Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARISH CHANDRA & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/11/1998
BENCH:
S.B. Majmudar, S. Saghir Ahmad, K. Venkataswami.
JUDGMENT:
MAJMUDAR, J.
Leave granted in S.L.P.(C) No. 6307 of 1995.
We have heard learned senior counsel for the parties
in these two appeals.
Both these appeals by special leave arise out of one
and the same judgment rendered by the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad.
In Civil Appeal No. 7643 of 1995, the
appellant-State of U.P. has brought in challenge the
aforesaid order of the High Court dismissing its appeal
against the award decree passed by the learned Trial Judge
subject to a slight modification in favour of the appellant
- State to which we will make a reference while considering
the cross-appeal arising out of S.L.P.(C) No. 6307 of 1995.
The cross-appeal is filed by the respondent Harish Chanra &
Co. in Civil Appeal No.7643 if 1995 who has felt aggrieved
by the modification regarding rate of interest as ordered by
the High Court in the impugned judgment to the extent it
reduced interest from 15 per cent per annum as awarded by
the trial court from the date of decree till payment to 6
per cent.
A few facts leading to the controversy in question
may be stated at the outset. On 26th October, 1979 an
agreement was entered into between the Superintending
Engineer, Irrigation Construction Circle, Dehradun on behalf
of the appellant-State on the one hand and M/s. Harish
Chandra & Co., New Delhi (respondent herein) on the other.
The work entrusted to the respondent-contractor was for
excavation of Khara Power Channel from K.M. 8 to K.M. 9.8
and also the construction of drainage crossings at Chhoti
Lui at K.M. 9.2 and Bari Lui at K.M. 9.6. The work was to
be started on 1.12.1979 and was to be completed latest by
31.5.1982. It is the case of the appellant-State that the
respondent-contractor did not complete the work within the
specified time, that is, by 31.5.1982. Time was extended
and still he did not complete and left the work incomplete
on 31.5.1986. That required the State to get the work
completed through other agencies which resulted in incurring
of additional cost by the State in completing the said work.
Disputes arose between the parties in connection with the
work which was carried on by the respondent before the
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aforesaid date, i.e. 31.5.1986. It appears that the
respondent issued a letter dated 16.11.1983 regarding
various claims put forward in the said letter and seeking
arbitration of the said disputes as per the clause contained
in the Special Conditions of the Contract. The Chief
Engineer, Yamuna Valley Projects, Irrigation Department,
Dehradun responded to the said letter of the respondent and
referred the claims Nos. 1, 2, 4 & 8, 13, 15 and 16
contained in the claimant’s aforesaid letter for arbitration
to the sole arbitrator - Chief Engineer, Irrigation
Department of the State. After hearing the parties, the
arbitrator rendered his award dated 24th February, 1992.
The arbitrator awarded interest on the amounts found due by
him to the respondent at the rate of 15 per cent from
16.11.1983, that is, the date on which the claimant had
sought for reference, to 5.1.1988 on different items.
Interest pendente lite was also allowed at 15 per cent and 6
per cent interest was allowed on the amounts found due from
the date of the award to the date of actual payment or date
of decree whichever was earlier. The said award was sought
to be made rule of the court by the respondent. The
appellant-State raised various objections to the award being
made rule of the court. The learned Trail Judge/Civil
Judge, Dehradun, after hearing the parties, by order dated
11th March, 1993 made the award rule of the court and
further directed that the claimant shall be entitled to get
the ordinary interest of 15.5 per cent per annum on the
amount of award with effect from the date of the order upto
the satisfaction of the decree. It is this decree passed by
the trial court that resulted into an appeal by the
appellant-State before the High Court which came to be
disposed of by the impugned judgment.
Learned senior counsel for the appellant State Shri
Avadh Behari Rohtagi in support of the appeal vehemently
submitted that the arbitrator had no power to grant interest
prior to the reference in view of clause 1.9 of the Special
Conditions of the Contract which clearly prohibited granting
of such interest. He also submitted that the two claims
which were granted by the arbitrator regarding hardrock
cutting were also not sustainable on the evidence on record.
In the cross-appeal, it was submitted by learned senior
counsel Shri Harish N Salve while supporting the main part
of the judgment under appeal that the High Court had
committed a patent error in reducing the rate of interest
from 15.5 per cent to 6 per cent from the date of the trial
court’s order till satisfaction of the decree. He further
submitted that interpretation of Clause 1.9 by the
arbitrator could not have been made a subject matter of
objections under Section 30 of the Arbitration Act.
In view of the aforesaid rival contentions, the
following points arise for our determination :-
(1) Whether the award of interest prior to the date
of the reference was within the power and jurisdiction of
the arbitrator ?
(2) Even if it was within the jurisdiction of the
arbitrator, whether Clause 1.9 barred such consideration ?
(3) Whether such an objection could have been raised
before the court in objections under Section 30 of the Act ?
(4) Whether the reduction of interest from 15.5 per
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cent to 6 per cent from the date of the decree till
satisfaction of the decree as ordered by the High Court was
justified ?
Point No.1
So far as this point is concerned, we note a
decision of the 3-Judge Bench of this Court in State of
Orissa vs. B.N.Agarwalla, 1997 (2) SSC 469, which has
clearly ruled in the light of the earlier Constitution Bench
judgment of this Court in Secretary, Irrigation Deptt.,
Govt. of Orissa vs. G.C Roy, 1992 (1) SCC 508, that the
claim for interest even for the pre-reference period was
also within the power and authority of the arbitrator after
the Interest Act, 1978. It is also not in dispute between
the parties that in the present cases the cause of action
for reference arose after coming into force of the Interest
Act, 1978. It is also not in dispute between the parties
that in the present cases the cause of action for reference
arose after coming into force of the Interest Act, 1978.
Consequently, it cannot be effectively urged by learned
senior counsel for the appellant-State that the arbitrator
had no power to grant such pre-reference period interest.
The first point is, therefore, answered in affirmative.
Points Nos. 2. and 3.
However, it was vehemently contended that even if
arbitrator and power to award interest for pre-reference
period, Clause 1.9 prohibited the consideration of such
claim by the arbitrator. Now it must be kept in view that
the arbitrator has interpreted Clause 1.9 and has rejected
the contention that claim of interest would not survive by
virtue of the said Clause. Shri Salve submitted that once
the arbitrator has so decided, it was within his
jurisdiction to decide one way or the other and when the
question of interest itself was a subject matter of dispute
referred to him, it was for the arbitrator to decide that
question and that could not have been made subject matter of
any objection under Section 30 of the Arbitration Act. It
is not necessary for us to closely examine this contention
of Shri Salve for the simple reason that when we turn to the
Clause itself, we find that even on merits learned counsel
for the appellant-State cannot effectively support his
contention in the light of the said Clause. The reason is
obvious. The said Clause reads as under :-
"1.9 No claim for delayed payment
due to dispute etc.
No claim for interest or damages
will be entertained by the Government with
respect to any moneys or balances which
may be lying with Government owing to any
dispute, difference; or misunderstanding
between the Engineer-in-charge in marking
periodical or final payments or in any
other respect whatsoever."
A mere look at the Clause shows that the claim for
interest by way of damages was not to be entertained against
the Government with respect to only a specified type of
amount, namely, any moneys or balances which may be lying
with the Government owing to any dispute, difference between
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the Engineer-in-Charge and the contractor; or
misunderstanding between the Engineer-in-Charge and the
contractor in marking periodical or final payments or in any
other respect whatsoever. The words "or in any other
respect whatsoever" also referred to the dispute pertaining
to the moneys or balance which may be lying with the
Government pursuant to the agreement meaning thereby
security deposit or retention money or any other amount
which might have been with the Government and refund of
which might have been withheld by the Government. The claim
for damages or claim for payment for the work done and which
was not paid for would not obviously cover any money which
may be said to be lying with the Government. Consequently,
on the express language of this Clause, there is no
prohibition which could be called out against the
respondent-contractor that he could not raise the claim for
interest by way of damages before the arbitrator on the
relevant items placed for adjudication. In fact, similar
contention has been repelled by the aforesaid decision of
the 3-Judge Bench of this Court in paragraphs 25 of the
Report that under Clause 4 which was pressed in service, no
interest was payable on the amount withheld. The claim
which was made in that case by Durga Parshad before the
arbitrator was for the non-payment of the full amount as per
final bill submitted by him and the interest so awarded on
the said amount was clearly not covered by Clause 4 of the
contract. Similar is the facts situation in the present
case and the working of the Clause in question is also of an
identical nature. Therefore, the contention of learned
senior counsel for the appellant-State that Clause 1.9
barred the consideration of such a claim for interest cannot
be sustained. The High Court, therefore, rightly came to
the conclusion that that Clause was not a bar to such a
claim. Further contention of learned senior counsel for the
appellant that the claims regarding cutting of hardrock were
wrongly granted, cannot be made subject matter of an
objection under Section 30 of the Arbitration Act which
could have been agitated for getting any reduction of the
amount as awarded by the arbitrator. It was a question
purely on merits of the award which could not be agitated in
objections as they were not in the nature of an appeal
against the award before the court below. Civil Appeal No.
7643 of 1995 is disposed of accordingly.
Point No.4
In the cross-appeal being Civil Appeal arising out
of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No.6307 of 1995, learned
senior counsel for the respondent-State vehemently submitted
that as per Section 24 of the U.P. Civil Laws (Reforms and
Amendment) Act, 1976, paragraph 7-A was inserted in the
First Schedule to the Arbitration Act, 1940 which barred the
power of the arbitrator in granting more than 6 per cent
interest on the awarded amount and, therefore, the High
Court was justified in reducing 15.5 per cent interest to 6
per cent in the light of the said provision. The aforesaid
contention of the learned counsel has to be examined in the
light of what the High Court stated in para 9 of the
impugned judgment. It has observed that when the arbitrator
has found interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum to be
reasonable, the trial court ought to have adopted the same
rate of interest for being awarded to the contractor. In
our view, the said reasoning cannot be sustained for the
simple reason that even if aforesaid Paragraph 7-A which was
not pressed in service before the High Court could be
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resorted to, it only barred the power of the arbitrator and
not of the court. Further, it could not be said that the
arbitrator had found the interest at the rate of 6 per cent
per annum to be reasonable. In fact, he had no authority or
power to go beyond 6 per cent interest. So far as the court
is concerned, it is in its discretion to award 15.5 per cent
interest on the decretal amount from the date of the decree
till satisfaction of the decree. As that was within the
realm of the discretionary jurisdiction of the trial court
it could not have been set aside by the High Court in
appeal. The cross-appeal will stand allowed to this extent
by modifying the judgment and order of the High Court by
substituting 15.5 per cent interest instead of 6 per cent
interest per annum from the date of the decree till payment.
Consequently, Civil Appeal No. 7643 of 1995 is
dismissed and the Civil Appeal arising out of Special Leave
Petition (Civil) No. 6307 of 1995 is allowed to the
aforesaid limited extent. In the net result, the impugned
judgment of the High Court is modified to the extent
indicated and the order of the trial court will stand wholly
confirmed. In the facts and circumstances of the present
case, there will be no order as to cost.
Interim orders will stand vacated. The security
furnished by the respondent-contractor in compliance with
the earlier interim order will stand discharged.