 6 of
the arbitration agreement the remaining partners had to
"make full payment to the retiring partners of such amount
as may be decided" by the arbitrator. But in determining
the amounts to be awarded to the retiring partners, the
authority of the arbitrator was restricted. He had, in
determining the amounts due to the retiring partners, to
take "final accounts with regard to the matters" set out in
cl. 4, "as far as possible, according to and taking into
consideration the terms and conditions of the Partnership
agreement". By this direction the clauses of the
partnership agreement were incorporated in the agreement of
reference. The "final account" of the retiring partners
with regard to the eight matters
487
specified in cl. 4 was undoubtedly to be made, as far as
possible, according to and taking into consideration the
terms and conditions of the partnership agreement. The
language used in the deed of reference is of compulsion, not
of, option: it means that if there be in the partnership
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agreement any term or condition, which deals with any
particular matter of which an account was to be taken under
cl. 4 of the -agreement of reference, it has to be strictly
followed. Use of the expression "as far as possible" did
not confer any discretion upon the arbitrator to ignore the
terms and conditions of the partnership agreement. In
paragraph-13 of the partnership agreement, in making
"valuation of the firm" for the purpose of settling
accounts, the value of the goodwill, the outstandings, stock
of raw material and moveable and immoveable property had to
be taken as directed therein. In the matter of valuation of
the goodwill of the firm, therefore, no discretion was left
to the arbitrator:the value of the goodwill had to be the
aggregate ofthe net profits of the last five years. Debts
due to the firm from persons other than partners had to
be "calculated at 85 % of the book value of the firm". In
respect of the stock of raw materials and other moveable
property the "book value in the books of the firm" had to be
accepted by the arbitrator and in the case of immoveable
property such as buildings, godowns, gardens, lands etc.
"the book value in the books of the firm" was to be accepted
and if none such was available the purchase price as
mentioned in the books was to be accepted. In all these
matters the arbitrator had by cl. 4 of the arbitration
agreement to make the final account of the retiring partners
according to and taking into consideration the terms and
conditions of the partnership agreement and had no option.
It is necessary to remember that the partnership agreement
does not grant to a retiring partner a share in the
aggregate of the four items mentioned in cls. (a), (b), (c)
& (d) of paragraph-13 i.e., goodwill of the firm,
outstandings, stock of raw materials including
488
moveable and immoveable property. The partnership agreement
merely provides that the "valuation of the firm" shall be
made as set out therein for the purpose of settling the
account of the retiring partners i.e., in ascertaining
the.amount due to the retiring partners valuation of the
assets in cls. (a) to (d) of paragraph-13 shall be made in
the manner set out therein. The arbitrator was therefore
bound to adopt the valuation prescribed by the partnership
agreement, but that is not to say that the retiring partner
was entitled to a share equal to the aggregate of the values
of the four items mentioned in paragraph-13. It is neces-
sary to emphasize this matter because on behalf of the
retiring partners a considerable argument was advanced
before us on the assumption that they were entitled to a
share equal to the aggregate of the values of the four items
of property mentioned in paragraph- 1 3 of the partnership
agreement, and that by the method of valuation adopted by
the arbitrator they were awarded much less than what they
were under the partnership agreement entitled to.
Paragraph-13 merely prescribes the valuation in respect of
four out of the items which had to be considered in
ascertaining the "valuation of the firm". The phraseology
used in paragraph-13 in the opening part of the paragraph
makes it clear beyond all doubt that the valuation of the
firm had to be made on the basis specified for the purpose
of settling the account of the retiring partner. The
specific items in paragraph-13 do not prescribe any method
of valuation of the debts and liabilities of the firm, but
the debts and liabilities must be taken into account in
assessing the value of the share of the retiring partners.
The arbitrator had to make a valuation of the firm i.e. of
all the assets of the firm and of the debts due by the firm
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and thereafter to settle the account of the retiring
partners.
We may now turn to the award made by the arbitrator. The
dispute between the parties has to be resolved on a true
interpretation of the following clause:
"I assess the value of the goodwill at Rs. 32
lakhs.
489
This amount includes the depreciation and
appreciation of the property, dead-stock and
dues to be recovered."
(We have taken this as the correct rendering into English of
the original award which is in Hindi. It is accepted by
both the parties before us as a true rendering.)
The arbitrator has, as he has observed in his award, taken
only the value of the goodwill, in determining the amounts
to be allotted to the retiring partners, and has not
expressly referred to the valuation of the three other
items, viz., the outstandings, the stock-in-trade and
moveables and the immoveable property mentioned in
paragraph-13 of the partnership agreement. Counsel for the
retiring partners urged that on the admission made by
Chintamanrao, the value of the goodwill alone was Rs.
21,70,650/10/and if the value of the immoveables, stock-in-
trade etc. and outstandings be added thereto, the aggregate
would considerably exceed Rs. 32 lakhs. But this argument
is founded on the fallacious assumption that the debts and
liabilities of the firm have to be ignored in determining
the shares of the retiring partners. Counsel for the
respondent submitted that in substance the goodwill had
alone to be valued by the arbitrator for the property,
moveable and immoveable, stockin-trade and the outstandings
of the firm were approximately equal to the aggregate of the
debts and obligations of the firm. Reliance in this behalf
was placed upon a balance-sheet Ext. A-13 of the assets and
liabilities of the firm, showing the financial position of
the firm on April 16,1958, and the value of the tangible
assets, such as the stock of raw-materials, moveable and
immoveable property and outstandings, according to the
balance-sheet, was approximately equal to the debts and
liabilities of the firm.
But it is not necessary for us to decide whether the
submission of the respondents is correct. The arbitrator
has in his award stated that Rs. 32 lakhs is the value of
the goodwill alone, and for some reason not disclosed by him
he has not valued the other
490
assets. He has also not disclosed in his award how he has
arrived at the valuation of Rs. 32 lakhs. One thing,
however, stands out prominently in the award, that in
assessing the value of the goodwill, he has included the
depreciation and appreciation of the property, dead-stock
and the outstandings. The arbitrator could undoubtedly make
a lump-sum valuation of the firm in the award made by him.
He was not obliged in the absence of a direction in that
behalf to set out in his award the valuation of the
different components which aggregated to the lumpsum. The
arbitrator had to "value the firm", and in doing so to abide
by the specific directions, but he was not obliged to set
out in the award separate valuations of all or any of the
items mentioned in para 4 of the deed of reference, or in
paragraph-13 of the partnership agreement, nor to set out
the extent of the debts and obligations assessed by him.
What then is the effect of the inclusion by the arbitrator
in the valuation of Rs. 32 lakhs, of the depreciation and
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appreciation of the property, deadstock and dues to be
recovered? Diverse arguments were submitted by counsel for
the appellants in support of the plea that the inclusion of
what is called the depreciation and appreciation in respect
of the various items does not amount to overstepping the
limits of the jurisdiction of the arbitrator. It may be re-
iterated that the powers of the arbitrator were, by the
terms of cl. 4 of the deed of reference, clearly restricted.
He was "to take final account of the retiring partners with
regard to the matters mentioned therein, as far as possible,
according to and taking into consideration the terms and
conditions of the partnership agreement". Restriction on
the power of the ‘rbitrator in valuing the property, dead-
stock and outstandings was explicit. He could not therefore
adopt any valuation different from the valuation prescribed
by paragraph-13 of the partnership agreement. But the
arbitrator has, as he has himself stated, in valuing the
goodwill at Rs. 32 lakhs included in that amount the value
of the depreciation and appreciation of the property, dead-
stock and dues to be recovered.
491
Counsel for the appellant submitted that reduction of
outstandings of the firm by 15 % in respect of the dues from
persons other than the partners was a mode of ascertaining
the depreciation in respect of that item provided by cl. (b)
of paragraph-13 of the partnership agreement, and the
arbitrator in taking into consideration that depreciation
has not acted outside his jurisdiction. It would be
difficult to regard the method of valuation as prescribed in
respect of the outstandings as "including depreciation".
Even assuming that the reduction of the outstandings of the
firm from persons other than the partners by 15 % as
directed in cl. (b) of paragraph-13 of the partnership
agreement be regarded as depreciation of the assets,
inclusion of depreciation and appreciation in respect of the
other assets was not permitted by the deed of partnership.
In valuing the moveable property including the stock of raw
materials, the arbitrator could not adopt any valuation
other than that mentioned in cl. (c) of paragraph -1 3 of
the partnership agreement, namely, the book value as given
in the books of the firm. Similarly, in the valuation of
immoveables such as buildings, godowns, gardens, lands etc.,
he had to accept the book value as mentioned in the books of
account of the firm and if no book value was available the.
purchase price as mentioned in the books was to be accepted.
The arbitrator had no power to make any adjustment in
respect of those items by including depreciation or
appreciation in their value.
The principle of Cruikshank and others v. Sutherland and
others(1) on which reliance was placed by counsel for the
retiring partners, has, in our judgment no application to
this case, because in that case though there was an article
of the partnership providing that the share of a deceased
partner in the assets of the partnership should be
ascertained by reference to the annual account made up on
April 30 next after the death, the articles were wholly
silent as to the
(1) [1923] 92 L.J. Ch. 136
492
principle to be adopted in preparing a full and general
account of the property. There was no usage or course of
dealings between the partners from which an inference could
be drawn that on the death of a partner his share shall be
paid out on the footing of book value. The executors of the
deceased partner claimed that his share be determined "at
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the fair value of the firm". At p. 138 it was observed by
Lord Wrenbury.
"Even if there were a usage to state an
account for one purpose in one way, that is
not a usage to state it for another purpose in
the same way. There is a passage in Blisset
v. Daniel (10 Hare, at p. 515) which is useful
reading in this connection. An account stated
for one purpose is not necessarily stated for
another purpose. The fact is, that in this
partnership an account has never been stated
with a view to fitting the case of a retiring
partner, or a deceased partner, or a senior
partner who is going to exercise an option of
taking over all the assets. The partners have
never had any such event in view in making the
account which they have made. There has never
been an account prepared which was intended to
meet all the various contingencies of events
such as these.
In the case before us there is no dispute that the duty of
the arbitrator was to make "valuation of the firm" subject
to paragraph-13 of the partnership agreement and it may even
be granted that in arriving at that valuation he was not
bound by paragraph-7, but on this question we express no
opinion. But the values as mentioned in the different
clauses had to be accepted in making up the partnership
account in respect of the four matters specifically
enumerated. The principle of Cruikshank’s case(1) did not
apply, because the partnership agreement in this case itself
provides that the book value in the books of the firm shall
be accepted.
(1) [1923] 92 L.J. Ch. 136.
493
The expression "book value" in the context in which it
occurs in the partnership agreement means, the value entered
in the books of account. Adoption of the book value is
therefore obligatory and there is no scope. of any
adjustment in the value in the light of any depreciation or
appreciation of the property, outstandings, stock-in-trade
or dead-stock, apart from what may actually be included in
the book value, in the books. It is the book value alone
which has to be taken. If the depreciation or appreciation
has been taken into account by the partners in assessing the
book value, that was evidently part of the book value as
entered in the books of account. If there was no book value
entered in respect of any immoveable property, the decisive
value was to be the purchase price.
It was then urged that it was for the arbitrator to
adjudicate upon the true meaning of the partnership
agreement and to give effect thereto, and if in making a
"valuation of the firm" he was of the opinion that
depreciation and appreciation in respect of certain items of
assets should be included for the purpose of making up the
account of the partners, the Court had no jurisdiction to
set aside the award on that account, merely because the
Court took a different view as to the true meaning of the
arbitration agreement. But if the partnership agreement was
incorporated in the deed of reference, the limits of the
jurisdiction of the arbitrator must be determined by the
Court and not by the arbitrator. By assuming that he was
entitled to include, beside the value of the four items as
mentioned in paragraph-13, some amount by way of
appreciation in the value of those items, the arbitrator
purported to set at naught the specific directions given in
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that behalf
An award made by an arbitrator is conclusive as a judgment
between the parties and the Court is entitled to set aside
an award if the arbitrator has misconducted himself in the
proceedings or when the award has been made after the issue
of an order by the Court superseding the arbitration or
after
494
arbitration proceedings have become invalid under s.35 of
the Arbitration Act or where an award has been improperly
procured or is otherwise invalid: s.30 of the Arbitration
Act. An award may be set aside by the Court on the ground
of error on the face of the award, but an award is not
invalid merely because by a process of inference and
argument it may be demonstrated that the arbitrator has com-
mitted some mistake in arriving at his conclusion. As
observed in Chempsey Bhara and Company v. Jivraj Balloo
Spinning and Weaving Company Ltd.(" at p. 331:
"An error in law on the face of the award
means, in their Lordships’ view, that you can
find in the award or a document actually
incorporated thereto, as for instance a note
appended by the "arbitrator stating the
reasons for his judgment, some legal
proposition which is the basis of the award
and which you can then say is erroneous. It
does not mean that if. in a narrative a
reference is made to a contention of one
party, that opens the door to seeing first
what that contention is, and then going to the
contract on which the parties’ rights depend
to see if that contention is sound."
The Court in dealing with an application to set aside an
award has not to consider whether the view of the arbitrator
on the evidence is justified. The arbitrator’s adjudication
is generally considered binding between the parties, for he
is a tribunal selected by the parties and the power of the
Court to set aside the award is restricted to cases set out
in s. 30. It is not open to the Court to speculate, where
no reasons are given by the arbitrator, as to what impelled
the arbitrator to arrive at his conclusion. On the assump-
tion that the arbitrator must have arrived at his conclusion
by a certain process of reasoning, the Court cannot proceed
to determine whether the conclusion is right or wrong. It
is not open to the Court to attempt to probe the mental
process by which the arbitrator has reached his conclusion
where it
(1) L.R. 50 I.A. 324.
495
is not disclosed by the terms of his award. But the
arbitrator has in the present case expressly stated in his
award that in arriving at his valuation, he has included the
depreciation and appreciation of the property, outstandings
and dead-stock, and in so doing in our judgment the
arbitrator has travelled outside his jurisdiction and the
award is on that account liable to be set aside. The
question is not. one of interpretation of paragraph-13 of
the partnership agreement but of ascertaining the limits of
his jurisdiction. The primary duty of the arbitrator under
the deed of reference in which was incorporated the
partnership agreement, was to value the net assets of the
firm and to award to the retiring partners a share therein.
In making the "valuation of the firm". his jurisdiction was
restricted in the manner provided by paragraph-13 of the
partnership agreement.
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It was next urged that the depreciation or appreciation
which had been entered in the assessment of the book value
were "other matters connected with" the "transactions"
mentioned in the deed of reference. But manifestly those
other matters were apart from the valuation of the goodwill,
property, outstandings and the dead-stock.
It was then urged that when the arbitrator stated that he
had included depreciation and appreciation of certain assets
in the value of the goodwill in the award, he merely meant
that such depreciation and appreciation was included as was
in the circumstances permissible. But that would be
ignoring the express recital in the award. In fact under
the scheme of valuation envisaged by the partnership
agreement and therefore the deed of reference, there was no
scope for including in the valuation, appreciation of the
assets. Again to argue, as was sought to be done, that even
though the arbitrator stated that he had included in the
amount of Rs. 32 lakhs "the depreciation and appreciation"
of the property, dead-stock and dues, there being no power
to include appreciation, appreciation in the property and
the
496
dead-stock could not have been included amounts to reaching
a conclusion from an assumed premise of which the conclusion
was a component.
It was also urged that the expression depreciation and
appreciation had no such meaning as decrease or increase in
the market value of the property, ,dead-stock and
outstandings, and the clause merely meant that in fixing the
valuation such depreciation or appreciation as had gone into
the assessment of the book value of the different items was
taken into consideration. But the arbitrator has not said
that he merely took into consideration the depreciation and
appreciation which went into the book value assigned by the
partners to the assets in the account: he has clearly stated
that he had included the depreciation and appreciation in
those assets in the valuation of the goodwill.
Finally it was urged that the recital about the inclusion of
depreciation or appreciation was a mere surplusage and
should be discarded. But it would be difficult to regard a
statement made by the arbitrator relating to what he says he
had included in the valuation of the goodwill, as a mere
surplusage, especially having regard to the orders made by
him insisting upon the production of documentary evidence
and certain books of account from Chintamanrao. It may be
pointed out that by cl. 7 of the deed of reference very wide
powers were conferred upon the arbitrator to call upon the
disputing parties to produce the accounts etc. which the
arbitrator desired and to produce any other papers or
documents which the arbitrator would like to inspect, and to
reply to any enquiry verbal or written of any sort or in any
connection and in any form the arbitrator wanted. The
orders passed by the arbitrator in exercise of these powers
tend to indicate that in his view he was competent to
ascertain and include in the valuation of the firm the
depreciation and appreciation on the various items which
were taken into account in arriving at the valuation. By
order dated September 16, 1958, the arbitrator gave
direction, amongst
497
others, to Chintamanrao to file a statement of houses etc.
of immoveable property, valuation of the same as shown in
the books of account, i.e. figures regarding it, and "also
the approximate value statement as it existed" at the date
of demand according to the estimate of Chintamanrao. In the
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note to the order, it was stated that Chintamanrao had
produced certain papers but they were incomplete, and
therefore he was ordered to bring copies of the incomplete
papers and also those papers which were not sent by him. On
October 10, 1958, Chintamanrao produced a statement of the
net profits of the five years preceding the date of
dissolution-which he called the price of the goodwill-for
Samvat years 2009 to 2013. The aggregate of the net profits
was Rs. 21,70,650/10/which he called "price of the
goodwill". He then submitted a statement of the
outstandings of the different shops aggregating to Rs.
9,16,366/- and the value of the goods purchased, and other
property, and submitted that the total value of the goodwill
of the firm by taking into account the profits of the firm
for the last five years "as per the statement filed was Rs.
21,70,650/10/3 and deducting therefrom 15 % of the
outstandings of the firm considered as irrecoverable, the
balance was Rs. 20,33,295/12/9" and that this was the amount
from which the shares of the retiring partners were to be
computed. On December 2, 1958, an application was filed by
Chintamanrao inviting the attention of the arbitrator to the
agreement of reference and to the terms of the deed of
partnership, especially paragraphs 7 and 13, and submitting
that the book values of items (2) to (5) in paragraph-4 of
the agreement of reference were already in the books of
account and could be easily found without any detailed or
elaborate examination of the books of account, it was
unnecessary to enter upon any detailed inspection of the
various entries. On this application an order was passed on
December 5, 1958, by the arbitrator that the inspection of
the books of account do start on December 21, 1958, in his
presence at Sagar in the office of Messrs Virajlal Mannilal
and Company and that Chintamanrao do
1 SCI/64-32
498
make arrangements for giving inspection of all the books of
account. On December 22, 1958, another application was
submitted by Chintamanrao stating that it was not necessary
to produce certain registers and manufacturing accounts and
that the orders in that behalf were beyond the jurisdiction
of the arbitrator and that he was unable to produce the
,documents demanded. It was submitted by that application
that the kind of inspection claimed and granted amounted to
re-opening of the accounts for the last five years which
were closed with the consent and to the knowledge of all the
partners and which could not in law be re-opened. On De-
cember 23, 1958, an application was made by Amrat Lal son of
Jivraj (one of the retiring partners) submitting that the
arbitrator had to value the goodwill and this had to be done
by ascertaining the value of the profits of the five years,
and for that purpose the arbitrator was entitled to
ascertain yearly profits by scrutinising the account books
and finding out the yearly net profits. On these
applications on December 25, 1958 the arbitrator gave a
direction that Chintamanrao do produce the papers mentioned
in item No. 2 in the order dated September 16, 1958, namely,
the gross and net profits of the last five years, and that
he do produce the other papers which were ordered to be
produced by the order dated September 16, 1958. Thereafter
on January 9, 1959, the arbitrator made his award. The
insistence of the arbitrator upon production of the gross
and net profits of the last five years indicate that it was
the opinion of the arbitrator that he was entitled to take
into consideration not only the book value of the assets
given in the partnership books of account but the
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depreciation and appreciation of those assets. The specific
use of the expression by the arbitrator that he had included
the depreciation and appreciation of various items of
property and the procedure followed by him including the
orders therefore clearly establish that the expression used
by him was not a mere surplusage.
499
It is clear that the arbitrator has included in his
valuation some amount which he was incompetent, by virtue of
the limits placed upon his authority by the deed of
reference, to include. This is not a case in which the
arbitrator has committed a mere error of fact or law in
reaching his conclusion on the disputed question submitted
for his adjudication. It is a case of assumption of
jurisdiction not possessed by him, and that renders the
award, to the extent to which it is beyond the arbitrator’s
jurisdiction, invalid. It is, however, impossible to sever
from the valuation made by the arbitrator the value of the
depreciation and appreciation included by the arbitrator.
The award must, therefore, fail in its entirety.
In this view of the case, we do not think it necessary to
consider whether the plea raised by the remaining partners
that the award is vitiated on the ground that the arbitrator
accepted from the retiring partners documents prepared from
the books of account without giving an opportunity to the
remaining partners to explain those documents. It was the
case of Chintamanrao that these documents were prepared and
handed over to the arbitrator without giving any notice to
him. It was the case of the retiring partners that the
documents consisted merely of extracts of entries in the
books of account, and that in any event Chintamanrao had
assented to those documents being included in the record of
the arbitrator. For the reasons set out by us in dealing
with the first plea for setting aside the award, and that
plea having succeeded, we do not think it necessary to enter
upon the respective contentions of the parties on the second
ground.
We accordingly hold that the award was properly set aside by
the Courts below.
Counsel for the retiring partners submitted that on the view
taken by us, the award should be remitted to the arbitrator
under s. 16 of the Arbitration Act, 1940. No such request
was, however, made by them in the Trial Court or in the High
Court, and we will not be justified in the circumstances of
the case in
500
acceding to that request. We may observe that we have not
heard counsel on the question whether in the circumstances
of the case and on the conclusion recorded, we have the
power under s. 16 to remit the award to the arbitrator. The
retiring partners have also not asked for an order for
supersession of the arbitration agreement in exercise of the
powers of the Court under s. 19. We have, therefore,
refrained from considering that question also.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs in one set.
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This appeal arises out of an arbitration
award which was set aside by the Additional District Judge,
Sagar on the objection of the respondents. The judgment of
the Additional District Judge was confirmed on appeal by the
High Court and the present appeal has been filed on a
certificate granted by the High Court under Art. 133 (1)(c)
of the Constitution. The arbitration was without the
intervention of the Court. Previously it proceeded before
three arbitrators but the authority of two of the
arbitrators was revoked by the Additional District Judge,
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Sagar, at the agreed request of the parties to the
reference. It then proceeded before one Chaturbhuj V.
Jasani who gave his award on January 9, 1959.
The arbitration proceedings were necessary because of the
retirement of the appellants from a firm called Virajlal
Mannilal & Co. which at that time consisted of eight
partners in three groups. These groups were the three
appellants (Jivraj and his two sons) owning -/4/3 share,
respondents Nos. 1-3 (Chintamanrao and his two sons) owning
-/7/6 share and the two remaining respondents, who are
brothers, owning the balance. By agreement this retirement
was to take place on April 15, 1958. In revoking the award
the High Court, in concurrence with the court below, has
upheld two objections-(a) that the arbitrator exceeded his
jurisdiction and (b) that he was guilty of misconduct in
receiving some evidence behind the back of Chintamanrao.
501
The firm of which the several parties here were partners had
a written deed of partnership executed on February 16, 1956.
This deed replaced earlier deeds to which reference is not
necessary. The partnership kept its accounts from Diwali to
Diwali and every year it drew up a balance sheet and a
profit and loss account, copies of which documents were
given to all the partners. The accounts so stated were
subject to objection but if none was made, they were
conclusive and binding on the partners. All this was
provided in the deed of partnership which also provided for
the retirement of partners and its 13th paragraph laid down
special terms as follows:
"In case of retirement of any partner the
valuation of the Firm will be made on the
following basis for the purpose of settling
the account of the retiring partner:-
(a) Goodwill of the Firm: That is, right to
use the trade marks, trade labels and the name
of the Firm.
In making the valuation of the above, the net
profits of the last five years will be taken
as the value of the Goodwill of the Firm.
(b) Outstandings, Udhari (Recoveries): That
is, loans and debts outstanding against
persons other than partner will be calculated
at 85 % of the book value of the Firm.
(c) Stock of Raw Materials: That is,
tobacco, bidis, bidi leaves, labels and other
moveable property will be valued at the book
value of these in the books of the Firm and
all such stocks and moveables, thus valued
shall be given to the following partners.
(d) Immovable Property: Such as
buildings, godowns, gardens, lands etc. will
be valued at the purchase price or their book
value in the books of the firm as the case may
be, and all these shall be given to the re-
maining partners."
502
As a result of an arrangement reached aliunde by which the
businesses of these partners, which were in different firm
names and various places, were to be divided between the
appellants on the one hand and the respondents on the other,
the parties desired an arbitration to separate the shares of
the appellants as partners retiring from the firm Virajlal
Mannilal & Co. A deed of reference was executed by them on
April 16, 1958. After the usual recitals, it provided that
a final account of the partners should be taken with regard
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to eight matters- as far as possible according to and taking
into consideration the terms and conditions of the
partnership agreement." The eight matters were:
1. Goodwill of Trade Mark.
2. Property.
3. Credits (Udhari).
4. Dead Stock.
5. Stock-in-trade i.e., the raw material or
the finished goods invested in the business.
6. Other matters connected with these
transactions.
7. Profit and Loss Account.
8. The Receipt and Payments account of the
amounts of the partners.
It was further provided that the firm Virajlal Mannilal was
to continue with the respondents after the appellants had
retired therefrom and the appellants were to be. paid an
amount to be determined by the arbitrator and in such a
manner and on such conditions as he might direct.
The arbitrator having filed the award in Court, the
respondents filed objections, only two of which noticed
above succeeded and the award was set aside. I shall
therefore proceed straight to those objections of which only
the first was fully argued before us. In making his award
the arbitrator gave the appellants a -14/3 share from a lump
amount of RS. 32 lacs which he described as "goodwill" of
the firm, adjusting, in the respective shares of the three
appellants in that sum, all amounts standing to their credit
503
or debit, as the case may be, in the account books of the
firm. He also assessed the "goodwill" for the period from
Diwali to the date of retirement and made suitable
additions. His real decision is contained in three or four
lines in the award which of course contains other matters
and his exact words in Hindi have given rise to some
difference because they have been translated in two
different ways on the record of the case. The two
translations are-
(1) The value of the goodwill of the whole
firm 1 assess at Rs. 32,000,00,-- (Rupees
thirtytwo lacs). In this sum property, dead
stock and depreciation and appreciation of
Udhari are also included;
(2) The value of the goodwill of the whole
firm 1 assess at Rs. 32,000,00/- (Rupees
thirtytwo lacs). In this sum the depreciation
and appreciation of property, dead stock and
Udhari is also included."
The second translation is probably more accurate than the
first, but to my mind it is not a matter of mere words but
of what the arbitrator has done. The award is in Hindi and
the two words "appreciation" and "depreciation" are in
English. They might well have been used to still all
controversy about issues which the parties had raised before
him relating to these matters. The arbitrator might, in
other words, have used these words loosely without meaning
anything except to show that he had looked into everything
which the parties desired him to see. The dispute is thus
whether the arbitrator exceeded his jurisdiction by adding
back depreciation amounts to the book value and/or allowing
for appreciation of property which was successfully claimed
by the respondents in the High Court and the Court below to
be not open to him?
In this appeal it was contended on behalf of the appellants
that the deed of partnership as well as the order of
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reference left the arbitrator a free hand and even if the
arbitrator wrongly interpreted the deed of partnership and
did add back the depreciation and/or
504
appreciation, no question of jurisdiction could arise.
Reliance is placed upon the observations of the Judicial
Committee in the well-known case of Chamsey Bhara & Co. v.
Jivraj Balloo Spg. & Wvg. Co.(1) where it was observed:
"An error in law on the face of the award
means, in their Lordships’ view, that you can
find in the award or a document actually
incorporated thereto, as for instance, a note
appended by the arbitrator stating the reasons
for his judgment, some legal proposition which
is the basis of the award and which you can
then say is erroneous. It does not mean that
if in a narrative a reference is made to a
contention of one party that opens the door to
seeing first what that contention is, and then
going to the contract on which the parties’
rights depend to see if that contention is
sound. Here it is impossible to say, from
what is shown on the face of the award, what
mistake the arbitrators made. The only way
that the learned judges have arrived at
finding what the mistake was is by saying;
"inasmuch as the arbitrators awarded so-and-
so, and inasmuch as the letter shows that the
buyer rejected the cotton, the arbitrators can
only have arrived at that result by totally
misinterpreting Rule 52". But they were
entitled to give their own interpretation to
Rule 52 or any other Article, and the award
will stand unless, on the face of it, they
have tied themselves .down to some special
legal proposition which then, when examined,
appears to be unsound."
Mr. Desai contends that the arbitrator might have
interpreted the partnership deed wrongly but that was a
matter within his jurisdiction and the error, if any, not
being one of law on the face of the award, the Civil Court
had no authority or jurisdiction to set aside the award.
The other side contends, as has so far been held in the
case, that the reference, read with the partnership deed,
created an area of
(1) I.L.R. 47 Bom. 578 at 586.
505
jurisdiction which the arbitrator has outstepped. The first
point is therefore to decide what were the limits of the
arbitrator’s action as disclosed by the reference and the
deed of partnership and then to see what the arbitrator has
actually done and not what be may have stated loosely in his
award. This is the only way in which the excess of
jurisdiction can be found If the interpretation of the deed
of partnership lies with the arbitrator, then there is no
question of sitting in appeal over his interpretation, in
view of the passage quoted above from Champsey’s case but if
the parties set limits to action by the arbitrator, then the
arbitrator had to follow the limits set for him, and the
court can find that he has exceeded his jurisdiction on
proof of such action.
The arbitrator derived his authority from the reference and
we must turn to its terms in the first instance. The
material portion has been quoted and it shows that in view
of the retirement of Jivraj and his sons, parties considered
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it necessary "to effect the final account of the retiring
partners with regard to the matters mentioned below as.’ far
possible according to and taking into consideration the
terms and conditions of the partnership agreement" and then
followed the eight items. The words underlined are in the
recitals but they do show that the parties desired a
division in accordance with the terms of the partnership
agreement. The words "as far possible" show some latitude
in one sense, but the force of those words is to be
discovered with the aid of the other words "according to and
taking to consideration etc." which lay down that the terms
of the partnership agreement must prevail over personal
opinion. The partners appointed the arbitrators to decide
the eight matters and to enable them to give their decision
undertook by cl. 7 of the reference to furnish all accounts,
documents and information which the arbitrators might
require of them.
Now the deed of partnership which was to prevail as far as
its terms were applicable provided that to settle the final
account of the retiring partners
506
four items of assets should be valued in a particular way.
These directions were contained in cl.’ 13 of the deed
already set out earlier. Thus goodwill was equal to five
years’ net profits; debts due to the firm were to be taken
not at their book value but at 85 % of that value; stocks of
raw materials were to be valued at book value; and immovable
properties at purchase price or their book value in the
books of the firm as the case may be. The goodwill took no
account of anything but the net profits. Admittedly, the
net profits of the preceding five years were Rs. 21,70,650/
10/-. This set at rest sub-clause (a) of cl. 13 of the
partnership agreement. Admittedly also the outstandings
(Udhari) came to Rs. 9,16,366/- at their book value and 15%
thereof came to Rs. 137,354/13/6. The net Udhari therefore
was Rs. 7,79,011/2/6. Differences really arose in the
matter of valuation of raw materials and immovable
properties and in this connection. the appellants asked to
see an account of gross profits for the past five years
which the arbitrator ordered Chintamanrao to produce.
According to the appellants the value of properties given by
Chintamanrao was the written down value and the right figure
according to the agreement was not Rs. 6,24,369/- as stated
by Chintamanrao but Rs. 16,57,000/-. In reply Chintamanrao
stated that it was not the practice of the firm to prepare
an account of gross profits but he added that gross profits
could be calculated from the account books by the other side
or by the arbitrator and he offered the services of an
accountant to prepare such an account. The documents which
the arbitrator is said to have received behind the back of
Chintamanrao (though not some of the other respondents) are
the abstracts which show the gross profits and what was
excluded to reach the net profits. The net profits in these
accounts and the net profits given by Chintamanrao agree. I
do not refer to the dispute about the production of the
documents since that part of the case was not argued before
us, but these accounts prime facie do show that in working
out net profits for the five years, depreciation of
immovable property and goods was taken
507
into account. The same depreciation appears to have been
taken into account in the balance sheet while valuing the
assets against the liabilities. In other words depreciation
of immovable properties and goods over the five years for
which the goodwill was to be calculated appeared to have
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been taken twice over.
I would have persuaded myself to go into this matter more
deeply but for the fact that such depreciation does not
altogether account for the difference between 21 lacs and 32
lacs. The balance sheets show a very slender difference
between the assets and liabilities over the five years and
it may be taken that the value of Udhari, raw materials and
immovable properties is offset by the liabilities. Nothing
remains except a very petty sum as profit to be carried over
for addition to the goodwill. The duplicated depreciation
does not in fact account for the increase from Rs. 21 lacs
to Rs. 32 lacs. The conclusion is therefore inescapable
that the arbitrator meant what he said when he spoke of
including appreciation and depreciation in the valuation of
the properties etc. For this reason he must be held to have
exceeded his jurisdiction and it is not a question of his
having merely interpreted the partnership agreement for
himself as to which the Civil Court on authority could have
had no say, unless there was an error of law on the face of
the award.
Reliance is placed upon the case of Cruickshank and others
v. Suiherland -and others’-" that if accounts in the past
were not prepared to meet the contingency of retiring
partners, the accounts must be recast for this special
purpose and the arbitrator must necessarily have freedom to
value property in his own way and not by accepting old
accounts already made by the partners. The intention here
was that the arbitrator should prepare the final accounts as
the partners would themselves have done under the
partnership agreement, and the arbitrator had to follow cl.
13 of the partnership agreement which was binding on
(1) [1923] 92 L. J. Ch. 136.
508
the partners and therefore on him. The partnership
agreement did not speak of market value or fair value. It
stated that the purchase price or the book value as the case
may be alone could be taken into account. This meant that
the book value where available and the purchase price in
other cases only were to enter in the calculations. There
was thus no option to go to fair value or market price at
all.
I do not think that we should supersede the arbitration
agreement under s.19. No circumstance was made out for such
a course. I would have directed a remit to the arbitrator
under s. 16 of the Arbitration Act 1940 but my brethren take
a different view of the matter and I leave the matter there.
The contention of the appellants on the question of juris-
diction decided against them must fail and I agree that the
appeal should be dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.