Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NIROD BARAN BANERJEE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DY. COMMISSIONER OF HAZARI BAGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/02/1980
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
KOSHAL, A.D.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1109 1980 SCR (2)1043
1980 SCC (3) 5
ACT:
New Plea-A point not taken either before the trial
court or before the High Court when the appeal was not
taken, cannot be allowed to be raised for the first time
either in the Supreme Court or in the application given
before the High Court for granting a certificate of fitness-
Civil Procedure Code Order VI Rule 8 and Order VIII Rule 2.
HEADNOTE:
In respect of the lands acquired by the State of Bihar,
the appellant was awarded a sum of Rs. 9665-35 which along
with solatium and other charges totalled to a sum of Rs.
20,231-67. The appellant claimed a sum of Rs. 2,80,000/- as
the market value of the land acquired. Before the District
Magistrate could take up the hearing on a reference made
under s. 18 of the Land Acquisition Act, the matter was
agreed by the parties to be referred to a Board of
Arbitration consisting of three persons of whom one was
appointed by the appellant. The Board so constituted gave an
award confirming the compensation given by the Collector.
The appellant moved the District Court for setting aside the
award. The said application was dismissed by the Court and
an appeal to the High Court thereon was also dismissed.
Thereafter, the appellant approached the High Court for
granting a certificate of fitness for appeal to the Supreme
Court and it was at that stage that for the first time the
appellant raised the point that the arbitration agreement
was not in accordance with the provisions of Article 299 of
the Constitution and that there being no arbitration
agreement in the eye of law, the award was invalid and
liable to be set aside. The High Court accepted the
contention and granted leave as prayed for.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: 1. The question whether or not there was an
agreement which fulfilled the requirements of Art. 299 is
not a pure question of law but is a question which depends
on investigation of facts. [1046C]
2. In view of the provision of Order VI Rule 8 and
Order VIII Rule of the Code of Civil Procedure, the
appellant would be debarred from raising a point for the
first time before this Court or even before the High Court.
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It is well settled that no evidence can be looked into by
the Court for which there is no foundation in the pleadings.
[1047B]
In the instant case, the appellant cannot be allowed to
raise the plea for the first time in the Supreme Court, in
as much as:
(a) the appellant contented himself by relying on the
resolution by the Government, treated it as a valid
arbitration agreement and never raised the question that the
said resolution was hit by Art. 299 of the Constitution of
India. [1047C]
(b) he fully participated in the arbitration
proceedings and having taken the benefit of a decision by
the Board in his favour made a complete somersault only when
the decision went against him, by taking the plea now under
examination, which doubtless required investigation of
facts. [1047D]
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(c) Even that plea he took neither before the
Additional Sub-Judge nor in the High Court when the appeal
was heard on merits but only for the first time in the
application which he gave for granting leave to appeal to
this Court. Had he raised the plea before the Trial Court
that the arbitration agreement was not in consonance with
Art. 299 of the Constitution of India, the respondent may
have been in a position to rebut the plea by producing
evidence and circumstances to show that an agreement for
arbitration was authenticated in the form required by Art.
299 of the Constitution. [1047E]
Kalyanpur Lime Works Ltd. v. State of Bihar and Anr.;
[1954] S.C.R. 958 @ 969; followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No.1105 of
1970.
Appeal by Certificate from the Judgment and Order dated
13-5-1968 of the Patna High Court in Misc. Appeal No. 178 of
1963.
Dr. Y. S. Chitale, K. N. Choubey and B. P. Singh for
the Appellant.
Lal Narain Sinha Attorney General and S. N. Jha for the
Respondent
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J.-This appeal by certificate is directed
against a judgment of the Patna High Court dated 13-5-1968
dismissing the appeal filed by the appellant before the High
Court.
The case arose out of land acquisition proceedings
taken by the Government in respect of the land in dispute
which comprised 84.31 acres. On 21-9-1980, the Collector by
his award allowed a compensation of Rs. 9666.35 which along
with solatium and other charges totalled to a sum of Rs.
20,231.67. The appellant claimed Rs. 2,80,000/- as the
market value of the land acquired. On 11-10-1960, a
reference was made to the District Judge under S. 18 of the
Land Acquisition Act. Before the District Judge could take
up the proceedings for hearing, the matter was agreed by the
parties, to be referred to a Board of Arbitrators consisting
of three persons of whom one was appointed by the appellant
Accordingly, a joint petition for referring the case to the
arbitrator was made on 19-12-1961 and on the next day, dated
20-12-1961 the case was referred for arbitration to the
Board. On 22-5-1962, the Board gave an award confirming the
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compensation given by the Collector. Having thus lost his
case before the Board, the appellant moved the District
Court for setting aside the award. His application was
dismissed by the Additional Sub-Judge to whom
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the case was transferred in the meantime and hence an appeal
was filed by him before the High Court which was also
dismissed. There-after the appellant approached the High
Court for granting a certificate of fitness for appeal to
this Court and it was at that stage that for the first time
he raised the point that the arbitration agreement was not
in accordance with the provisions of Article 299 of the
Constitution and that thus there being no arbitration
agreement in the eye of law, the award was invalid and
liable to be set aside. The High Court appears to have been
impressed by the point raised before it and granted leave as
prayed for. Hence this appeal before us.
Dr. Y. S. Chitale, learned counsel appearing for the
appellant submitted that on the admitted facts there was no
separate arbitration agreement, that the resolution of the
Government incorporating the agreement of both the parties
that the matter be referred to the Board of Arbitrators
would be deemed to be the arbitration agreement, that the
resolution not having been authenticated in accordance with
the provisions of Article 299 of the Constitution of India
was invalid and that therefore the award which followed it
would also be invalid. In support of his argument the
learned counsel relied on a decision of this Court in the
case of Mulamchand v. State of Madhya Pradesh(1) where this
Court while considering the scope and the ambit of Article
299 observed as follows:-
"It was held by this Court that the provisions of s.
175(3) were mandatory and the contracts were therefore
void and not binding on the Union of India which were
not liable for damages for breach of the contracts. The
same principle was reiterated by this Court in a later
case-State of West Bengal v. M/s. B. K. Mondal and
Sons[1962] 1 Supp. SCR 876. The principle is that the
provision of s. 175 (3) of the Government of India Act,
1935 or the corresponding provisions of Art. 299(1) of
the Constitution of India are mandatory in character
and the contravention of these provisions nullifies the
contracts and makes them void. There is no question of
estoppel or ratification of such a case."
It was argued by Dr. Chitale that in view of the
constitutional provisions of Art. 299, this Court held that
the agreement was void, and that there could be no estoppel
against a statute or constitutional provisions. To the same
effect are the decisions in Laliteshwari
1046
Prasad Sahi v. Baseshwar Prasad & Ors.(1) and Bihar Eastern
Gangetic Fisherman Co-operative Society Ltd. v. Sipahi Singh
and Ors.(2). Great reliance was placed by the learned
counsel for the appellant on the decision of this Court in
The Marine Cooled (Bengal) P. Ltd. v. Union of India(3)
which was also a case of an arbitration agreement.
The Attorney General while repelling the arguments of
the appellant submitted that there can be no dispute with
the propositions laid down by this Court regarding the
interpretation of Art. 299 of the Constitution of India but
that the question whether or not there was an agreement
which fulfilled the requirements of Art. 299 is not a pure
question of law but is a question which depends on
investigation of facts. He added that as the appellant did
not plead this point either before the Trial Court or before
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the High Court when the appeal was heard on merits the
appellant cannot be allowed to raise it for the first time
either in this Court or in his application given before the
High Court for granting a certificate of fitness. It was
argued by the Attorney General that if the point had been
pleaded at the initial stage, the respondent might have been
in a position to show that an agreement conforming to the
provisions of Art. 299 of the Constitution of India existed.
We are of the opinion that the contention raised by the
Attorney General is sound and must prevail. In the case of
Kalyanpur Lime works Ltd. v. State of Bihar and Another(4) a
similar situation arose and this Court refused to entertain
the point relating to the applicability of s. 30 of the
Government of India Act 1915 which corresponds to Art. 299
of the Constitution or s. 175(3) of the Government of India
Act, on the ground that the party concerned did not raise
the same in their pleadings. In this connection this Court
observed as follows:-
"The first question which arises in this connection is
whether the contract was to be executed by a formal
document or whether it could be spelt out from the
correspondence in which the negotiations were carried
on by the parties. We do not think it necessary to go
into this question, for assuming that a formal document
was necessary, the plea of section 30, it is to be
noted, was not raised in the pleadings. Objection is
taken on behalf of the appellant that
1047
the point not having been raised in the written
statement it was not incumbent upon the plaintiff to
show that the contract was executed according to the
provisions of section 30, before it could be
specifically enforced and reliance was placed upon the
provisions of order VI, rule 8, and Order VIII, rule 2
of the Civil Procedure Code."
This Court pointed out that in view of the provisions
of order VI Rule 8 and Order VIII Rule 2 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, the appellant would be debarred from
raising the point for the first time before this Court or
even before the High Court. The facts of the present case
appear to be on all fours with facts of the case in the
decision cited above. In the instant case also, the
appellant contented himself by relying on the resolution by
the Government, treated it as a valid arbitration agreement
and never raised the question that the said resolution was
hit by Art. 299 of the Constitution of India. On the other
hand, the appellant fully participated in the arbitration
proceedings and having taken the benefit of a decision by
the Board in his favour made a complete somarsault only when
the decision went against him, by taking the plea now under
examination, which doubtless required investigation of
facts. Even that plea too he took neither before the
Additional Sub-Judge nor in the High Court when the appeal
was heard on merits but only for the first time in the
application which he gave for granting leave to appeal to
this Court. In these circumstances it is manifest that if
the appellant had raised the plea before the Trial Court
that the arbitration agreement was not in consonance with
Art. 299 of the Constitution of India, the respondent may
have been in a position to rebut the plea by producing
evidence and circumstances to show that an agreement for
arbitration was authenticated in the form required by Art.
299 of the Constitution. It is well settled that no evidence
can be looked into by the Court for which there is no
foundation in the pleadings. We cannot therefore allow the
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appellant to raise the plea for the first time in this Court
and the High Court also ought not to have entertained it at
the stage of the application for a certificate of fitness to
be granted for leave to appeal to this Court. No other point
was pleaded before us.
The appeal fails and is accordingly dismissed. In the
circumstances of this case however, there will be no order
as to costs.
V.D.K. Appeal dismissed.
1048