Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 955 of 2006
PETITIONER:
M/s BSES Ltd. (Now Reliance Energy Ltd.)
RESPONDENT:
M/s Fenner India Ltd. & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/02/2006
BENCH:
H. K. Sema & B. N. Srikrishna
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 20062/2004)
SRIKRISHNA, J.
Leave granted.
This is one more instance of an injunction being sought against a
beneficiary seeking to enforce his/her rights under a bank guarantee, albeit
with a novel averment that "lack of good faith" or "enforcing with an
oblique purpose" constituted further exceptions to the general rule against
intervention.
The Facts
M/s Godavari Sugars Ltd. awarded a contract for a captive power
plant to M/s BSES Ltd. (now Reliance Energy Ltd.) (hereinafter "the
Appellant"). The Appellant, in turn, awarded a part of that work to M/s
Fenner India Ltd. (hereinafter "the First Respondent"). In connection with
this, the Appellant issued to the First Respondent, four work orders/
purchase orders, as follows:
"(i) Work Order No. 2245 dated 15.3.2000/ 4.5.2000 for a
sum of Rs.70,00,000/-\005
(ii) Work Order No. 2246 dated 15.3.2000/ 4.5.2000 for a
sum of Rs.5,57,00,000/-\005
(iii) Work Order No. 2247 dated 15.3.2000/ 4.5.2000 for a
sum of Rs.90,00,000/- \005
(iv) Work Order No. 2248 dated 15.3.2000/ 4.5.2000 for a
sum of Rs.50,00,000/-\005"
As required by the terms and conditions of the said work/ purchase
orders, the First Respondent submitted four bank guarantees from the State
Bank of India (hereinafter "the Second Respondent-Bank"), dated
23.3.2000 bearing Nos. 288/99, 289/99, 290/99 and 291/99 in sums of Rs.
7,00,000/-, Rs. 9,00,000/-, Rs. 55,70,000/- and Rs. 38,35,000 respectively.
They were unconditional irrevocable bank guarantees, under which the
Second Respondent-Bank agreed to pay to the Appellant the amount claimed
or demanded by the Appellant. The amounts guaranteed thereunder were
payable with or without any reason in writing from the Appellant, without
protest or demur or proof of satisfaction, and without reference to the First
Respondent, upon being called by the Appellant, irrespective of any dispute
between the Appellant and the First Respondent with regard to or touching
any of the contractual terms between them. They were, of course, subject to
the aggregate limits stipulated in each of the bank guarantees.
On 10.5.2000, the Appellant and the First Respondent entered into a
"wrap-around agreement", under which it was agreed that the First
Respondent would perform its contractual obligations on a turnkey basis viz.
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as a composite one. This principle was also made applicable to the bank
guarantees. Thus, Clause (4) of this agreement in terms says:
"In case of any material breach of any or all the Contracts,
BSES shall have the right to embark upon the retentions and
encashment of Bank Guarantees of all the contracts."
On 4.12.2003, the Appellant invoked the four bank guarantees. On
7.12.2003, the First Respondent invoked the arbitration clause, as provided
in the work/ purchase orders. On 8.12.2003, the First Respondent moved a
petition under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
(hereinafter "the Arbitration Act") before the District Court, Madurai,
seeking a declaration that the Appellant was not entitled to invoke the four
bank guarantees. The First Respondent also sought an interim injunction
against the Appellant restraining them from encashing or receiving any
amount under the bank guarantees, pending disposal of the arbitration
proceedings.
On 22.3.2004, the learned Principal District Judge, Madurai,
dismissed the First Respondent’s petition by holding that this was not a case
where "irretrievable injustice" would be done by enforcement of the bank
guarantees, nor was it a case where a strong prima facie case of fraud had
been made out. Despite this finding, the learned District Judge took the view
that, although the Appellant was not entitled to an order of injunction, the
Appellant’s rights would have to be safeguarded till the matter was disposed
of in the arbitration proceedings. Accordingly, the learned District Judge
directed the Appellant to maintain status quo for a period of one month
(from the date of the order), within which the arbitral proceedings were to be
disposed of. The parties were directed to seek their remedies before the
arbitrator.
Sometime in April 2004, an application was made under Section 17 of
the Arbitration Act before the Arbitral Tribunal. The First Respondent
preferred an appeal before the High Court of Madras challenging the order
and judgment dated 22.3.2004 of the learned District Judge. On 24.5.2004,
even while the arbitral proceedings were pending, the High Court made an
interim order. Further, by the impugned judgment dated 30.7.2004, the High
Court allowed the appeal preferred by the First Respondent and granted the
injunction as prayed for, and set aside the order of the learned District Judge.
The Rule and its Exceptions
Mr. Rohtagi, learned Senior Counsel for the Appellant, urged that the
settled law in this country is that a bank guarantee is an independent contract
between the bank and the beneficiary thereof. Accordingly, irrespective of
any dispute between the beneficiary and the party at whose instance the bank
has given the guarantee, the bank is obliged to honour its guarantee, as long
as the guarantee is unconditional and irrevocable. Our attention was drawn
to the judgment of this Court in U.P. Cooperative Federation Ltd. v. Singh
Consultants and Engineers (P) Ltd. (hereinafter "U.P. Cooperative
Federation"). It was pointed out in that case that a bank guarantee must be
honoured in accordance with its terms as the bank, which gives the
guarantee, is not concerned with the relations between the supplier and the
customer. Neither is the bank concerned with the question whether any of
them have failed in their contractual obligations or not. In other words, the
bank must pay according to the tenor of its guarantee, on demand, without
proof or condition.
There are, however, two exceptions to this rule. The first is when
there is a clear fraud of which the bank has notice and a fraud of the
beneficiary from which it seeks to benefit. The fraud must be of an
egregious nature as to vitiate the entire underlying transaction. The second
exception to the general rule of non-intervention is when there are "special
equities" in favour of injunction, such as when "irretrievable injury" or
"irretrievable injustice" would occur if such an injunction were not granted.
The general rule and its exceptions has been reiterated in so many judgments
of this Court, that in U.P. State Sugar Corporation v. Sumac International
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Ltd., (hereinafter "U.P. State Sugar Corporation") this Court, correctly
declared that the law was "settled" .
Mr. Sorabjee, however, tried to expand upon the settled exceptions to
the rule by first, relying on an order of this Court in State of Haryana v.
Continental Construction Ltd. (hereinafter "Continental Construction
Ltd."). We are afraid that the short order in Continental Construction Ltd.
(supra) appears to have been made on the narrow facts of that case and does
not constitute a precedent binding us. Moreover, as mentioned earlier, a line
of judgments of this Court have long settled the law relating to the
invocation of bank guarantees.
Second, Mr. Sorabjee placed reliance on a number of foreign
judgments, especially that of the Queen’s Bench Division in TTI Team
Telecom Ltd. v. Hutchison 3G UK Ltd., wherein, the rule and its
exceptions in England have been elegantly summarized. Mr. Sorabjee
placed special emphasis on the following propositions:
"\005(3) The basis for a contention of a breach of faith must be
established by clear evidence even for the purposes of interim
relief. A breach of faith can arise in such situations as: a failure
by the beneficiary to provide an essential element of the
underlying contract on which the bond depends; a misuse by
the beneficiary of the guarantee by failing to act in accordance
with the purpose for which it was given; a total failure of
consideration in the underlying contract; a threatened call by
the beneficiary for an unconscionable ulterior motive; or a lack
of an honest or bona fide belief by the beneficiary that the
circumstances, such as poor performance, against which a
performance bond had been provided, actually exist.
(4) In addition, where it appears that the call would be a
nullity, a court will intervene to restrain that invalid call.
Examples are where a condition precedent to a call has not yet
been fulfilled; where the bond is a ’see to it’ bond necessitating
prior proof of loss by the beneficiary or poor performance by
the third party which has not yet been established; or where the
demand or the supporting documents show that the demand
does not conform to the requirements imposed by the bond for a
valid demand.
(5) Otherwise, a threatened call will not be restrained. In
particular an allegedly incorrect calling of a performance bond
will not be restrained merely because the factual basis of the
call arising out of the underlying contract is disputed. Thus
disputes as to whether a breach of contract, a determination of a
contract for cause, a repudiation of a contract or the incurring of
loss have occurred, where these are events covered by the
performance guarantee, will not be allowed to found an
application to restrain a call unless these disputes reveal a
breach of faith by the beneficiary. Any consequent payment
under the bond to the beneficiary which over-compensates the
beneficiary may be recouped in the ’accounting’ exercise that
the third party may claim in subsequent litigation against the
beneficiary under the underlying contract\005"
Mr. Sorabjee, finally contended that in Singapore, where commercial
cases are expeditiously disposed of, the Court of Appeal in Samwoh Asphalt
Premix Pte. Ltd. v. Sum Cheong Piling Pte. Ltd. has held that calling a
performance guarantee for an oblique purpose was not permissible.
Specifically, using it as a "bargaining chip", as a "deterrent" or in an
"abusive" manner, would invite an injunction from the court. He submitted
that the Singapore court has gone so far as to say that the unconscionable
calling of a bank guarantee was an exception independent of fraud.
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We are afraid that in the face of the law succinctly laid down in U.P.
Cooperative Federation (supra) and reiterated in numerous judgments of
this Court referred to earlier, we are unable to accept the wide proposition of
law laid down in the foreign judgments cited by Mr. Sorabjee. Whatever
may be the law, as to the encashment of bank guarantees in other
jurisdictions, when the law in India is clear, settled and without any
deviation whatsoever, there is no occasion to rely upon foreign case law.
Contentions of the First Respondent
A reading of the impugned judgment of the High Court shows that the
learned Judge was cognizant of the settled rule relating to bank guarantees,
but came to the conclusion that the encashment of the bank guarantees by
the Appellant would present a case under one of the exceptions to the rule
viz. would cause "irretrievable injustice" to the First Respondent.
Learned counsel for the First Respondent strongly supported this line
of argument of the High Court. He contended that the bank guarantees were
for different purposes, either to: (i) secure the payment of advances or (ii)
secure performance. As far as the bank guarantees to secure advance
payments were concerned, he contends that there is a provision in the
contract that the amount of advance was to be recovered by deduction from
the gross accepted amount of any running bill. The contract stipulates two
modes of recoveries: (i) By deduction from the gross amount from the
running bill, and (ii) By invocation of the bank guarantee. Mr. Sorabjee
further urged that it had been found by the District Court and the High Court
concurrently that the entire amount of the bank guarantee had been
recovered from the running bills of the First Respondent. Accordingly, he
argued that, encashing the bank guarantee after having recovered the full
amount of advances from the running bills was an "egregious fraud" or at
any rate, created a situation of "special equities" in favour of the First
Respondent. The High Court, he submits, was fully justified in granting an
injunction since these facts were prima facie established as triable issues.
Further, Mr. Sorabjee submitted that the fourth bank guarantee (No.
291/99 dated 23.3.2000) was further qualified by "due and faithful
performance of the contract", and that the contract had been admittedly
performed. In the circumstances, he submits that, the encashment of this
guarantee was fraudulent or created a situation of special equities, which
was covered by U.P. Cooperative Federation Ltd. (supra). Mr. Sorabjee’s
assertions, however, need closer scrutiny through examining the contractual
clauses, as well as through examining the conduct of the First Respondent.
The Contractual Clauses
Mr. Sorabjee is correct in that both the District Court and the High
Court have concurrently held that the documents placed on record do bear
out that the entire guarantee amount had been recovered. We are, however,
unable to accept Mr. Sorabjee’s contention that the bank guarantees were
given only for the purpose of security as against the advance paid to the First
Respondent. Indeed, Mr. Rohtagi is justified in his submission that the final
contract was a "wrap-around agreement". The terms of the agreement signed
on 10.5.2000 make it clear, after referring to the four contract agreements for
work/ purchase orders, that:
"\005It is specifically agreed between the parties that
CONTRACTOR is not only responsible and liable for its scope
of supplies in Contract No. I and for its scope of services in the
Contract Nos. II, III and IV, but also to perform and take care of
all such works which though are not specifically mentioned in
these four contracts, but are essential to complete the
"BAGASSE HANDLING SYSTEM PACKAGE" as a whole in
its true intent and requirement unless the exclusion(s) are
specifically agreed by BSES. Contract-III shall also include
unloading of plant and equipment supplied under Contract-I
consequent to receipt at site, movement within site to stores
and/or to intermediate location and/or to final location, co-
ordination with Owner for entry in their store documents, issue
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of Store Issue Voucher, etc."
The agreement further provides vide Clause (2):
"The successful and timely completion of the ’BAGASSE
HANDLING SYSTEM PACKAGE’ by CONTRACTOR and
its performance thereof under Contract-I, Contract-II, Contract-
III and Contract-IV shall be jointly and severally bound by the
terms of the "Contract" and shall be jointly and severally liable
to BSES for the performance of all obligations under the
"Contract".
Clause (3) of the agreement declares:
"CONTRACTOR agrees that if liquidated damages for delay
and/or performance guarantees, claim on
warranty/workmanship, punch lists and any breach of contract
by CONTRACTOR are applied under the provisions of any of
the four "Contracts", it automatically shall be construed that the
same provision can be applied on all the four contracts as read
together. BSES shall have the right to treat the contracts jointly
as turnkey contract and money can be recovered by BSES
including but not limited to liquidated damages, fines or
penalties of whatever nature as per the "Contract" and any
excess costs and expenses associated with the completion of the
job by BSES for the "BAGASSE HANDLING SYSTEM
PACKAGE"."
Clauses (4) and (5) in express terms respectively state:
"In case of any material breach of any or all the Contracts,
BSES shall have the right to embark upon the retentions and
encashment of Bank Guarantees of all the contracts."
"Notwithstanding the works undertaken by the designated sub-
contractor(s) of the Contractor subject to provisions of the
contract, the Contractor shall remain wholly liable to perform,
fulfill and discharge all the obligations and responsibilities
under this contract on a turnkey basis and the same shall in no
way be reduced or diminished for any reasons whatsoever."
Upon a careful reading of this agreement, we are satisfied that the
contract though, for the sake of convenience, was split up into four sub-
contracts (viz. the four work/ purchase orders), was a composite contract
executable on a turnkey basis. The terms of this turnkey contract were
reduced into writing by the "wrap-around agreement" of 10.5.2000. We are
of the definite view that under the "wrap-around agreement", the Appellant
had the right to encash any or all of the guarantees for any breach in any of
the terms of the four contracts. Hence, we are unable to accept the
submission of Mr. Sorabjee that the first three bank guarantees were only for
securing the advances paid and that it was only the fourth bank guarantee
(No. 291/99 dated 23.3.2000) that was liable to be called for failure to
perform the contract. In fact, an appraisal of the terms of the contract leads
us to the conclusion that the bank guarantees were intended for both
purposes: for securing the advances paid to the First Respondent and also for
securing due performance of the contract.
Renewal of the Guarantees
Our conclusions as to the real purpose of the bank guarantees are
fortified by our examination of the conduct of the First Respondent. Indeed,
we repeatedly asked Mr. Sorabjee as to why and under what circumstances
the First Respondent continued the first three guarantees, purportedly
pertaining to advances, even after the First Respondent knew that the
advance amount had been fully recovered. Mr. Sorabjee claimed sometime
to put an Additional Affidavit to deal with this query, which according to
him, had been raised by this Court for the first time. In the Additional
Affidavit (dated 11.11.2005) filed on behalf of the First Respondent, the
explanation given for the continuation of bank guarantees even after full
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recovery of the advances is that:
"\005the petitioner (the Appellant) has been insisting on extension of
bank guarantees and threatened to encash them if they were not
extended,\005 Thus under petitioner’s threat of encashment of the bank
guarantees, and in the hope of amicably settling the issue with the
petitioner, the first respondent (sic) felt compelled to extend the bank
guarantees."
In our view, this is an unsatisfactory explanation in the circumstances
of the case and in any event, this explanation neither establishes "egregious
fraud" by the Appellant nor creates a situation of "irretrievable injury".
The Fourth Bank Guarantee
Finally, Mr. Sorabjee tried to intervene in the fourth bank guarantee
(No.291/99 dated 23.3.2000) and contended that this was the only bank
guarantee intended to secure "due and faithful performance of the contract".
He further urged that the performance had been duly satisfied and, therefore,
there was no warrant for calling this bank guarantee. Mr. Sorabjee turned to
a certificate issued by M/s Godavari Sugar Mills Ltd. (dated 18.3.2003) to
contend that there had been due and satisfactory performance of the contract.
We are, however, not impressed with Mr. Sorabjee’s argument because the
evidence on record is precisely to the contrary. In fact, the certificate, in
terms, says that there was a technical defect found:
"\005for which correction will be done by Fenner representative
(sic) as assured by him. After completion of all those points
further tests can be carried out."
Accordingly, we are prima facie not satisfied that performance had
been duly and satisfactorily certified. Under the terms of the "wrap-around
agreement", the Appellant was entitled to encash all or any of the bank
guarantees for breach of the First Respondent’s obligations under any one of
the contracts. In our view, it is the case of the Appellant that there was no
satisfactory performance of the contract, as a result of which, the Appellant
was justified in encashing the concerned bank guarantee. Indeed, as per the
terms of the bank guarantee itself, the Appellant is the best judge to decide
as to when and for what reason the bank guarantees should be encashed.
Further, it is no function of the Second Respondent-Bank, nor of this Court,
to enquire as to whether due performance had actually happened when,
under the terms of the guarantee, the Second Respondent-Bank was obliged
to make payment when the guarantee was called in, irrespective of any
contractual dispute between the Appellant and the First Respondent. Indeed,
in similar circumstances, this Court in General Electric Technical Services
Company Inc. v. Punj Sons (P) Ltd., held:
"\005the Bank must honour the bank guarantee free from
interference by the courts. Otherwise, trust in commerce
internal and international would be irreparably damaged. It is
only in exceptional cases that is to say in case of fraud or in
case of irretrievable injustice, the court should interfere.\005The
nature of the fraud that the courts talk about is fraud of an
"egregious nature as to vitiate the entire underlying
transaction". It is fraud of the beneficiary, not the fraud of
somebody else."
This was also a case where, after having recovered certain amount
from the running bills, a call was made on the bank guarantee in respect of
the full guaranteed amount. In an observation with direct relevance for the
present case, this Court pointed out that the bank was not concerned with the
outstanding amount payable under the running bills:
"The right to recover the amount under the running bills has no
relevance to the liability of the Bank under the guarantee. The
liability of the Bank remained intact irrespective of the recovery
of mobilisation advance or the non-payment under the running
bills. The failure on the part of \005(the Beneficiary)\005to specify
the remaining mobilisation advance in the letter for encashment
of bank guarantee is of little consequence to the liability of the
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bank under the guarantee."
Irretrievable Injury
As we have stated repeatedly, the First Respondent can succeed only
if the case can be brought under the two accepted exceptions to the general
rule against intervention. Evidently, there is no "egregious fraud" so as to
fall within the first exception. Hence, only one more point remains: whether
encashment of the guarantees will create special equities (in particular,
"irretrievable injury") in favour of the First Respondent? We are not
satisfied on facts that such is the present situation.
There is no dispute that arbitral proceedings are pending. In fact, we
were shown that one of the disputes referred to arbitration is whether the
bank guarantees are null and void. Further, one of the substantive prayers in
the arbitration made on behalf of the First Respondent, is to make an award
declaring the four bank guarantees unenforceable, illegal, void and liable to
be discharged. Further, there is also a prayer for permanent injunction to
restrain the Appellant from encashing the bank guarantees. Therefore, since
this prayer is already pending before the Arbitral Tribunal, we see no
situation of "irretrievable injustice" if, at the present moment, the Appellant
is allowed to encash the bank guarantees. For justice can always be rendered
to the First Respondent, if he succeeds before the Arbitrators. Nor do we see
any special equity in favour of the First Respondent, when there is in fact a
dispute that performance was prima facie not satisfactory, which enabled the
Appellant to encash all or any of the four bank guarantees.
The Final Findings
In this view of the matter, we see no merit in the stand taken by the
First Respondent. In our judgment, the Madras High Court erred in
interfering with the bank guarantees and in granting injunction as sought for.
In the result, the impugned judgment of the High Court is set aside and the
judgment of the learned District Judge, Madurai is affirmed, except with
regard to the maintenance of status quo directed on the encashment of
guarantees. It is made clear that the Appellant is entitled to encash the bank
guarantees and the Second Respondent-Bank shall be free to honour its
guarantees, subject to adjustment in the arbitral proceedings.
The appeal is accordingly allowed with costs quantified at Rupees
Twenty Thousand.