Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1784 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Union of India
RESPONDENT:
Tecco Trichy Engineers & Contractors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/03/2005
BENCH:
CJI R.C. Lahoti, G.P. Mathur & P.P. Naolekar
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(@ SLP (C) No. 20446 of 2002)
P.P. Naolekar, J.
Leave granted.
The Southern Railway entered into a contract with
respondent No. 1 for gauge conversion from Madras Beach to
Trichchirappalli Villupuram Section \026 construction of a bridge
being agreement No. 136/Cn/95 dated 29.9.95. On behalf of
the Southern Railway, the contract was signed by the then Chief
Project Manager, presently, the Chief Engineer. Disputes arose
touching the claims arising out of the execution of works under
the contract and in exercise of the power conferred by the
arbitration clause contained in the contract, the General
Manager, Southern Railway appointed an arbitrator as also a
Presiding Arbitrator, while respondent No. 1 nominated its
arbitrator. The arbitral tribunal so constituted gave its award on
10/11.03.2001 and signed the same. A copy of the award was
delivered in the office of the General Manager, Southern Railway
on 12.3.2001. The receipt seems to have been acknowledged by
someone in the office, probably the inwards clerk. The Chief
Engineer received the copy of the award from the tribunal on
19.3.2001.
On 10.7.2001, the Chief Engineer presented an application
for setting aside the arbitral award under Section 34 of the
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (hereinafter ’the Act’ for
short). An application seeking condonation of delay under sub-
Section (3) of Section 34 was also filed. The delay sought to be
condoned was of 27 days only based on an assumption that the
copy of the award was received on 19.3.2001. The application
for condonation of delay was contested by respondent No. 1 on
the ground that arbitral award was delivered on 12.3.2001 and
calculated from that date there was a delay of 34 days in filing
the application beyond the period of limitation prescribed by sub-
Section (3) of Section 34 of the Act while the proviso appended
to the said provision does not permit any delay beyond the
period of 30 days being condoned by the Court. The objection
raised by respondent No. 1 has found favour with the learned
Single Judge of the High Court, who rejected the application
holding it as barred by limitation. The decision has been upheld
by the Division Bench of the High Court. Feeling aggrieved, the
appeal has been filed by special leave.
The short question which arises for decision in this appeal
is : which is the effective date on which the appellant was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
delivered with and received the arbitral award as that would be
the date wherefrom the limitation within the meaning of sub-
Section (3) of Section 34 of the Act shall be calculated.
Sub-sections (1) and (3) of Section 34 are relevant for our
purpose and are reproduced hereunder:
34. Application for setting aside
arbitral award.___ (1) Recourse to a Court
against an arbitral award may be made only by
an application for setting aside such award in
accordance with sub-section (2) and sub-
section (3).
xxx xxx xxx xxx
(3) An application for setting aside may
not be made after three months have elapsed
from the date on which the party making that
application had received the arbitral award or,
if a request had been made under section 33,
from the date on which that request had been
disposed of by the arbitral tribunal:
Provided that if the Court is satisfied that
the applicant was prevented by sufficient cause
from making the application within the said
period of three months it may entertain the
application within a further period of thirty
days, but not thereafter."
Form and contents of arbitral award are provided by
Section 31 of the Act. The arbitral award drawn up in the
manner prescribed by Section 31 of the Act has to be signed and
dated. According to sub-Section (5), "after the arbitral award is
made, a signed copy shall be delivered to each party". The term
"party" is defined by clause (h) of Section 2 of the Act as
meaning ’a party to an arbitration agreement’. The definition is
to be read as given unless the context otherwise requires.
Under sub-Section (3) of Section 34 the limitation of 3 months
commences from the date on which "the party making that
application" had received the arbitral award. We have to see
what is the meaning to be assigned to the term "party" and
"party making the application" for setting aside the award in the
context of the State or a department of the Government, more
so a large organization like the Railways.
It is well-known that the Ministry of Railways has very
large area of operation covering several Divisions, having
different Divisional Heads and various departments within the
Division, having their own Departmental Heads. The General
Manager of Railways is at the very apex of the Division with a
responsibility of taking strategic decisions, laying down policies
of the Organisation, giving administrative instructions and
issuing guidelines in the organisation. He is from elite
managerial cadre which runs entire Organisation of his Division
with different Departments, having different Departmental
Heads. The day to day management and operations of different
departments rests with different Departmental Heads.
Departmental Head is directly connected and concerned with the
departmental functioning and is alone expected to know the
progress of the matter pending before the arbitral Tribunal
concerning his department. He is the person who knows exactly
where the shoe pinches, whether the arbitral award is adverse to
Department’s interest. Departmental Head would naturally be in
a position to know whether the Arbitrator has committed a
mistake in understanding Departmental’s line of submissions and
the grounds available to challenge the award. He is aware of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
factual aspect of the case and also the factual and legal aspects
of the questions involved in the arbitration proceedings. It is
also a known fact and Court can take judicial notice of it that
there are several arbitration proceedings pending consideration
concerning affairs of the Railways before arbitration. The General
Manager, with executive work load of entire Division cannot be
expected to know all the niceties of the case pending before the
arbitral tribunal or for that matter the arbitral award itself and
to take a decision as to whether the arbitral award deserves
challenge, without proper assistance of the Departmental Head.
General Manager, being the head of the Division, at best is only
expected to take final decision whether the arbitral award is to
be challenged or not on the basis of the advise and the material
placed before him by the person concerned with arbitration
proceedings. Taking a final decision would be possible only if the
subject matter of challenge namely, the arbitral award is known
to the Departmental Head, who is directly concerned with the
subject matter as well as arbitral proceedings. In the large
organizations like Railways, "party" as referred to in Section 2(h)
read with Section 34(3) of the Act has to be construed to be a
person directly connected with and involved in the proceedings
and who is in control of the proceedings before the Arbitrator.
The delivery of an arbitral award under sub-Section (5) of
Section 31 is not a matter of mere formality. It is a matter of
substance. It is only after the stage under Section 31 has
passed that the stage of termination of arbitral proceedings
within the meaning of Section 32 of the Act arises. The delivery
of arbitral award to the party, to be effective, has to be
"received" by the party. This delivery by the arbitral tribunal
and receipt by the party of the award sets in motion several
periods of limitation such as an application for correction and
interpretation of an award within 30 days under Section 33(1),
an application for making an additional award under Section
33(4) and an application for setting aside an award under
Section 34(3) and so on. As this delivery of the copy of award
has the effect of conferring certain rights on the party as also
bringing to an end the right to exercise those rights on expiry of
the prescribed period of limitation which would be calculated
from that date, the delivery of the copy of award by the tribunal
and the receipt thereof by each party constitutes an important
stage in the arbitral proceedings.
In the context of a huge organization like Railways, the
copy of the award has to be received by the person who has
knowledge of the proceedings and who would be the best person
to understand and appreciate the arbitral award and also to take
a decision in the matter of moving an application under sub-
Section (1) or (5) of Section 33 or under sub-Section (1) of
Section 34.
In the present case, the Chief Engineer had signed the
agreement on behalf of Union of India entered into with the
respondent. In the arbitral proceedings the Chief Engineer
represented the Union of India and the notices, during the
proceedings of the Arbitration, were served on the Chief
Engineer. Even the arbitral award clearly mentions that the
Union of India is represented by Deputy Chief Engineer/Gauge
Conversion, Chennai. The Chief Engineer is directly concerned
with the Arbitration, as the subject matter of Arbitration relates
to the department of the Chief Engineer and he has direct
knowledge of the arbitral proceedings and the question involved
before the arbitrator. The General Manager of the Railways has
only referred the matter for arbitration as required under the
contract. He cannot be said to be aware of the question involved
in the arbitration nor the factual aspect in detail, on the basis of
which the arbitral tribunal had decided the issue before it unless
they are all brought to his notice by the officer dealing with that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
arbitration and who is in-charge of those proceedings.
Therefore, in our opinion, service of arbitral award on the
General Manager by way of receipt in his inwards office cannot
be taken to be sufficient notice so as to activate the Department
to take appropriate steps in respect of and in regard to the
award passed by the arbitrators to constitute starting point of
limitation for the purposes of Section 34(3) of the Act. The
service of notice on the Chief Engineer on 19.3.2001 would be
the starting point of limitation to challenge the award in the
Court.
We cannot be oblivious of the fact of impersonal approach
in the Government departments and organizations like Railways.
In the very nature of the working of Government departments a
decision is not taken unless the papers have reached the person
concerned and then an approval, if required, of the competent
authority or official above has been obtained. All this could not
have taken place unless the Chief Engineer had received the
copy of the award when only the delivery of the award within the
meaning of sub-Section (5) of Section 31 shall be deemed to
have taken place.
The learned Single Judge of the High Court as also the
Division Bench have erred in holding the application under
Section 34 filed on behalf of the appellant as having been filed
beyond a period of 3 months and 30 days within the meaning of
sub-Section (3) of Section 34. There was a delay of 27 days
only and not of 34 days as held by the High Court. In the facts
and circumstances of the case, the delay in filing the application
deserves to be condoned and the application under sub-Section
(1) of Section 34 of the Act filed on behalf of the appellant
deserves to be heard and decided on merits.
The appeal is allowed. The application under Section 34(1)
filed on behalf of the appellant shall stand restored in the High
Court, to be heard and decided in accordance with law by the
learned Single Judge. No order as to costs.