Delhi High Court
New India Assurance Company Limited vs Khanna Paper Mills Limited on 5 December, 2022
Author: C. Hari Shankar
Bench: C. Hari Shankar
Neutral Citation Number : 2022/DHC/005304
$~(original side)
* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
Reserved on: 5th January 2022
Pronounced on: 5th December 2022
+ O.M.P. (COMM) 496/2020
NEW INDIA ASSURANCE
COMPANY LIMITED ..... Petitioner
Through: Mr. Tushar Mehta, Solicitor
General of India and Mr. Joy Basu, Sr. Adv,
with Mr.Saurav Agrawal, Mr. Saurajay
Nanda, Mr.Ribhu Garg, Ms.Vani Sharma,
Mr.Vinay Misra, Mr. Ravi Sharma and
Mr.Kanak Bose, Advs.
Versus
KHANNA PAPER MILLS LIMITED ..... Respondent
Through: Mr. Sachin Datta, Sr. Adv.
with Mr. Viksit Arora, Ms. Ritika Jhurani,
Mr. Jishnu Bhradwaj, Advs.
CORAM:
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE C. HARI SHANKAR
% JUDGMENT
05.12.2022
1. The New India Assurance Company Limited ("NIA",
hereinafter) seeks, by means of the present petition under Section 34
of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 ("the 1996 Act"), to
challenge an award dated 2nd January 2020, passed by a learned three-
member Arbitral Tribunal in arbitral proceedings between NIA and
the respondent-Khanna Paper Mills Limited ("Khanna", hereinafter).
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
Signing Date:07.12.2022
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Facts
2. Khanna, which is engaged in the manufacture of pulp and
paper, availed of the insurance policy provided by NIA, vide Cover
Note dated 30th March 2012, valid for the period 1st April 2012 to 31st
March 2013, covering a sum of ₹ 1292 crores, including all movable
and immovable assets of Khanna.
3. During the period covered by the insurance policy, a fire broke
out in the premises of Khanna on 12th June 2012. Considerable losses
resulted. Khanna, thereupon, contacted NIA. M/s. Protocol Surveyor
and Engineers Pvt Ltd was appointed as the Surveyor, to conduct a
detailed survey of the losses suffered by Khanna. The Surveyor
submitted an Interim Survey report on 20th June 2012 and a Final
Survey report on 7th March 2013. Admittedly, a copy of the Final
Survey Report was provided to Khanna only on 27 th June 2013,
without its annexures.
4. According to Khanna, the delay in clearance of the claim by
NIA placed it in financial duress, in which situation it was compelled
to sign a blank Joint Discharge Voucher, in which NIA subsequently
filled details. A screenshot of the said blank Joint Discharge Voucher,
as filed by Khanna before the learned Arbitral Tribunal may be
provided as under:
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
Signing Date:07.12.2022
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Neutral Citation Number : 2022/DHC/005304
5. The amount paid by NIA to Khanna as per the said Joint
Discharge Voucher was ₹ 1,03,16,42,738/-. This, according to
Khanna, was much less than its total entitlement as per the insurance
policy of NIA.
6. As the contract between NIA and Khanna contained an
arbitration clause, the claims of Khanna were referred to arbitration by
a learned three member Arbitral Tribunal, which also conducted a site
visit on 25th - 26th April 2017.
Khanna's Claims before the learned Arbitral Tribunal
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
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7. Before the learned Arbitral Tribunal, Khanna quantified the
additional payments to which it was entitled under the following heads
of claim:
"I. Claim on account of Waste Paper Imported (Newsprint),
amounting to Rs. 2,53,45,105/-;
II. Claim on account of Waste Paper Imported (Other),
amounting to Rs. 10,74,16,427/-;
III. Claim on account of erroneous application of USD/MT
rates & Foreign Exchange rates applicable to the assessed quantity
of imported pulp for Newsprint, amounting to Rs. 2,45,13,433/-;
IV. Claim on account of Waste Paper (Local) amounting to Rs.
84,62,181/-;
V. Claim on account of complete exclusion of entire stocks of
"Work-in-Progress " (WIP) amounting to Rs. 50,77,26,268.86/-;
VI. Claim on account of Differential Custom Duty, amounting
to Rs.3,78,86,829/-;
VII. Claim on account of erroneous calculation of losses to
Plant and Machinery, amounting to Rs.16,83,144/-;
VIII. Claim on account of the erroneous valuation of the Debris
Removal Expenses, amounting to Rs.1,19,89,719/-;
IX. Claim on account of erroneous valuation of Fire
Fighting/Debris Removal .Expenses/Double Deduction, amounting
to Rs.25,26,689/-;
X. Claim on account of erroneous disallowance of reversal of
CENVAT credit, amounting to Rs.3,03,129/-."
8. Thereafter, the following two additional claims being claimed
XI and XII were added vide an application under Section 23 of the
1996 Act filed on 14th August 2017.
"XI. Declare and direct that the Respondent is not entitled to
deduct more than Rs. 50 lakhs towards "excess" and direct the
Respondent to refund the excessive deduction of "excess"; and
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
Signing Date:07.12.2022
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XII. Direct the Respondent to pay interest in terms of
Regulation 9 of the IRDA (Protection of Policyholders' Interest)
Regulations, 2002."
The total amount of relief thus sought before the learned Arbitral
Tribunal was ₹ 77,46,29,051.86.
The impugned award
9. The learned Arbitral Tribunal, at the outset, notes the main
issue, on which NIA and Khanna had locked horns, as being the effect
of the Joint Discharge Voucher dated 29th May 2013 signed by
Khanna and countersigned by an official of the bank.
10. The learned Arbitral Tribunal notes Khanna's claim that it had
been subjected to severe financial pressure as a result of the failure, on
the part of NIA, to make any interim on-account payments to Khanna
to compensate the losses suffered by it, despite the making of such
payments being a prevalent practice in the industry and despite
Khanna having addressed several representations to NIA in that
regard. The lack of any payment for a period of almost one year after
the fire had broken out, according to Khanna, left it at the brink of
collapse. In the meanwhile, short term loans to the tune of ₹ 65
crores, which had been extended to Khanna by banks, were also
falling due for payment, thereby increasing the financial stress on
Khanna. It was in these circumstances, contended Khanna, that it was
constrained to sign the blank Joint Discharge Voucher dated 29 th May
2013. The coercive circumstances, in which the blank Joint Discharge
Voucher came to be signed by Khanna, therefore, were the creation of
NIA.
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
Signing Date:07.12.2022
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11. Khanna also contended that, as it was not provided with any
copy of the Final Survey Report dated 7th March 2013, at the time
when it was made to sign the blank Joint Discharge Voucher, it was
not in a position to ascertain the correctness of the amount of ₹
1,03,16,42,738/- which was paid by NIA to Khanna, or the
justifiability of the computation of the said figure. In these
circumstances, Khanna requested NIA, vide letter dated 3rd June 2013,
to provide it the Final Survey Report. The said Final Survey Report,
even when provided on 27th June 2013, was without annexures.
Nonetheless, on going through the Final Survey Report, Khanna found
that it contained several allegedly arbitrary and illegal deductions,
principally with respect to the loss suffered by Khanna towards Work-
in-Progress (WIP), against which no compensation at all had been
awarded. It was in these circumstances that Khanna addressed, on 3 rd
October 2013, a notice to NIA, invoking arbitration. The amount
claimed in the said notice was ₹ 77.61 crores.
12. As against this, NIA contended, principally, that Khanna's
claims stood discharged by accord and satisfaction and that, therefore,
no dispute survived. NIA contended that the Surveyor had, after
properly assessing the loss suffered by Khanna, worked out the
amount of loss as ₹ 103.39 crores, which was adjusted by NIA to ₹
103.27 crores and paid to Khanna. NIA placed, on record, a complete
and filled Joint Discharge Voucher dated 29th May 2013, signed by
Khanna and the official of the bank which, according to NIA,
extinguished Khanna's claims by accord and satisfaction. A
screenshot of the said Joint Discharge Voucher, as filed by NIA before
the learned Arbitral Tribunal may be provided as under:
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
Signing Date:07.12.2022
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13. I may note here that a comparison of the signed blank Joint
Discharge Voucher filed by Khanna, with the completed Joint
Discharge Voucher filed by NIA reveals that they are the same
document, with the details relating to amount of final settlement,
which are unfilled in the blank Joint Discharge Voucher filed by
Khanna, having been filled in, in the Joint Discharge Voucher filed by
NIA.
14. NIA also relied on the following letter dated 3 rd June 2013,
addressed by Khanna to NIA almost immediately after the clearance
of the aforesaid amount of ₹ 1,03,16,42,738/- on 29th May 2013:
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
Signing Date:07.12.2022
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"Khanna Paper Mills Limited
Address:
Fatehgarh Road,
Amritsar-143001 Punjab, India
Ph: +91-183-5067100 to109
Fax: +91-183-5067100/110
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.khannapaper.com
3rd June 2013
Senior Divisional Manager
New India Assurance Company limited
Court Road
Amritsar
Dear Sir
Sub : Claim Settlement-Fire Loss Dated 12th June 2012
With reference to the subject, we are thankful to you for settlement
of our claim for Rs.1,03,16,42,738 (Rupees One Hundred Three
Crore Sixteen Lacs Forty Two Thousand Seven Hundred Thirty
Eight only). We are thankful that our repeated reminders, personal
visits and request for settlement before May 31, 2013, was
accepted and this enabled us to meet the deadline of the banks.
Any further delay would have seriously affected banking
relationship and external credit rating.
Our claim was for Rs. 179 Crores but after final discussions with
the surveyors, the value of the Work in Progress was reduced to
the cost of Pulp and the claim was revised to Rs. 170.71 Crores.
However we note that actual settlement has been for Rs. 103.16
Crores.
You are therefore requested to provide us the claim settlement
details and the copy of surveyors report so as to enable us to decide
about appropriate accounting for the same and to update the matter
to our Board, Bankers, Auditors and other statutory authorities.
Yours Faithfully
For Khanna Paper Mills Limited
Sd/-
Sushil Kumar Kabra
CFO"
15. Thus, contended NIA, Khanna had not only failed to lodge any
protest regarding the amount paid to it by NIA on 29 th May 2013;
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rather, Khanna expressed gratitude for having been released the said
payment.
16. In this context, NIA emphasized that (i) the allegations of
having had to agree to a lesser payment than was due to it under
duress and coercion was first made by Khanna in its letter dated 24th
December 2013 to the reply dated 4th December 2013 of NIA in
response to the notice of arbitration issued by Khanna to NIA and (ii)
the allegation of having had to sign a blank Joint Discharge Voucher
was, in fact, made for the first time in the statement of claim filed by
Khanna before the learned Arbitral Tribunal. This itself indicated that
the Joint Discharge Voucher, which had been placed on record by
NIA, was the actual Joint Discharge Voucher signed by Khanna,
which manifested its complete agreement to the payment of ₹
1,03,16,42,738/- as representing full and final settlement of its dues
against NIA.
17. Apart from this, the other major ground of contest, by NIA, to
Khanna's claims in the arbitral proceedings, was with respect to the
claim towards loss of WIP which would be addressed, in detail, later
in this judgement.
18. The two main issues on which detailed submissions were
advanced both before the learned Arbitral Tribunal as well as before
me were, therefore, (i) whether Khanna's claims against NIA stood
discharged by accord and satisfaction in view of the Joint Discharge
Voucher dated 29th May 2013 and (ii) whether Khanna's claim for loss
on account of destruction of WIP, as allowed by the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, was sustainable.
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By:KAMLA RAWAT
Signing Date:07.12.2022
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19. To facilitate understanding of the controversy, I deem it
appropriate, first, to address these two issues. In this context, I
proceed to deal with the award of the learned Arbitral Tribunal on the
issues, the rival contentions before me and my decision thereon, as
under.
Re: Whether all claims of Khanna against NIA stood discharged
by accord and satisfaction in view of the Joint Discharge Voucher
dated 29th May 2013
20. As already noted hereinbefore, Khanna contended that the Joint
Discharge Voucher dated 29th May 2013, though signed by it, did not
result in extinguishing of all its claims by accord and satisfaction. The
reason was that, according to Khanna, the Joint Discharge Voucher
had been signed under compulsion in view of the situation of financial
duress in which Khanna found itself at the time. Moreover, the Joint
Discharge Voucher, as signed by Khanna was, in its submission,
blank, indicating that Khanna's signature on the Joint Discharge
Voucher had been obtained not only under financial duress but also
under coercion. As Khanna, at that time, had not been provided with
the Final Survey Report dated 7th March 2013, it was unaware of the
basis of computation of the amount of ₹ 1,03,16,42,738/-. It was for
this reason, according to Khanna, that it could not immediately protest
at having been paid an amount less than what was due to it.
21. The financial duress in which Khanna found itself on 29 th May
2013 was, according to it, attributable to various factors, i.e. the delay
on NIA's part in releasing on account payments to Khanna for almost
a year, despite repeated requests by Khanna in that regard, and the
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loans taken by Khanna to replace the stocks destroyed in fire, which
had fallen due for payments in the interregnum.
22. The Final Survey Report, even when it was made available to
Khanna on 27th June 2013, it was pointed out, contained only 70
pages, and was not accompanied with the annexures thereto, which
ran into almost 1200 pages. The said annexures were made available
to Khanna only when NIA was directed to do so, by the learned
Arbitral Tribunal, vide order dated 10th February 2014.
23. In support of the aforesaid submissions, Khanna placed, on
record, a copy of the blank Joint Discharge Voucher1 purportedly
signed by it, communications with banks indicating extending of
short-term loans by the banks to Khanna, and communications with
NIA requesting for interim on account payments and also for being
provided a copy of the Final Survey Report.
24. Responding to Khanna's submissions, NIA contended, before
the learned Arbitral Tribunal, that all submissions of Khanna, with
respect to duress and coercion, as well as to having been compelled to
sign a blank Joint Discharge Voucher, were afterthoughts. NIA
placed, on record, a completely filled Joint Discharge Voucher dated
29th May 20132 which, according to NIA, was the actual Joint
Discharge Voucher signed by Khanna acknowledging its satisfaction
to the amount paid to it by NIA. The falsity of Khanna's allegations of
duress and coercion, and of having been made to sign a blank
Discharge Voucher, submitted NIA, was apparent from the fact that
the first allegation found place, for the first time, in the letter dated
1
Refer para 4 supra
2
Refer para 12 supra
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24th December 2013 of Khanna in reply to NIA's communication
dated 4th December 2013, and the second allegation was raised, for the
first time, in the statement of claim filed by Khanna before the learned
Arbitral Tribunal. Till 24th December 2013, therefore, there was no
allegation of any financial duress or coercion having compelled
Khanna to accept an amount less than what was due to it, and, till the
filing of the statement of the claim before the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, no allegation of Khanna having had to sign a blank Joint
Discharge Voucher ever figured.
25. The NIA also contested, on facts, Khanna's contention that it
was suffering from financial duress on 29th May 2013, when it signed
the Joint Discharge Voucher. However, as that is a pure question of
fact, which is outside the scope of a Court exercising jurisdiction
under Section 34 of the 1996 Act, I do not propose to enter into that
arena.
26. NIA also sought to contend, before the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, that, having failed to produce, in the witness box, Mr.
Surinder Kumar Gupta from the Oriental Bank of Commerce (OBC),
who also signed the Joint Discharge Voucher, Khanna had failed to
prove its allegation that the Joint Discharge Voucher was blank when
signed.
27. Additionally, NIA placed reliance on the judgment of the
Supreme Court in United India Insurance Company Ltd v. Antique
Art Exports Pvt. Ltd.3 and this Court in Worldfa Exports Pvt. Ltd. v.
United India Insurance Company Ltd.4
3
2019 SCC Online SC 504
4
2015 SCC OnLine Del 13951
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Findings of the learned Arbitral Tribunal
28. The learned Arbitral Tribunal, dealing with the aforesaid rival
contentions observes, at the outset, that NIA had "pertinently, not
addressed or controverted in its pleading, the fact that the fact that the
said document filed by the claimant at page 1285 (the blank so called
joint discharge voucher) was blank when signed by the claimant and
did not contain any details regarding the date of payment, amount of
payment, signatures of the respondent officials and voucher reference
no.". Further, observes the learned Tribunal, NIA had merely
examined the surveyor as RW-1, and had not led any evidence with
respect to the signing of the Joint Discharge Voucher. As against this,
CW-1 Saurabh Khanna, whose evidence was led by Khanna,
specifically averred, in paras 19 and 21 of his affidavit in evidence,
that he was coerced to sign the blank Joint Discharge Voucher, as he
was informed that no money would be released till he did so.
29. Extensive reliance has been placed by the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, on the judgment of the Supreme Court in National
Insurance Company Ltd. v. Boghara Polyfab Pvt. Ltd5 which, in
turn, relied on the earlier decision in United India v. Ajmer Singh
Cotton and General Mills6. From a perusal of the said decision,
observes the learned Arbitral Tribunal, the following propositions
emerged:
"i. That if the Joint Discharge Voucher has been signed by the
Claimant under financial stress and the signing of the same is used
as a condition precedent by the insurance company to release even
the admitted amount, the same is vitiated by coercion and there can
5
2009 1 SCC 267
6
1999 6 SCC 400
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be no accord and satisfaction; and
ii. Separately, the practice of making insured parties/parties in
lower bargaining positions sign undated discharge vouchers for
sums lesser than their claim amounts is itself a collusive practice
by government agencies/companies that is to be frowned upon."
30. The learned Arbitral Tribunal holds, on a comparative
consideration of the evidence laid by the NIA and Khanna as noted in
para 28 supra that Khanna had "in fact demonstrated that it signed the
alleged blank, undated, unfilled Joint Discharge Voucher under
duress". Thereafter, the learned Arbitral Tribunal proceeds to examine
the contention of Khanna that it was suffering, at the time of signing
the joint discharge voucher, from financial duress, thus:
"In this regard, it is imperative to note that admittedly, the
Claimant had written to the Respondent to release on-account
payments on 12.07.2012 and 04.04,2013, and informing it about
the STLs taken from the Banks. Furthermore, pertinently, during
the meeting held on 18.06.2012 [Ex. CW-1/R4, Vol. A, p. 22-36),
the Claimant in its Agenda for the Meeting @ p, 29 has averred
that:
"The insurance company and surveyors have
already made their initial visit and the higher
authorities of insurance company has given their
reassurance that they will release the on-account
payment equivalent to 50% of assessed loss
within 2-3 months."
53. A similar statement is made by the Claimant in its Letter dt.
19.06.2012 to the Banks wherein it is specifically stated (Ex. CW-
1/R5, Vol. A, p. 37) that the Claimant would settle the loan
whenever it's able to get on account payment from the Respondent
against the claim. Admittedly, the Respondent has not responded to
the said communications, nor has it led evidence to demonstrate
that no such assurance of making on account payments was made.
54. While there may be some force in the Respondent's
submission that the STLs advanced to the Claimant were not for a
period of 6 months(further extended by 3 months) as claimed by
the Claimant, the fact remains that STLs were taken by the
Claimant under the belief (mistaken or otherwise) that the
Respondent would he releasing on account payments, which the
Claimant would use to repay the bank loans. Moreover, even if the
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STLs (sanctioned in June and July 2012), were for a period of one
year, they would have been due for repayment in June 2013, and
the Claimant hadn't received any update regarding the payment of
the same till as late as 25.05.2013. The said circumstances, clearly
establish that at the time the undated Joint Discharge Voucher was
signed, the Claimant had not received any payment from the
Respondent for more than 11 months and therefore was coerced
into signing a Blank document (without the date or details of the
amount) as a condition precedent to receiving even the amount
admitted by the Respondent as due. Thus, in tribunal's view, the
present case falls squarely under the illustration quoted above from
Polyfab5, and there had been no accord and satisfaction leading to
discharge of the arbitration clause."
31. The plea of delay, on the part of Khanna, in providing requisite
details, holds the learned Arbitral Tribunal, could not be pleaded by
NIA as a ground of defence, in view of Regulation 9(2) of the IRDA
(Protection of Policyholders' Interests) Regulations, 2002 ("the IRDA
Regulations"), which read thus:
"(2) Wherever the insured is unable to furnish all the particulars
required by the surveyor, or where the surveyor does not receive
the full cooperation of the insured, the insurer or surveyor, as the
case may be shall inform in writing the insured about the delay that
may result in the assessment of the claim. The surveyor shall be
subjected to the code of conduct laid down by the Authority while
assessing the loss and shall communicate his findings to the insurer
within 30 days of his appointment with a copy of the report being
furnished to the insured, if he so desires. Where, in special
circumstances of the case, either due to its special and complicated
nature, the surveyor shall under intimation to the insured, seek on
extension from the insurer for submission of his report. In no case
shall a surveyor take more than six months from the date of his
appointment to furnish his report."
32. On the anvil of Regulation 9(2) of the IRDA Regulations, the
learned Arbitral Tribunal holds that, as Khanna had appointed the
Surveyor on 13th June 2012, the report ought to have been submitted
by the Surveyor at the very latest by 12th December 2012, whereas it
was submitted only on 7th March 2013. "The said impermissible
delay in assessing the loss by the respondents/surveyor", holds the
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learned Arbitral Tribunal, coupled with the fact that no on account
payment had been made to the claimant, despite its requests, clearly
establishes that the said undated blank Joint Discharge Voucher was
signed under financial duress.
33. The learned Arbitral Tribunal holds against NIA that, despite
not having been provided the complete Final Survey Report, Khanna
had, in its communication dated 24th December 2013 to NIA, clearly
alleged that the Joint Discharge Voucher was signed under duress and
coercion. This was immediately after NIA claimed discharge of its
liability to Khanna by accord and satisfaction and could not, therefore,
be said to be belated.
34. The fact that Khanna was able to place on record a blank Joint
Discharge Voucher signed by him, observes the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, could only be explained by NIA having got Khanna to sign
such a blank Joint Discharge Voucher. NIA was unable to provide
any alternative satisfactory explanation in that regard, either through
evidence or otherwise. The learned Arbitral Tribunal holds, in this
connection, thus:
"59. ... Per contra it is our opinion that the only explanation for
the Claimant having in its possession the Document filed as the
Blank so-called Joint Discharge voucher, at Vol. IV @ p.1285, is
that the Claimant was provided only with a Blank document to
sign. The Respondent has been unable to explain, through evidence
or otherwise, how a document which is in the pro-forma format of
the Respondent, could be in the possession of the Claimant, unless
that was the document that was provided to the Claimant at the
time of signing."
35. The aforesaid facts, coupled with the fact that Khanna had
never been provided any copy of the Final Survey Report, holds the
learned Arbitral Tribunal, defeated the case of discharge of Khanna's
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claims by accord and satisfaction, that NIA had sought to build up.
36. The decision in United India Insurance3, on which NIA sought
to place reliance, was held to be distinguishable as, in that case, there
was a specific communication from the insured to the insurer,
acknowledging that it had been paid the amount due to it. No such
communication, holds the Arbitral Tribunal, was forthcoming in the
present case.
Submissions of NIA
37. Mr. Tushar Mehta, learned Solicitor-General, appearing on
behalf of NIA, submitted that all disputes between Khanna and NIA
stood concluded and settled by accord and satisfaction in view of the
Joint Discharge Voucher dated 29th May 2013, which had been signed
both by Khanna and Mr. Surinder Kumar Gupta, a representative of
OBC. He submits that Khanna had led no evidence to support its
contention either that the Joint Discharge Voucher, at the time it was
signed by Khanna, was blank, or that NIA had in any manner coerced
Khanna into accepting payment less than what was due to it. The plea
of duress and coercion, submits the learned SG, was belied by the fact
that, immediately after the Joint Discharge Voucher was signed,
Khanna, vide letter dated 3rd June 2013, thanked NIA for having
released ₹ 103.16 crores to Khanna against its claim. No objection,
regarding the amount released, was raised at that time. Nor was it
sought to be contended that the Joint Discharge Voucher was signed
under duress or coercion or that it was blank when signed.
38. Mr Mehta submits that Khanna could not seek to rely on the
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fact that the Final Survey Report had not been made available to it on
29th May 2013, when it signed the Joint Discharge Voucher.
Providing of the Final Survey Report was not required for Khanna to
allege coercion, if such coercion had actually existed.
39. The learned SG emphasizes the delay on Khanna's part in
raising any protest. He points out that it was for the first time in the
letter dated 24th December 2013, by way of response to NIA's letter
dated 4th December 2013, that Khanna objected to the amount released
to it. Even in the said letter, there was no specific allegation of
coercion. Khanna merely relied on a judgment of the Supreme Court
in Boghara Polyfab5. As against this, the plea of the Joint Discharge
Voucher having been blank when it was signed by Khanna was, on the
other hand, he points out, raised for the first time in the Statement Of
Claim filed before the learned Arbitral Tribunal. The earliest
objection was, therefore, taken more than six months after the Final
Survey Report had been provided to Khanna. Khanna could not,
contends the learned SG, take refuge behind the plea that it had not
been provided the annexures to the Final Survey Report, as, in its
Statement Of Claim, the said objection was raised by Khanna though
it still did not have, with it, the annexures to the Final Survey Report.
40. The learned SG submits that the objections of duress and
coercion, as raised by Khanna, were completely bereft of material
particulars. Khanna had not disclosed the identity of the person who
had subjected it to coercion. Even in the affidavit in evidence of Mr.
Saurabh Khanna as CW-1, there was a mere bald averment of duress
and coercion without any detail. In view of the mandate of Order VI
Rule 4 of the CPC, such an allegation of duress and coercion, bereft of
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particulars, was of no evidentiary value whatsoever.
41. Pointing out that the Joint Discharge Voucher was signed not
merely by Khanna but also by Mr. Surinder Kumar Gupta, the
representative of OBC, the learned SG submits that Khanna did not
lead his evidence or produce him in the witness box. Thus, Khanna
did not lead the best evidence possible to establish its case that the
Joint Discharge Voucher, when signed, was blank.
42. As against this, the allegations, the affidavit in evidence of CW-
1 Saurabh Khanna merely alleged misrepresentation.
43. The learned SG also relied on the following part of the cross-
examination of CW-1 which, according to him, demolished Khanna's
plea that the Joint Discharge Voucher was blank when it was signed
by Khanna:
"Q.446 Did you inform the banks of the amounts that you
expected to get from the insurance company and, if so, what
figure?
Ans. I do not remember, however, whenever we met the bank
officials we conveyed to them that we were expecting full claimed
amount i.e. approx. Rs.170 Crores from the insurance company."
Q.447 I suggest to you that by April, 2013, you were aware that
the surveyor had not recommended to the insurance company for
payment of the full claimed amount. What have you to say?
Ans. I disagree.
Q.448 After the banks received the money from the insurance
company, did the banks communicate to you that the amount of Rs.
103 Crores is much less than the full claimed amount?
Ans I do not remember.
Q.449 Shown page 1297 of list of documents filed with the SOC
(letter dated 25.05.2013 from the Claimant to the CMD of the
Respondent). This letter was intact dispatched on 27.05.2013 at
1509 hours by registered post, is that correct?
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Ans It may be so. The postal receipt is a part of the letter.
Q.450 I suggest to you that on 27.05.2013, you were well aware
that the payment was likely to be made in the next one or two days
and was infact made on 29.05.2013. What have you to say?
Ans. I do not agree.
Q.451 On which date did you sign the allegedly blank joint
discharge voucher (at page 1285 of the list of documents with the
SOC)?
Ans I do not remember the exact date.
Q.452 I suggest to you that OBC, being a PSU bank, will not sign
on a blank document like joint discharge voucher. What have you
to say?
Ans. I disagree.
Q.453 Shown document at Annexure R-2 at page 54 of the
Statement of Defence (marked as CW-1/R-8) which is a joint
discharge voucher. I put it to you that you signed this joint
discharge voucher. What have you to say?
Ans. I had signed the document when it was blank as is available
at page 1285 of the list of documents with the SOC, marked as
CW-1/R-7.
Q.454 I put it to you that the bank first signed the joint discharge
voucher, thereafter you signed the same and filled up the amount in
the joint discharge voucher (CW-1/R-8) and handed it back to the
insurance company. What have you to say?
Ans I was informed that without signatures, money will not be
paid. I, therefore, asked the bank to sign it, I also signed it. It was
blank at that time. There were no signature of the official of the
insurance company at that time on the said document. Officials of
the insurance company were present at that time in our office and
they took this blank document with them.
Q.455 Who informed you that without signatures, money will not
be paid?
Ans. Mr Sunil Mahajan, Divisional Manager of the insurance
company had told me that money will not be paid unless I sign it.
Q.456 When did he tell you this and where?
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Ans. He said this in our office but I do not remember the exact
date.
Q.457 When did you receive the money?
Ans. 30.05.2013 by RTGS when the money was credited in our
account.
Q.458 After you received the sum of Rs.103 crores approx., when
did you protest about the fact that you were pressurized into
signing a blank joint discharge voucher?
Ans. The amount was not mentioned in the joint discharge
voucher. When the money was credited to our bank, we
immediately protested orally to the insurance company as to how
only Rs.103 Crores have been paid instead of Rs.170 Crores. A
letter was written on 03.06.2013.
Q.459 I suggest to you that the issue regarding signing of a blank
joint discharge voucher was only raised for the first time when the
Statement of Claim was filed in March, 2014. What have you to
say?
Ans. I do not agree."
44. The reliance, by the learned Arbitral Tribunal, on the delay in
issuance of the Final Survey Report is also, submits the learned SG,
misguided, as delay was attributable only to Khanna not providing the
requisite details in time, despite several reminders by the Surveyor.
45. The learned SG also relied upon the audited financial
statements of Khanna to contend that the plea of Khanna that it was
under financial stress was incorrect. Besides, submits the learned SG,
Sections 19 and 19A of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 made a contract
executed without free consent merely voidable and not void ipso facto.
As such, the objection against want of free consent had necessarily to
be raised at the first available opportunity.
46. The learned SG sought to contend that the case was fully
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covered in favour of NIA by the judgment of the Supreme Court in
United India Insurance3. The learned Arbitral Tribunal had
distinguished the said decision by an erroneous finding of fact to the
effect that while, in the said decision, the insured had accepted, in
writing, the amount contained in the Joint Discharge Voucher, no such
letter of acceptance existed in the present case. This finding was
erroneous on facts in view of letter dated 3rd June 2013, written by
Khanna to NIA.
For all these reasons, the learned SG submitted that the finding, in the
impugned Award, that the claim of Khanna against NIA stood
discharged by accord and satisfaction, could not sustain.
Submissions of Khanna
47. Arguing on behalf of Khanna, Mr. Sachin Datta, learned Senior
Counsel, submitted that no occasion for interference with the
impugned arbitral award, within the narrow confines of Section 34 of
the 1996 Act, could be said to exist in the present case. He impressed,
on this Court, the confines of Section 34, particularly citing, for the
said purpose, the judgment of the Supreme Court in Ssangyong
Engineering & Construction Co. Ltd. v. NHAI 7. The learned Arbitral
Tribunal, he submitted, had found, on a meticulous analysis of facts,
that Khanna was, at the time of signing the joint discharge voucher on
29th May 2013, suffering from financial duress, as a result of the short
term loans taken by it from banks, which had to be repaid by June
2013. Mr. Datta also relied on the positive finding of fact, by the
learned Arbitral Tribunal that, at the time when the joint discharge
7
(2019) 15 SCC 131
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voucher was signed by Khanna, it was, in fact, blank. At that time,
Khanna was not even aware of the amount which had been awarded to
it by NIA. The learned Arbitral Tribunal also found, on facts, that
there was no delay in the raising of objections, by Khanna, to the
amount released to it under the joint discharge voucher. In these
circumstances, the learned Arbitral Tribunal had correctly held that
the claim of Khanna against NIA could not be said to have been
discharged by accord and satisfaction, and the said decision did not
call for interference by this Court under Section 34 of the 1996 Act.
48. Mr. Datta drew attention to communications dated 4th April
2013 and 25th May 2013, from Khanna to NIA, requesting NIA to
expedite assessment of Khanna's claims. Adverting to the letter dated
3rd June 2013, Mr. Datta submitted that there was no acknowledgment
or acceptance by Khanna, in the said letter, of the correctness of the
amount of compensation released to it. Rather, submits Mr. Datta, the
letter expressed surprise at Khanna having been released only ₹ 103
crores against the total amount of ₹ 170 crores claimed by it and
sought a copy of the final survey report of NIA only so as to ascertain
the basis of the release of the said reduced amount. This final survey
report, points out Mr. Datta, was admittedly provided to Khanna only
on 27th June 2013, on which occasion, too, the annexures to the final
survey report were not provided.
49. Mr. Datta further submitted that there was no categorical and
positive denial, by NIA, of Khanna's assertion that the joint discharge
voucher was blank when signed by Khanna. He relies on the
decisions of the Supreme Court in Gian Chand & Bros v. Ratan Lal8,
8
(2013) 2 SCC 606
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Jaspal Kaur Cheema v. Industrial Trades Link9 and the decision of
this Court in Suzuki Motors v. Suzuki (India) Ltd.10, to contend that
any assertion of fact, which was not specifically denied, was deemed
to have been admitted. Mr. Datta placed considerable emphasis on the
fact, by the learned Arbitral Tribunal, that there was no explanation,
forthcoming from NIA, as to how Khanna had, in its possession, a
blank joint discharge voucher. This fact, it was submitted, could be
explained only by accepting Khanna's contention that, in fact, Khanna
had been made to sign on a blank joint discharge voucher. No other
explanation being forthcoming in this regard, Mr. Datta submits that
the impugned award was unexceptionable.
50. On the aspect of evidence which had emerged during trial
before the learned Arbitral Tribunal on the issue of the joint discharge
voucher, Mr. Datta pointed out that the respondent had, Saurabh
Khanna, CW-1, in his affidavit in evidence, clearly deposed that the
Joint Discharge Voucher was blank when signed. He submits that this
deposition could not be shaken in cross examination and relies, for
this purpose, on questions 446, 447, 450, 452 to 459 (reproduced in
para 43 supra) and 460 of the record of cross examination of CW-1,
which may be reproduced thus:
"Q.460 I suggest to you that the letter written on 03.06.2013, page
1298 of Statement of Claim was for the purpose of deciding the
appropriate accounting and to update the matter to Board, bankers,
auditors and other statutory authorities and was not by way of
protest as mentioned in answer to Q. 458. What have you to say?
Ans. I cannot comment on the language of the letter. However, it
was to know as to why our claim has been reduced."
51. Mr. Datta submits that, during cross examination of CW-1, it
9
2017) 8 SCC 592
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was never suggested that the discharge voucher dated 29 th May 2013
was not blank when signed. Rather, he submits that, question 454
(reproduced hereinabove) as posed by NIA to Khanna, indicated that
NIA was attempting to suggest that Khanna was handed over a blank
discharge voucher and had itself filled in the details before signing it,
which was patently absurd.
52. As against CW-1, whose evidence had been led by Khanna, and
who had specifically deposed that the joint discharge voucher was
blank when signed, Khanna contended that NIA did not lead any
evidence, whatsoever, to support its assertion to the contrary. Even if
it were to be assumed that the initial onus to prove that the joint
discharge voucher was blank when signed rested on Khanna, Mr.
Datta submitted that, once Khanna had led the evidence in that regard,
and the testimony of CW-1 on that issue remained unshaken in cross-
examination, the onus shifted to NIA to prove that the joint discharge
voucher was not blank when signed.
53. The surveyor, who was the only witness of NIA, did not testify
with respect to the joint discharge voucher. In these circumstances,
Mr. Datta submits that the learned Arbitral Tribunal could not be
faulted, either on facts or in law, in holding that the joint discharge
voucher, at the time when it was signed by Khanna, was in fact blank.
54. To emphasise the fact that there was no acquiescence, by
Khanna, to the settlement of its claim for an amount of ₹ 103.16 crores
as granted under the joint discharge voucher, Mr. Datta points out that
no basis for the said figure had been made known to Khanna at or
prior to 29th May 2013. Even as on 25th May 2013, on which date
10
2019 SCC OnLine Del 9241
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Khanna wrote to NIA seeking to know the status of its claim, Khanna
was never informed that the claim was being settled at ₹ 103.16
crores. There could, therefore, submits Mr. Datta, be no question of
Khanna agreeing to the said amount on 29th May 2013, without
having, at that date or even prior thereto, been informed of the said
amount or the basis of its computation. For the proposition that, in
such circumstances, there was no question of accord and satisfaction,
Mr. Datta relies on the judgment of this Court in Oriental Insurance
Co. v. Mercuary Rubber Mills11.
55. The position in law, submits Mr. Datta, stands crystallised by
the judgments of the Supreme Court in Boghara Polyfab5 and
Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Dicitex Furnishing Ltd12, as well as
by the judgment of this Court in Worldfa Exports4. Mr. Datta has
emphasised, on facts, the financial circumstances in which his client
was placed on 29th May 2013, to demonstrate that it had signed the
joint discharge voucher under financial duress.
56. Mr. Datta also placed reliance on a circular dated 7 th June 2016
issued by the IRDA, in which Insurance Companies were directed to
ensure that discharge vouchers, when signed, were complete in all
respects. The said circular, read with the earlier circular dated 24th
September 2015 issued by the IRDA, submits Mr. Datta, reserved the
right of the insured to contest the amount of compensation released,
even after signing of a discharge voucher.
Analysis
11
(2012) 127 DRJ 650
12
(2020) 4 SCC 621
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57. At the outset, it is necessary to understood the scope of
interference with arbitral awards, as conferred by Section 34 of the
1996 Act.
58. Section 34(2)(a)(iv) of the 1996 Act, as it stood prior to its
amendment by the Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act
2016, expressly envisaged interference with an arbitral award, insofar
as the merits of the award were concerned, only where
(i) the award dealt with a dispute which was not
contemplated by, or falling within the terms of the submission
to arbitration, or
(ii) the award contained decisions on matters beyond the
scope of the submission to arbitration.
59. Apart from this, the only other provision which envisaged
interference with an arbitral award, on the merits of the award, was
Section 34(2)(b)(ii), which permitted such interference where the
arbitral award was "in conflict with the public policy of India". In this
regard, the explanation to the said clause clarified that an award would
be treated as in conflict with the public policy of India if
(a) its making was induced or affected by fraud or
corruption,
(b) the award was violative of Section 75 or
(c) the award was violative of Section 81 of the 1996 Act.
60. However, the Explanation was specifically "without prejudice
to the generality of" Section 34(2)(b)(ii). The generally wide scope
and ambit of the expression "public policy of India" was not,
therefore, compromised by the Explanation. The scope of interference
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with arbitral awards, on merits, under the pre-amended Section 34
had, therefore, to be restricted to cases where the award was in
conflict with the "public policy of India". In this regard, guidelines are
to be found in the judgments of the Supreme Court in ONGC
Ltd. v. Saw Pipes Ltd13. and Associate Builders v. DDA14. Both these
decisions advocate a wide interpretation of the expression "public
policy of India". Read together, they hold that an arbitral award would
be contrary to the public policy of India if it was (i) contrary to
fundamental policy of Indian law or (ii) contrary to the interest of
India or (iii) contrary to justice or morality or (iv) patently illegal.
61. Thus was introduced, by judicial fiat, the concept of patent
illegality, as a ground to interfere with an arbitral award, though the
said ground did not find express place in Section 34 as legislatively
enacted.
62. "Patent illegality" was also regarded as a ground for interfering
with arbitral awards in McDermott International Inc. v. Burn
Standard Co. Ltd15 and D.D.A. v. R.S. Sharma &
Co.16. McDermott15 held that, if the arbitrator had "gone contrary to
or beyond the express law of the contract or granted relief in the
matter not in dispute, the award would be "patently illegal". R.S.
Sharma16 further widened the expression by holding that an award
which was
(i) contrary to substantive provisions of law, or
(ii) contrary to the provisions of the Arbitration and
Conciliation Act, 1996, or
13
(2003) 5 SCC 705
14
(2015) 3 SCC 49
15
(2006) 11 SCC 181
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(iii) against the terms of the respective contract, or
(iv) patently illegal, or
(v) prejudicial to the rights of the parties, would be
vulnerable to interference under Section 34(2).
63. "Patent illegality", therefore, unquestionably visits an award
which is contrary to the contract between the parties. This is but
obvious, as the arbitral tribunal is a creature of the contract between
the parties, and it is well settled that no court, or other judicial or
quasi-judicial authority, can go behind the contract, or statute, to
which it owes its existence.
64. The Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act, 2016
introduced, with effect from 23rd October 2015, Explanations 1 and 2
in Section 34(2) and sub-section (2A) in Section 34 of the 1996 Act.
These provisions read thus:
"Explanation 1. - For the avoidance of any doubt, it is clarified that
an award is in conflict with the public policy of India, only if -
(i) the making of the award was induced or affected by
fraud or corruption or was in violation of section 75 of
section 81; or
(ii) it is in contravention with the fundamental policy of
Indian law; or
(iii) it is in conflict with the most basic notions of
morality or justice
Explanation 2. - For the avoidance of any doubt, the test as to
whether there is a contravention with the fundamental policy of
Indian law shall not entail a review on the merits of the dispute.
(2A) An arbitral award arising out of arbitrations other than
international commercial arbitrations, may also be set aside by the
Court, if the Court finds that the award is vitiated by patent
illegality appearing on the fact of the award.
16
(2008) 13 SCC 80
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Provided that an award shall not be set aside merely on the
ground of an erroneous application of the law or by reappreciation
of evidence."
65. By this amendment, the legislature departed, somewhat, from
the view expressed, in the decisions cited hereinabove, with respect to
the scope of expression "public policy of India". The expression
"public policy of India" was, by Explanation 1, restricted only to cases
where the award was
(i) induced or affected by fraud or corruption,
(ii) violative of Section 75,
(iii) violation of Section 81,
(iv) in contravention with the public policy of Indian law, or
(v) in conflict with the most basic notions of morality or
justice.
66. Thus, a new expression "fundamental policy of Indian law"
came to be introduced in Section 34, while entering a note of caution
that, in examining whether the award was in contravention with the
fundamental policy of Indian law, the court would not review the
merits of the dispute.
67. "Patent illegality" was engrafted as a separate ground to vitiate
an award, by Section 34(2A), but was not included within the ambit of
the expression "public policy of India". Thus, "patent illegality"
continued to remain a ground for a valid challenge to an arbitral award
and, in addition, the award was also liable to be interfered with, if it
was found to be in contravention with the fundamental policy of
Indian law.
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68. Eight decisions, rendered in the context of the amended Section
34, are of relevance. They are Ssangyong7, South East Asia Marine
Engineering & Constructions Ltd. (SEAMEC) v. Oil India
Ltd.17, Project Director NHAI v. M. Hakeem18, State of
Chhattisgarh v. Sal Udyog Pvt. Ltd.19, NHAI v. P Nagaraju20, Delhi
Airport Metro Express v. Delhi Metro Rail Corporation Ltd.21, PSA
Sical Terminals Pvt Ltd v. Board of Trustees22 and IOCL v. Shree
Ganesh Petroleum23.
69. Ssangyong7 held, inter alia, that an arbitral award was
susceptible to interference on the ground that it had overlooked an
issue of importance if the issue was such that, had it been dealt with,
the whole balance of the award would have been altered and its effect
would have been different. SEAMEC17, even while endorsing the
view propounded in earlier decisions, that the mere possibility of an
alternative interpretation to the contractual covenants, different from
that accorded thereto by the arbitral award, would not constitute a
legitimate basis to interfere therewith, held, significantly, that the
Section 34 court was justified in examining "whether the
interpretation provided to the contract in the award of the tribunal was
reasonable and fair, so that the same passes muster under Section 34
of the Arbitration Act". "Reasonability" and "fairness" in the manner
in which the Arbitral Tribunal had interpreted the contractual
covenants, thereby, became a relevant consideration, for the Section
34 court.
17
(2020) 5 SCC 164
18
(2021) 9 SCC 1
19
(2022) 2 SCC 275
20
2022 SCC OnLine SC 864
21
(2022) 1 SCC 131
22
2021 SCC OnLine SC 508
23
(2022) 4 SCC 463
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70. Sal Udyog19 is an example of a case in which the Supreme
Court found the interpretation, by the learned Arbitral Tribunal, of the
relevant clauses of the agreement to be unacceptable and "patently
illegal" by an incisive examination of the contractual clauses. Insofar
as the concept of "patent illegality", as a ground to interfere with the
arbitral awards, under the amended Section 34 of the 1996 Act, is
concerned, paras 43 to 45 of the report in PSA Sical22 are relevant,
and may be reproduced thus:
"43. It will thus appear to be a more than settled legal
position, that in an application under Section 34, the
court is not expected to act as an appellate court and
reappreciate the evidence. The scope of interference
would be limited to grounds provided under Section 34
of the Arbitration Act. The interference would be so
warranted when the award is in violation of "public
policy of India", which has been held to mean "the
fundamental policy of Indian law". A judicial
intervention on account of interfering on the merits of the
award would not be permissible. However, the principles
of natural justice as contained in Section 18 and
34(2)(a)(iii) of the Arbitration Act would continue to be
the grounds of challenge of an award. The ground for
interference on the basis that the award is in conflict with
justice or morality is now to be understood as a conflict
with the "most basic notions of morality or justice". It is
only such arbitral awards that shock the conscience of the
court, that can be set aside on the said ground. An award
would be set aside on the ground of patent illegality
appearing on the face of the award and as such, which
goes to the roots of the matter. However, an illegality
with regard to a mere erroneous application of law would
not be a ground for interference. Equally, reappreciation
of evidence would not be permissible on the ground of
patent illegality appearing on the face of the award.
44. A decision which is perverse, though would not be
a ground for challenge under "public policy of India",
would certainly amount to a patent illegality appearing
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on the face of the award. However, a finding based on no
evidence at all or an award which ignores vital evidence
in arriving at its decision would be perverse and liable to
be set aside on the ground of patent illegality.
45. To understand the test of perversity, it will also be
appropriate to refer to paragraph 31 and 32 from the
judgment of this Court in Associate Builders14, which
read thus:
"31. The third juristic principle is that a decision
which is perverse or so irrational that no reasonable
person would have arrived at the same is important
and requires some degree of explanation. It is
settled law that where:
(i) a finding is based on no evidence, or
(ii) an Arbitral Tribunal takes into account
something irrelevant to the decision which it
arrives at; or
(iii) ignores vital evidence in arriving at its
decision, such decision would necessarily be
perverse.
32. A good working test of perversity is
contained in two judgments. In Excise and
Taxation Officer-cum-Assessing Authority
24
v. Gopi Nath & Sons , it was held:
"7. ... It is, no doubt, true that if a finding of
fact is arrived at by ignoring or excluding
relevant material or by taking into
consideration irrelevant material or if the
finding so outrageously defies logic as to
suffer from the vice of irrationality incurring
the blame of being perverse, then, the
finding is rendered infirm in law."
In Kuldeep Singh v. Commr. of Police25, it was
held:
24
1992 Supp (2) SCC 312
25
(1999) 2 SCC 10
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"10. A broad distinction has, therefore, to be
maintained between the decisions which are
perverse and those which are not. If a
decision is arrived at on no evidence or
evidence which is thoroughly unreliable and
no reasonable person would act upon it, the
order would be perverse. But if there is
some evidence on record which is
acceptable and which could be relied upon,
howsoever compendious it may be, the
conclusions would not be treated as perverse
and the findings would not be interfered
with."
71. IOCL23 examined, in depth, once again, Section 34 of the 1996
Act, having noted the law earlier enunciated in that regard. Paras 33,
42 to 46 and 53 of the report in that case read thus:
"33. The arbitral award is liable to be set aside insofar
as the same deals with disputes with regard to the lease
agreement which are not contemplated by the arbitration
clause in the dealership agreement and/or in other words,
do not fall within the terms of the submission to
arbitration. The arbitral award is thus liable to be set
aside under Section 34(2)(a)(iv) of the 1996 Act. The
decision enhancing the lease rent is patently beyond the
scope of the submission to arbitration. Moreover, the
composition of the Arbitral Tribunal or the arbitral
procedure was not in accordance with the lease
agreement dated 20-9-2005.
*****
42. In Associate Builders14, this Court held that an
award could be said to be against the public policy of
India in, inter alia, the following circumstances:
42.1. When an award is, on its face, in patent violation
of a statutory provision.
42.2. When the arbitrator/Arbitral Tribunal has failed to
adopt a judicial approach in deciding the dispute.
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42.3. When an award is in violation of the principles of
natural justice.
43.4. When an award is unreasonable or perverse.
43.5. When an award is patently illegal, which would
include an award in patent contravention of any
substantive law of India or in patent breach of the 1996
Act.
42.6. When an award is contrary to the interest of India,
or against justice or morality, in the sense that it shocks
the conscience of the Court.
43. An Arbitral Tribunal being a creature of contract,
is bound to act in terms of the contract under which it is
constituted. An award can be said to be patently illegal
where the Arbitral Tribunal has failed to act in terms of
the contract or has ignored the specific terms of a
contract.
44. However, a distinction has to be drawn between
failure to act in terms of a contract and an erroneous
interpretation of the terms of a contract. An Arbitral
Tribunal is entitled to interpret the terms and conditions
of a contract, while adjudicating a dispute. An error in
interpretation of a contract in a case where there is valid
and lawful submission of arbitral disputes to an Arbitral
Tribunal is an error within jurisdiction.
45. The Court does not sit in appeal over the award
made by an Arbitral Tribunal. The Court does not
ordinarily interfere with interpretation made by the
Arbitral Tribunal of a contractual provision, unless such
interpretation is patently unreasonable or perverse.
Where a contractual provision is ambiguous or is capable
of being interpreted in more ways than one, the Court
cannot interfere with the arbitral award, only because the
Court is of the opinion that another possible
interpretation would have been a better one.
*****
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53. In Satyanarayana Construction Co. v. Union of
India26, a Bench of this Court of coordinate strength held
that once a rate had been fixed in a contract, it was not
open to the arbitrator to rewrite the terms of the contract
and award a higher rate. Where an arbitrator had in effect
rewritten the contract and awarded a rate, higher than that
agreed in the contract, the High Court was held not to
commit any error in setting aside the award."
*****
63. Rewriting of a contractual covenant has been held,
in N.H.A.I. v. Bumihiway DDB (JV)27, to be against the
law of the land, and fatal to the award. The decisions
in Union Territory of Pondicherry v. P.V.
Suresh28, Shree Ambica Medical Stores v. Surat
People's Co-operative Bank Limited29, IFFCO Tokio
General Insurance Co. v Pearl Beverages Ltd.30, Tata
Consultancy Services v. Cyrus Investments (P)
Ltd.31 and Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution
Co. v. Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory
32
Commission , to which allusion is already to be found in
para 2.6 hereinabove, also hold that clauses of a
commercial contract cannot be rewritten by a court or
arbitral tribunal."
72. Findings of fact and law, returned by the arbitral tribunal, are of
various kinds. In respect of all findings, the scope of interference
under Section 34 is limited. It would not be far from the legal truth to
state that findings of arbitral tribunal that involve interpretation of
contractual provisions would merit interference only where the
learned Arbitral Tribunal effectively re-writes the contract or where
the interpretation accorded by the arbitral tribunal to the concerned
contractual provisions militate against other contractual provisions, for
26
(2011) 15 SCC 101
27
(2006) 10 SCC 763
28
(1994) 2 SCC 70
29
(2020) 13 SCC 564
30
(2021) 7 SCC 704
31
(2021) 9 SCC 449
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which one may refer to the recent decisions of this Court in Calcom
Cement India Ltd. v. Binod Kumar Bawri33 and GMR Ambala v
NHAI.34 respectively.
73. In all other cases, the Section 34 court is expected, normally, to
defer to the interpretation accorded by the learned Arbitral Tribunal to
the provisions of the contract before it. Where findings of fact
returned by the learned Arbitral Tribunal are concerned, they would
merit interference only, and only, where the findings are perverse.
Perversity, as already noted, attaches to findings which either exclude
relevant evidence from consideration, or rely on irrelevant evidence,
or are such as no person, acquainted with facts, could reasonably be
assumed to arrive at. Where the finding is a possible one, based on the
material before the learned Arbitral Tribunal, the Section 34 court
would forbear from interference. Equally, where the facts available
before the learned Arbitral Tribunal could lend itself to two
conclusions, and the learned Arbitral Tribunal prefers one, the Section
34 court, even if prefers the other, would not substitute its subjective
satisfaction for the subjective satisfaction of the learned Arbitral
Tribunal.
Application of the above principles to the present issue
74. Viewed thus, in my considered opinion, no case for interference
with the decision of the learned Arbitral Tribunal on the aspect of
discharge of Khanna's claim against NIA on the basis of accord and
satisfaction, can be said to exist. Most fundamental, in this conclusion
32
(2022) 4 SCC 657
33
2022 SCC OnLine Del 3453
34
2022 SCC OnLine Del 3122
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of mine, is the fact that NIA, in fact, has not been able, either before
the learned Arbitral Tribunal or even before this Court, to explain as to
how Khanna placed, on record, a blank discharge voucher signed by
it. The finding of the learned Arbitral Tribunal on this aspect, in para
59 of the impugned award is reproduced in para 32 supra, is, in my
view, unexceptionable.
75. It is not Khanna's case, mercifully, that the blank discharge
voucher placed on record by Khanna was a fabrication. Nor did NIA
seek to contend that Khanna had somehow purloined the blank
discharge voucher from its possession and use it to its unholy
advantage. Even if, therefore, the filled in joint discharge voucher
which NIA placed on record were to be taken into account, the
absence of any explanation, from NIA, to the possession of the signed
joint discharge voucher filed by Khanna, can lead to only one
inference, which is that Khanna was made, initially, to sign a joint
discharge voucher, which was later filled in.
76. This single aspect, in my view, considerably tilts the scale, in
the present case, in favour of Khanna, insofar as the aspect of
discharge of Khanna's claim by accord and satisfaction is concerned.
77. I am not inclined to accept Mr. Mehta's submission that, after
the signing of the joint discharge voucher, Khanna wrote to NIA
acknowledging its acceptance of the amount of ₹ 103.27 crores,
released to it under joint discharge voucher. The letter dated 3 rd June
2013, in my view, does not lend itself to any such interpretation. A
holistic reading of the said letter makes it clear that Khanna had not
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accepted, either expressly or by necessary implication, in the said
letter, the amount of ₹ 103.27 crores as representing full and final
settlement of its dues against NIA. Rather, in the said letter, Khanna
queried of NIA regarding the basis of computation of the said amount
and, in order to ascertain whether the reduction, by NIA, from
Khanna's original claim was, or was not justified, sought a copy of the
final survey report. The final survey report was provided only on 27 th
June 2013. Even then, it was provided without its annexures. Any
document, which cites annexures and is provided without the said
annexures, cannot be said to have provided at all, in law.
78. The learned SG sought to emphasize the position, in law, that
any allegation of duress or coercion is required to be raised at the first
available opportunity, failing which it cannot be accepted. He also
sought to place reliance, in this context, on Sections 90 and 91 of the
Contract Act. Sections 90 and 91 of the Contract Act apply to
concluded contracts, and cannot, therefore, apply to a case such as
this. Insofar as the learned SG submits that the allegation of coercion
and duress ought to have been raised immediately following the act of
coercion or duress, the proposition, while well founded in law, may
not apply directly to the facts of the present case. If, in fact, a party is
found to have executed a document under duress, that duress does not
stand effaced merely because of delay in pleading it. Delay in
pleading coercion or duress, no doubt, would dilute the strength of the
plea; however, if, on facts, coercion or duress is found to have actually
existed, they cannot be wished away merely because the party delayed
in raising the plea.
79. In the present case, the learned Arbitral Tribunal has found, on
facts, that Khanna was under financial duress when it signed the joint
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discharge voucher on 27th May 2013. These findings, predicated on
material on record, cannot be revisited under Section 34 of the 1996
Act, as they cannot be said to suffer from perversity, as understood in
law. While this aspect of financial duress is by itself sufficient to
sustain the finding of the learned Arbitral Tribunal that Khanna's
claims did not stand extinguished by accord and satisfaction, the
additional fact that Khanna had been made to sign a blank discharge
voucher is of no little significance. Getting an insured to sign a blank
discharge voucher is a practice which has been specifically deprecated
by the Supreme Court in Boghara Polyfab5. It partakes, even by itself,
of the nature of coercion. It cannot be expected that an insured would,
willy nilly, and of its own volition, sign a blank discharge voucher,
even before being told the amount which is being released to it.
80. The signing of a blank discharge voucher, even by itself,
indicates that the party was acting under pressure and compulsion.
Grains of the elements of duress and coercion, therefore, vest even in
such act.
81. Boghara Polyfab5, especially the passages on which the learned
Arbitral Tribunal placed reliance in the present case, clearly indicates
that, the signing of a discharge voucher does not, in every case,
extinguish the claim of the insured to a higher amount. Undoubtedly,
this principle would have to be applied keeping in mind the facts of
the case before the court, or the learned Arbitral Tribunal. Where a
discharge voucher is voluntarily signed and, on facts, found to actually
evince full and final settlement of the claim of the insured, it may not
be possible for the insured, later, to rake up the issue and seek a higher
amount. The issue of whether the joint discharge voucher actually
amounts to a full and final settlement of the claim of the insured is,
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however, again a pure finding of fact which, absent perversity, is
impervious to challenge under Section 34 of the 1996 Act.
82. The letter dated 3rd June 2013, properly read, itself indicates
that Khanna had not fully and finally accepted the amount of ₹ 103.16
crores as its claim for the loss suffered by it in fire. The basis of the
said claim had not even been made known to Khanna at that point of
time. I am entirely in agreement with the findings of the learned
Arbitral Tribunal that, where the final survey report had itself not been
provided to Khanna, it could not be said that Khanna had acquiesced
to the amount found to be payable thereunder. A party can acquiesce
only to something which is within its knowledge. Khanna, at the time
of signing the joint discharge voucher on 29th May 2013, had not even
been made known the amount which was being paid to it, let alone the
basis on which the said amount had been worked out. Even if it were
to be assumed that the amount had been made known to Khanna at
that point of time, it is not in dispute that the basis of computation of
the amount was not made known. It would be unfair and unrealistic to
hold that Khanna could be bound down to an amount, the basis of
computation of which was never made known to it at that point of
time.
83. The finding of financial duress which was being suffered by
Khanna on 29th May 2013, and the fact that Khanna had to sign a
blank joint discharge voucher, read with the fact that, despite
representations by Khanna to NIA, even prior to 29 th May 2013, and
thereafter, the final survey report was made available to Khanna only
on 27th June 2013, without its annexures, read together, defeat any
possibility of interference, by this Court, with the impugned award of
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the learned Arbitral Tribunal, insofar as its finding that the claim of
Khanna against NIA did not stand discharged on account of accord
and satisfaction, is concerned.
84. I, therefore, concur with the finding of the learned Arbitral
Tribunal that the claims of Khanna against NIA, as urged before the
learned Arbitral Tribunal, could not be said to stand discharged by
accord and satisfaction.
Re: Claim V of Khanna - Towards loss of WIP
85. Khanna claimed, in its statement of claim, that it had suffered
loss of work in progress (WIP) to the tune of ₹ 50.77 crores. WIP,
according to Khanna, in its statement of claim, was merely the
difference between the quantity of goods purchased and the quantity
of goods released for sale. In its ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning)
software record the quantity purchased was reflected as "batch
certification" whereas the quantity released for sale was reflected as
"batch released". The difference between "batch certification" and
"batch released", therefore, submitted Khanna, represented its WIP.
86. I deem it appropriate to reproduce, in extenso, the observations
and findings of the learned Arbitral Tribunal with respect to Khanna's
claims for loss against WIP as contained in paras 96 to 111 of the
arbitral award, as under:
"96. Under Claim V, the Claimant has claimed Rs. 50.77 crores
on account of the loss of its Works-in-Progress (WIP) (to the tune
of 17387 MT of WIP), a claim which had been disallowed in its
entirety by the Surveyor and the Respondent. The main ground for
the disallowance of the said claim in its entirety by the Surveyor,
was that the Claimant had not provided the Surveyor with any
documentation to substantiate the same, despite repeated requests.
Both parties however, are ad idem on the fact that stock under the
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head of WlP is covered under the IAR Policy. Both parties, are
also, are ad idem on the fact that WIP is an inevitable incidence of
the manufacturing process. A logical corollary of the same is
therefore, that WIP had infact been generated by the Claimant. It
is also logical that given the intensity of the fire on 12.06,2012,
some of such WlP must have been lost/destroyed in the said fire.
97. The Claimant's case, in brief, is simply that WIP is the
difference between the produced quantity of goods and the released
quantity - and thus arriving at the amount of WIP generated by the
Claimant is a mathematical balancing, The reasons (or all quantity
produced not being converted into finished goods are numerous-
such as lack of orders, lack of cutting capacity, the produced
quantities not being in a saleable form; slow moving stock and the
like. As per the Claimant, the said quantity produced is reflected in
its ERP record under the head "Batch Certification", while the
stock sold is reflected under the head "Batch Release". It is stated
that it is this difference between the "Batch Certification" and
"Batch Release" that constitutes WIP, and the same details are
clear from the ERP records, which had been provided to the
Respondent. To support its Claim, the Claimant has relied on, apart
from the ERP itself (Record for the months of March- May 2012 is
annexed as Exhibit D to CW - 1 Evidence Affidavit @pp. 8-301),
the following documents:
(i) Bank Stock Statement (Claimant's Documents, Vol.
II, pp. 348-378 @p.475) (latest Statement as on
31.05.2012 reflecting WIP worth Rs, 62.83 crores
odd);
(ii) Audited Balance Sheets (Claimant's Documents,
Vol. II, PP. 476-86) (Balance. Sheet as on
31.03.2012 reflecting WIP value of Rs. 61.11 crores
odd);
(iii) Provisional Trading Account (Claimant's
Documents, Vol. II, pp. 487·89) (reflecting WIP as
on 11.06.2012 to be 28,924 MT. worth Rs. 48.26
crores odd);"
(iv) CA Certificate (Claimant's Documents, Vol. III, .P.
750) (reflecting the WIP stock on the date of the fire
as 28,942 MT, worth Rs. 48.26 crores);
(v) Account Monitoring Report dated 31.03.2011
[Exhibit E to CW-1 Evidence Affidavit, pp. 342
@p. 379] {reflecting the WIP stock as on 31.3.2011
to be worth ₹ 63.28 crores)
98. CW-1 in his Evidence Affidavit has also explained the said
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manufacturing process and generation of WIP in para 63 of his
Evidence Affidavit as follows:
"63. l say that the process which is followed by the
claimant for conversion of Raw material into the Finished
good is detailed herein below:
• The Claimant produces various types of
finished goods such as Newsprint, Board and paper,
The raw material is purchased from vendors in
India and as well as abroad depending on the
manufacturing requirements. This raw material
usually consists of Waste Paper (Local), Waste
Paper (imported) and Pulp. The raw material is
mixed with substances such as bleaching and
washing chemicals which may include sodium
sulphite, hydrogen peroxide and sodium
hydrosulphite and caustic soda lye, soap noodles
etc. for whitening and purification
• This mixture is then put in the pulper for
grinding and the pulp is generated.
• The Claimant has installed at its premises 4
major machines, which includes 2 machines for
production of board, 1 for paper and 1 for
newsprint. The said pulp which is generated is
transferred to the relevant machine depending on
what the final product is. The relevant machine
converts the pulp into Paper/board/Newsprint in the
form of Reels. At this stage, the Claimant issues a
certificate to the effect "Batch Certificate" and a
corresponding entry is made in the ERP system.
• After formation of the Jumbo Reel,
depending on the orders received and demand in the
market, the said jumbo reel is subjected to two other
processes.
• Usually, the customers either order for
paper in the form of reels or in the form of sheets.
The re-winder machine/sheeter machine cuts the
jumbo reels into smaller reels and/or sheets, which
are then subsequently dispatched to the customer,
On dispatch of the goods, the claimant issues a
certificate "Batch release" and a corresponding
entry is made in the ERP System of the Claimant.
Therefore, this difference between the "Batch
Certification" and "Batch Release" is work-in-progress
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and the value of the same can be adjudged from the ERP
record so maintained by the Claimant and duly verified to
be absolutely accurate in the Final Survey Report.
Furthermore, a sample of the ERP record will reflect that
for all raw material which is subjected to the manufacturing
process detailed above, a corresponding entry is made in
the ERP system by the Claimant, therefore the ERP system
keeps a comprehensive and updated record of all stock
operations including WIP."
99. From the above, it is evident that the produced goods are
the "jumbo reels" of Newsprint, Board or paper (what is certified in
the ERP as "Batch Certificate"). The finished goods however, are
the smaller diameter, cut-to-order and dispatched products out of
the said jumbo reels (What is certified as "Batch Release"). Prima
facie, this appears to be a verifiable process through the ERP
system.
100. However, given that the Respondent has disallowed the
claim in its entirety, the same would have only two possible
implications for the point of view of the Respondent- i.e., either
that no such WIP was lost, or that no information regarding the
same was supplied to the Surveyor. This particular averment of the
Respondent shall be dealt with subsequently.
101. The Respondent has initially taken the second line of
argument, as stated above. The Respondent has also taken issue
with the Claimant allegedly repeatedly changing its stance
regarding what constitutes the WIP. It has claimed that in its initial
Claim Bill dated 19.06.2012 (Annexure 42 to the Final Survey
Report, Claimants Documents, Vol. III @ p. 781), the Claimant
had claimed WlP as "material kept for repulping", the lost quantity
of which was described as 17,387 MT, amounting to Rs.51 crores.
It has further averred that the Interim Survey Report dated
20.12.2012 {Ex. RW 1/1 of RW-1's Evidence Affidavit@internal
p.11}, has noted that the Insured has stated that the "Material for
Re-pulping" is
.."the in-house generated waste/rejection
during/after paper production
This is used directly in Pulper
This can be either in the form of Rejected Reels of
paper and/or sheets and/or loose paper''
At internal page 24 of the said Interim Report, the provisional
liability for the said "Material Kept for Re-pulping" has been
assessed at 75% (till completion of verifications and is likely to he
further adjusted) as Rs.38.25 crores. It Is the Respondent's case that
the Surveyor had accordingly, vide Letter dated 20.06.2012 (SOD,
Annexure R-5, pp. 60-64 @p,62 para 16) requested the claimant
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to provide: "A statement giving details in following format
separately for all types of Raw materials and Materials Kept of
(sic) Re-pulping". The Respondent states that it was only on
01.09.2012, in its Reply to the Letter dated 20.06.2012 (SOD,
Annexure R-6, pp. 65·72 @p.68 para 16), that Claimant for the
first time terms the said material kept for re-pulping as "Works in
progress", thus:
"16, ... Regarding material kept for repulping, it is stated
that, in fact it is work in progress. All the raw material
issued for production are transferred to Work in progress.
After the production, some material not meeting the quality
standards are rejected which are either sold as a second
quality or in case of major defect, it is sent for repulping,
Certain materials for which immediate orders are not
available are also kept as work in progress. These
materials are kept in the stock yard which fully got burnt.
The detail of work in progress, from year 2009-10, 2010-11
to march 2012 and as on date of loss is enclosed, which is a
system generated statement.
As per the Respondent, it was thus only in its Second. Claim Bill
dated 01.09.2012 (Ex. RW-l/3A (colly)) that the claim for material
kept for repulping was re-described as "Work in progress
comprising newsprint, paper & board kept for repulping or selling
at reduced price." As per the respondent, even in the Final Claim
Bill dated 02.02.2013, the claim (although reduced to Rs.36.17
crores) is for "Work in progress comprising newsprint, paper &
board kept for re-pulping or selling at reduced price". Thus, as per
the Respondent, during the claim settlement period, Claimant
always categorized WIP as primarily material kept for re-pulping.
Further, it is stated that this new definition of WIP, being the Batch
Certification minus Batch release was taken in the proceedings
before this Tribunal, and that too underwent various edits by the
Claimant.
102. The Respondent has further asserted that the Surveyor was
right in rejecting the said claim, as there were, in any event, no
documentation forthcoming from the Claimant to substantiate its
claim. In particular, the Respondent relies on Letters issued by the
Surveyor to the Claimant, dated 20.06.2012 (reproduced above),
15.09.2012 (Annexure R-7, SOD, @ p. 73), which in para 11
states:
"11. Please note that despite our repeated requests, the
basis of arriving at Quantities of Work in progress has not
been provided till date. Moreover, no documentary
evidence has been made available in support of the your
claim towards WIP. Also, there is no reflection of these
stocks in your ERP system."
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As per the respondent, the same request is repeated in para 9 of its
letter dated 22.09.2012 {Annexure R-8, SOD,@ p.74), As per the
Respondent, the Claimant hasn't provided any such details except
for purportedly bald assertions in its Letters dated 01.10.2012
(Annexure R-9, SOD,@ p.76) that the complete record of WIP is
available in the ERP system.
103. The Surveyor has dealt with the Claim of WIP on Internal
pages 59-60 of the Final Survey Report (Claimant's Documents-,
Vol. I, pp. 81-82). It is pertinent to note firstly that unlike all the
other Claims, in his analysis of the claim on WIP, the Surveyor has
not provided any Annexures - not even the details provided by the
Claimant along with its Letter dated 01.09.2012, which were later
produced as Ex. RW 1/3A (Colly) during the cross examination of
RW-1 in response to Q.313. The entire assessment of the Surveyor
is clearly done in a completely perfunctory manner. All that is
stated is the justification of the Claimant towards the said loss,
which dearly indicates, as has been noted earlier, the reasons for
generation of WIP, and also the fact that such WIP is "shifted to
the Open Stock Yard due to lack of storage space in the Production
Area and stored there. These WIP stocks are then either sold as
seconds OR on receipt of matching orders OR repulped," In his
comments on the same, the Surveyor has rejected the claim on the
single ground that the Insured was allegedly unable to provide
records towards:
• "Batch wise generation of records of such WIP
quantities
• Date wise movement records of such WIP quantities
from Production to Storage Yard
• Consumption Date of such WIP quantities directly
consumed in the pulper
Production logs stating the reasons and quantity of such
rejection, if any."
This statement is made despite noting that "insured are maintaining
Overall Stocks & Production data in the ERP System." The main
reason for rejection, or not relying on the ERP data is that "no
separate records of such WIP are maintained.'' The Surveyor has
also made a bald statement that on the production floor of each
machine, there are facilities to recycle any production - wastage,
and "nominal production wastage is re-cycled on a daily basis
within the plant. This clearly indicates that the Surveyor appears to
only be concerned with WIP being the "waste" that is repulped,
and hence did not even look into the question of the clear
difference between Batch Certification and Batch Release as seen
in the ERP.
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104. Further, it is clear that it is not the Claimant's case that the
ERP has separate WIP data - simply because of the manner in
which the data is generated. The Claimant's case is that an analysis
/balancing of the said ERP data would reflect WIP. There is a clear
difference between Batch Certification and Batch Release, which is
unaccounted for (after taking into account the stocks of WIP saved)
and the only way to explain the said unaccounted stock is that the
same was WIP which was destroyed during the fire. The site visit
conducted by the Tribunal also demonstrated that it would not be
possible to store such massive quantities of product on the
production floor and that the same is being stored by the Claimant
in the Yard, which was gutted by the fire on 12.06.2012. Thus, we
find no merit in the Respondent's submission that the relevant
records were not provided by the Claimant in order to assess the
loss on account of WIP. Given that the Surveyor's only reason to
reject the claim on WIP is the alleged lack of information
forthcoming from the Claimant, which has been rejected
hereinabove, there is no reason to delve further into the
Respondent's objections to the Claimant's claim. Thus we find that
the Surveyor had wrongly rejected the Claimant's claim on account
of WIP.
105. Even otherwise, we find that CW-l had been subjected to
rigorous cross-examination on the aspect of WIP and had cogently
and logically justified the Claimant's Claim. The understanding of
WIP has dearly withstood cross-examination thus:
"Q.97 In what form does the packaging board come out of
the paper machine ?
Ans. Jumbo Reel.
Q.98 What is Jumbo Reel?
Ans. It's big roll of board/paper.
Q.99 Usually what would be the diameter and height of
such a jumbo reel?
Ans. Diameter is around 1.5 meters.
Q.100 What is the length of the roll?
Ans. Each machine has a different deckle. PM1 is 3.1
meters, PM2 is 2.4 meters. That is the length of the roll.
Q.101 What is the length of the roll in PM4 and PM5?
Ans. PM4 is 4.5 meters, PM5 is 6.6 meters.
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Q.102 ln PM1 where is the jumbo reel stored?
Ans. It is stored at various locations - paper machine
floor, storage yard etc.
Q.103 When the jumbo reel is produced in PM1, in which
physical location in the factory is it so produced?
Ans. In PM1.
Q.107 How are the jumbo reels stacked on the machine
floor?
Ans. Horizontally.
Q.108 What do you do with jumbo reels ?
Ans. All the jumbo reels go to the rewinder where are cut
into shorter diameter and width.
Q.109 After cutting the jumbo reels, what is the next step?
Ans. We store them in the waste paper yard or the paper
machine floor. These rolls are stored vertically in the waste
paper yard.
Q.110 Where does the cutting of jumbo reels take place?
Ans. It is not possible to cut the jumbo reels. They are
first Rewound and made into smaller diameter reels. Those
smaller diameter reels are either cut or rewound again as
per size. These are various sheeters installed in each paper
machine.
Q.111 Where does the cutting of the smaller diameter reels
take place in respect of each of the paper machines?
Ans. It is quite flexible. Sheeter specifications are usually
same for all. Depending upon the stock level, we take a
decision to cut these reels.
Q.113 After the smaller diameter reels are cut, are they
packaged at the same location?
Ans. Packaging is only done for those reels for which we
have direct reel order. They are packaged at a location
nearest to the cutting machine.
Q.114 Is there a separate designated packaging area for
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each of the units PM1, PM2, PM4 and PM5?
Ans. Yes.
Q.115 After packaging of the cut smaller reels, what is the
next step?
Ans. They are stored in finishing house awaiting to be
despatched.
Q.116 Are there any smaller reels which are cut but not
packaged?
Ans. Yes.
Q.128 Are some jumbo reels shifted to the waste paper
yard?
Ans. Sometimes.
Q.129 Is this usual?
Ans. No.
Q.130 What is shifted from the paper machine to the waste
paper yard?
Ans. Smaller diameter reels.
Q.131 In what circumstances are these smaller diameter
reels shifted to the waste paper yard?
Ans. Lack of orders, mismatch in sheeter production,
better servicing to customer, bad market situation.
Q.132 Are these smaller diameter reels resold?
Ans. Yes.
Q.133. Are any proportion of these smaller diameter reels
sent for repulping and reintroduced in the manufacturing
process?
Ans. No.
Q.134 Are these smaller diameter reefs more valuable than the
waste papers stored in the waste paper yard?
Ans. Yes.
Q.135 Is there any protection from the weather available to the
smaller diameter reels which are stored in the open yard?
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Ans. Yes.
Q.137 When the jumbo reels are produced are they weighed?
Ans. Yes.
Q.138 Is there any certification at this stage?
Ans. Yes.
Q.139 Do you at the stage of weighing the jumbo reels after they
are produced record the weight in your ERP?
Ans. Yes, batch certification.
Q.141 For batch certification, 1s any physical copy of
certificate generated?
Ans. Yes, it is all automated through ERP system.
Q.142 Did you generate such certificates from your ERP
system and supply them to the Surveyor?
Ans. Yes, all relevant information was given to the
Surveyor in soft copy.
Q.143 Were hard copies supplied to the Surveyor?
Ans. I think so.
Q.144 After jumbo reels are rewound into smaller diameter
reels, are they weighed?
Ans. Yes.
Q.145 Is there any terminology used in ERP identifying the
weight of smaller diameter reels at this stage?
Ans. I have to check. However, it is not needed as the
system can do that.
Q.285 Please see Q. 145. Are you in a position to answer
the same now?
Ans. There is no terminology used in ERP identifying the
smaller diameter reels as that is not required.
Q.146 After the smaller diameter reels are cut, are they
actually and physically weighed?
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Ans. Yes. They are weighed.
Q.147 I suggest to you that in fact in the regular course
smaller diameter reels which are cut are not actually
weighed but the weight can be derived from diameter, GSM
and width.
Ans. We do both.
Q.148 Is this weight recorded in the ERP and under
what heading?
Ans. I have to check.
Q.286 Please see Q. 148. Are you in a position to answer
the same now?
Ans. The weight is recorded at the time of dispatch and is so
recorded in the ERP.
Q.149. Are the smaller diameter reels shifted to the open
waste yard before or after cutting?
Ans. Rewinder makes jumbo reels into small reels. Smaller
reels are sent to waste paper yard.
Q.150 Are all smaller reels sent to the waste paper yard?
Ans. It depends upon the market situation, order position.
Based on that, decision is taken whether to store it in waste
paper yard or to keep in the paper machine area for further
processing.
Q.l51 Under which heading in your ERP system, it is
shown how much of the smaller reels are being sent to the
waste paper yard?
Ans. I have to check.
Q.287 Please see Q. 151. Are you in a position to answer
the same now?
Ans. After entry of batch certification in the ERP, goods
sent for dispatch are entered in ERP system as batch
release. Difference between the batch certification and
batch release is the weight of WIP which is reflected in the
ERP system.
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Q.152 Before dispatching the goods, that is after
packaging, will it be correct to say that you will be
weighing the goods ready for dispatch?
Ans. Yes.
Q.153 Is there any terminology used in your ERP
identifying the weight of the goods which are despatched?
Ans. They are entered in ERP. But I do not know the
terminology
Q.154 Is it correct that in your ERP, you use the term
"batch release"?
Ans. Yes.
Q.155 Can you explain at which stage of the process
"batch release" takes place?
Ans. When the goods are ready for dispatch, they are
entered under
the heading "batch release".
Q.156 You have made a claim under the head "WIP" (work
in progress). Can you please tell us what is meant by this
term?
Ans. WIP means work in progress. So material whichever
has been manufactured and not yet ready for dispatch
means work in progress.
Q.157 According to you, all the WIP is later sold. Is that
correct?
Ans. Yes.
Q.158 According to you in page 36 of your affidavit
statement, the Surveyor misunderstood when he thought that
the WIP was to be subjected to repulping.
Ans. Yes
Q.348 Are jumbo reels are part of WIP?
Ans Yes.
Q.349 After the jumbo reels are cut into smaller reels, does
it continue to be WIP?
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Ans Yes.
Q.350 When the smaller reels are packed, do they continue
to be WIP?
Ans After the smaller reels are packed, they become
finished goods.
Q.351 Is a batch release certificate issued, if so when?
Ans I will have to check and revert
Q.391 With reference to Q. 351, as to whether batch release
certification is issued and if so, when, can you answer the
question now?
Ans When material is getting ready for finishing/
dispatch, we do batch release in ERP.
Q.358 Is the difference between batch certification and
batch release, treated as the work in progress for which you
have made a claim in this arbitration?
Ans Yes
Q.377 Is there any separate godown for WIP (board,
paper and Newsprint) which you can point out on this map?
Ans It is a continuous process. We have little bit storage
between production and finishing the process. So major
WIP is stored in waste paper yard.
Q.378 Is it your answer that there is no separate godown
for WIP on the premises?
Ans I repeat my answer to Q. No. 377. It is a continuous
process. We have little bit storage between production and
finishing the process. So major WIP is stored in waste
paper yard."
106. Moreover the Surveyor has also, in response to Questions
209 and 210 of RW-l's cross examination admitted that the ERP
data captured all the movement of the raw material at all stages of
the manufacturing process and that the production data of the
goods manufactured in the factory was obtained from the ERP
record as provided by the Claimant. He has further admitted (in
response to Q. 212 and 213) that there are in fact various
intermediate stages of production before raw materials get
converted into finished goods and that as soon as any raw material
is subject to manufacturing process, it is transformed into WIP and
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that if jumbo reels or smaller diameter reels (which are not yet
converted into finished goods) are lost in fire, such loss would he
covered under the Insurance policy. He has further admitted
(response to Q.215) that smaller diameter reels (which are not yet
converted into finished goods) would form part of WIP and
[response to Q.217) that The jumbo reels which have not been
subject to "cutting", would form part of WIP. However,
inexplicably, in response to Q. 211, he states:
"Q211. Would it also be correct to say that data was also
obtained from the ERP record with regard to various
intermediate stages of production?
Ans. No. It is not correct because our assessment of loss
does not include any kind of produced / finished goods"
107. RW-1 has also, inexplicably, claimed ignorance of the
terms "batch certification'' and ''batch release" and stated that the
same were not present in the ERP (response to Q. 205-208), which
is contrary to the record. He continued to insist that no separate
records of WIP movement was provided - even though the same
can clearly be ascertained from the analysis of the ERP data. We
find that RW-1 failed to analysis the ERP data provided - which is
the only reason the said claim was rejected. In fact, RW-1's evasive
response to Q. 158-160 and the Tribunal's questions regarding his
physical inspection of the site, would also clearly demonstrate that
the Surveyor simply did not even initiate the process of assessing
the WIP claim, by even physically Inspecting the premises for the
said claim. The said cross-examination is reproduced herein below:
"Q.158 Would it be correct to say that factually, no
physical verification or inspection was conducted to
ascertain the existence of more than 700MTs of WIP stated
to have been saved in the fire and as set out in the table at
paragraph 10.3 of the· final survey report (page 60 of
Volume I of Claimant's documents)?
Ans No. It is not correct as we physically inspected every
nook and corner of the insured plant, but could not
ascertain the existence of any WIP stocks because of the
insured's inability to provide relevant records.
0.159 How much WIP did you physically find upon
inspection in the aftermath of fire?
Ans As stated earlier, in the absence of any relevant
records pertaining to WIP stocks, we did not find any WIP
stocks in the aftermath of fire.
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0.160 Do you mean to say that upon physical inspection,
you could not find any WIP anywhere in the factory?
Ans I mean to say that the physical inspection, during
the course of insurance survey, is based on the insured
providing necessary records which establish the existence
of stocks to be inspected. In this case, since no such records
were provided by the insured, we could not physically verify
the WIP.
Per Tribunal:
Q. Did you enquire from the Claimant as to where was
the saved WIP stock as mentioned in para 10.3 of the final
survey report and if so what was the explanation?
Ans Yes, we enquired from the insured as to where was
the saved WIP stock and the insured could never lead us to
any such place and show us such saved WIP stock.
Q. Was this observation made in your report?
Ans No."
108. Furthermore, we find that RW-l has also attempted to assert
that the WIP claim was given up by the Claimant itself. RW-1
was questioned on his Letter dated 12.12.2012, wherein no
further details qua WIP have been sought, the implication being
that by that date he had already decided to disallow the said claim
(q.224). In response, RW·l asserts that "during our visit between
5th December to 9th December, 2012, the insured's team dealing
with the claim gave us this understanding that they will not be
pursuing the WIP part of the claim", yet somehow this aspect has
not been mentioned in the Final Survey Report or anywhere in
either the SOD, or communications/documents on record. Thus,
we find glaring inconsistencies in the testimony of RW-1, and
find that the Claimant has proved that in fact WIP was generated,
and destroyed in the fire and that all such records had been
provided to the Surveyor, which failed to analyse the same, and
has perfunctorily refused the said claim.
109. The Respondent has also raised other grounds objecting to
the Claimant's claim, namely, the use of the terms "batch
conversion" in the ERP and a column titled "MOV" in the
derivative chart of ERP annexed by the Claimant along with its
Evidence Affidavit. However, we find that the said terms have
been satisfactorily explained by CW -1 during cross examination
in response to question 367 (per tribunal, on MOV) and Q. 418-
422 (on Batch conversion). Moreover, we find that such
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objections are a smokescreen used by the Respondent, to attempt
to cover for the fact that in fact, the Surveyor, abdicated his duty
to properly examine the Claimant's claim under WIP because he
failed to properly analyse the ERP data with respect to the same.
110. In terms of relief, we find that although the Claimant has
raised a Claim of 50.77 crores towards WIP, in its Final Claim
Bill (which was what the Surveyor was to base his assessment of
loss on) dated 02.02.2013, the said claim had been reduced to
36.17 crores. The explanation given by the claimant for the same
is that it was forced to do the same, because it was told that its
claim would only he allowed if the same is reduced and the books
manipulated to reflect the amount of Rs.36.17 crores as opposed
to the original Rs.51 crores claimed under WIP. The same l find
to be a rather serious allegation, without any substantiation -and
neither is the same pleaded in the SOC. Thus, I find that it would
be appropriate for the Claimant to receive only the amount
claimed in the Final Claim Bill, i.e, and amount of Rs. 36.17
crores towards WIP.
111. Thus, Claim V is decided in favour of the Claimant, and it
is decided that the Claimant is entitled to an amount of Rs. 36.17
crores on account of loss due to destruction of its WIP."
Submissions of NIA
87. The learned SG, appearing for NIA raises, as his first contention
to contest the impugned Award insofar as it allows Khanna's claim
towards loss of WIP, that Khanna was repeatedly changing the basis
of its claim. It is submitted that (i) in email dated 19 th June 2012,
Khanna had informed that "material kept for re-pulping 17,387 empty
approx", valued at ₹ 51 crores, was lost in fire, (ii) the interim survey
report dated 20th June 2012 of the surveyor recorded Khanna's case to
be that 17,387 empty rejected manufactured paper, kept in the open
stockyard for re-pulping, had been lost in the fire, (iii) in the letter
dated 1st September 2012, Khanna referred to rejected manufactured
paper as the WIP, (iv) in the claim form dated 1 st September 2012,
submitted by Khanna, the WIP was said to comprise "newsprint, paper
and board kept for re-pulping or selling at reduced prices", (v) in the
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final survey report dated 7th March 2013, it was noted that Khanna
was referring to rejected goods kept for re-pulping/selling as seconds
as the WIP and (vi) before the learned Arbitral Tribunal, the WIP was
stated to be the difference between the quantity of goods produced and
the quantity of goods released for sale. Khanna, therefore, was
alternately referring, at various stages when it claimed loss on account
of WIP, to material kept for re-pulping and to finally produced goods,
by the said appellation. In this context, the learned SG sought to point
out that, in its final survey report dated 7th March 2013, the surveyor
rejected Khanna's claim for compensation against loss of WIP on the
ground that no separate record of WIP stock was maintained by it and
no records, for movement of WIP from the production buildings to the
open stockyard was given. This, contends the learned SG, constituted
a valid reason for rejecting Khanna's claim for loss on account of
WIP, which could not have been revisited by the learned Arbitral
Tribunal.
88. Reverting to his contention that Khanna was prevaricating on
the nature of the WIP, the learned SG submitted that while, till the
arbitral proceedings, WIP, as according to Khanna, referred to rejected
goods, the impugned Award notes Khanna's contention that WIP was
in the nature of smaller reels of manufactured paper not yet ready for
dispatch, which could be worked out by subtracting the "Batch
Released" figure from the "Batch Certification" figure. On this aspect
being brought to the attention of CW-1 in cross examination, the
learned SG points out that his answer was that Khanna could "have
used a better language to explain WIP". CW-1 Saurabh Khanna
acknowledged being unable to explain this discrepancy, as the "WIP"
phrase was used by the finance department. The learned SG relied,
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for this purpose, on questions 295 and 296 as posed to CW-1 and his
responses thereto, which read thus:
"Q.295 Is it your case that you used the phrase "re-pulping"
because of some pressure from the Surveyor?
Ans. Our Finance Department has used this phrase and I cannot
comment on it.
Q.296 I suggest to you that 7 days after the fire, the Claimant
described WIP as material kept for re-pulping and today as an
afterthought you are blaming the Finance Department for misusing
the phrase. What have you to say?
Ans. I disagree. The Finance Department could have explained it
better."
A new claim, according to Section 64UM of the Insurance Act, 1938
was required to be first assessed by an IRDAI License Surveyor,
before it could be cleared. That process of assessment, submits Mr.
Mehta, could not have been conducted by the learned Arbitral
Tribunal.
89. Mr. Mehta submits that, though the discrepancy between the
nature of the WIP claim, as raised in the pre-arbitral communications
and deliberations vis-a-vis the claim as postulated by Khanna before
the learned Arbitral Tribunal, was specifically underscored by NIA in
its submissions in arbitration and noted in the impugned Award, the
learned Arbitral Tribunal has not returned any finding thereon. In this
context, Mr. Mehta has drawn attention to para 103 of the impugned
Award, which faults the surveyor for having only treated WIP as
waste which was re-pulped, without "looking into the question of the
clear difference between Batch Certification and Batch Released as
seen in the ERP". The learned SG submits that the entire argument of
WIP being an amount derivable by subtracting Batch Released from
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Batch Certification being an argument which was raised for the first
time before the learned Arbitral Tribunal, the surveyor could not have
possibly examined that issue. The learned SG also characterized the
findings of the learned Arbitral Tribunal, based on the site visit
conducted on 26 April 2017, as presumptuous.
Submissions of Khanna
90. Mr. Dutta, arguing on behalf of Khanna, echoes the finding of
the learned Arbitral Tribunal that the surveyor was unjustified in
observing that no separate records of WIP were maintained by
Khanna, without taking into account the fact that the WIP quantity
could easily be derived from the ERP record by subtracting the "Batch
Released" figure from the "Batch Certification" figure. The sanctity
of the ERP record, points out Mr. Dutta, has never been questioned.
Mr. Dutta has also relied on the response of the surveyor as RW-1,
during cross examination, to question no.158 posed to him, which
reads thus:
"Q.158 Would it be correct to say that factually, no physical
verification or inspection was conducted to ascertain the existence
of more than 700MTs of WIP stated to have been saved in the fire
and as set out in the table at paragraph 10.3 of the final survey
report (page 60 of Volume I of Claimant's documents)?
Ans No. It is not correct as we physically inspected every nook
and corner of the insured plant, but could not ascertain the
existence of any WIP stocks because of the insured's inability to
provide relevant records."
91. Mr. Dutta also underscores the findings, of the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, in paras 106 to 108 of the impugned Award, highlighting the
inconsistencies in the deposition of the surveyor in cross examination.
CW-1 Saurabh Khanna in his affidavit in evidence, submits Mr. Dutta
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had clearly explained the manufacturing process and the manner in
which WIP was generated. Para 30 of the written submissions filed
by Khanna after conclusion of hearing sought to explain the manner in
which WIP was worked out, thus:
"30. The Arbitral Tribunal has dealt with the findings of the
surveyor on WIP at Paras 103-104 of the award (Pages 57-59 of
the Petitioner's documents) and has noted that the entire assessment
is clearly done in a perfunctory manner. Further, the Arbitral
Tribunal noted that the Respondent's case was that the WIP records
could be deduced from the ERP record itself through an analysis. It
is submitted that the Respondent has installed at its premises 4
major machines, which includes 2 machines for production of
board, 1 for paper and 1 for newsprint. The said pulp which is
generated is transferred to the relevant machine depending on what
the final product is. The relevant machine converts the pulp into
Paper/board/ Newsprint in the form of Jumbo Reels. At this stage,
the Respondent issues a certificate to the effect "Batch Certificate"
and a corresponding entry is made in the ERP system. After
formation of the Jumbo Reel, depending on the orders received and
demand in the market, the said jumbo reel is subjected to two other
processes. Usually, the customers either order for paper in the form
of reels or in the form of sheets. The re-winder machine/sheeter
machine cuts the jumbo reels into smaller reels and/or sheets,
which are then subsequently dispatched to the customer. On
dispatch of the goods, the Respondent issues a certificate for
"Batch release" and a corresponding entry to this effect is made in
the ERP System. The difference between Batch certificate and
Batch Release is the value of WIP. This analysis was never carried
out by the surveyor, even though the Respondent had provided the
entire ERP record and also provided the calculation, which was
filed in the arbitral proceedings as well."
92. Mr. Dutta has also sought to justify the Award, by the learned
Arbitral Tribunal, of ₹ 36.17 crores against Khanna's claim towards
loss of WIP by submitting that while, initially, the claim towards loss
of WIP was reckoned on the basis of unsold finished goods which
were valued at ₹ 50.77 crores, on the insistence of the surveyor, the
claim was reduced to ₹ 36.17 cores at pulp value. This figure, it is
submitted, was borne out by the provisional trading account of
Khanna supported by the certificate of its chartered accountant. Mr.
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Dutta submits that the documents filed by Khanna, read with the ERP
record which was filed before the learned Arbitral Tribunal, could
easily work out the quantity of WIP. This quantification, it is sought
to be submitted, being derived from the ERP record, could not be
questioned.
93. In these circumstances, submits Mr. Dutta, no case for
interference with the findings of the learned Arbitral Tribunal, insofar
as it has allowed Khanna's claim for loss of WIP in the fire, can be
said to exist.
94. The possibility of WIP having been lost in the fire which took
place on 12th June 2012 cannot be gainsaid. It is difficult to believe
that there was no WIP which was destroyed in the fire. The final
survey report dated 7th March 2013, too, does not hold that there was
no WIP loss in the fire which took place on 12th June 2012. The
surveyor has rejected Khanna's claim, essentially on the ground that
requisite data had not been produced by Khanna, on the basis of which
the claim could be awarded. The learned SG has, in this context,
adverted to the communications addressed by the surveyor to Khanna,
in which data was sought which, according to him, were not answered.
95. In order to be entitled to any award towards loss on account of
WIP, it goes without saying that Khanna would not only have to
establish that such loss took place, but would also have to establish the
quantity of WIP which was lost. The onus, in respect of both of these
aspects, would rest with Khanna, being the claimant. Even if,
therefore, one were to presume that some amount of WIP must have
been lost in the fire which took place on 12th June 2012, unless and
until the quantity of WIP could be definitively ascertained, no award
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of any amount could have been made in favour of Khanna by the
learned Arbitral Tribunal, as it is well settled that an arbitral tribunal
cannot proceed on assumptions and presumptions. Even if, therefore,
the fact of loss of WIP in the fire which took place on 12 th June 2012
were to be taken as incontrovertible, that fact alone would not entitle
Khanna to an award towards such loss of any amount whatsoever,
unless and until such amount could definitively be found by the
learned Arbitral Tribunal to represent the loss which took place. No
amount can be granted by an arbitral tribunal gratis, or as a matter of
charity. Damages, if granted, have to be capable of positive
quantification.
96. That exercise, unfortunately, has not been conducted by the
learned Arbitral Tribunal in the present case. Indeed, in the entire
impugned Award, no justification for the decision of the learned
Arbitral Tribunal to award, to Khanna, ₹ 36.17 crores towards loss of
WIP in the fire, is to be found. A reading of para 110 of the impugned
Award, in fact, clearly reveals that the learned Arbitral Tribunal has
not applied its mind to Khanna's entitlement to ₹ 36.17 crores towards
loss in WIP. If the learned Arbitral Tribunal was to award ₹ 36.17
crores, the impugned Award should at least have contained the
reasoning, if not the calculation, on the basis of which the figure of ₹
36.17 crores could be arrived at. Clearly, the impugned Award is
lacking in this respect.
97. I felt it necessary to advert to the findings of the learned
Arbitral Tribunal on the aspect of the WIP loss, as, in my view, a
reading of the said findings makes it clear that the decision to award,
to Khanna, ₹ 36.17 crores towards WIP is completely bereft of
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reasons. If one were to go, para to para, from paras 96 to 111 of the
impugned award, the following position emerges:
(i) Para 96, to the extent it is relevant, merely notes the fact
that WIP was an inevitable incidence of the manufacturing
process and gives voice to the opinion of the learned Arbitral
Tribunal that some WIP must have been destroyed in the fire
which took place on 12th June 2012.
(ii) Para 96 sets out initially the basis of Khanna's claim
against loss in WIP, which is that, by subtracting, from the
figure of "batch certification", the figure of "batch released",
one would be able to arrive at WIP. Learned SG has
emphasised the fact that the claim for WIP as thus urged before
the learned Arbitral Tribunal was completely contrary to the
claim for WIP as contained in the notice invoking arbitration
and even in the statement of claim filed by Khanna in the
arbitral proceedings. I would advert to that aspect of the matter
somewhat later.
(iii) Even if it were to be assumed that the difference between
the figure of "batch certification" and "batch released"
represents WIP, the corollary would be that, in order to claim
loss towards WIP on 12th June 2012, the "batch certification"
and "batch released" figures as on 12th June 2012 ought to have
been found mentioned in the impugned award. They are not,
however, forthcoming.
(iv) Rather, the only two pieces of evidence, on which
Khanna relied, to support its claim for loss on account of WIP,
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which relate to the WIP as on the date of fire i.e. 12th June 2012,
were the bank stock statement as on 31st May 2012 and the
Provisional Trading Account as on 11th June 2012. There was a
vast difference between the figures of WIP reflected in these
two statements. The bank stock statement reflects the figure of
WIP as on 31st May 2012 to be worth ₹ 62.83 crores, whereas
the provisional trading account reflected the WIP to be ₹ 48.26
crores. Though Khanna also relied on a CA certificate reflecting
the WIP as on 11th June 2012 to be ₹ 48.26 crores, the CA was
not produced in the witness box, so that this discrepancy could
be resolved.
(v) Significantly, the claim of Khanna towards WIP loss by
fire as well as the amount awarded by the learned Arbitral
Tribunal towards such loss, were considerably deviant from
both these figures. Khanna claimed ₹ 50.77 crores in its final
claim bill and reduced the claim, before the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, to ₹ 36.17 crores. Neither of these figures can be
treated as even proximate to the WIP loss as reflected in the
bank stock statement or the provisional trading account on
which Khanna relied. The learned Arbitral Tribunal proceeded
to award neither the figure contained in the bank stock
statement, nor the figure contained in provisional trading
account nor the figure contained in the final claim bill raised by
Khanna, but, rather, the claim of ₹ 36.17 crores, for which there
is no material whatsoever even as per para 110 of the impugned
award. Effectively, the learned Arbitral Tribunal has merely
awarded Khanna whatever it sought.
(vi) Para 98 deals with the affidavit in evidence of CW-1
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which again states that the WIP could be worked out as the
difference between the figures of "batch certificate" and "batch
released".
(vii) Para 99 explains what WIP is.
(viii) Para 100 merely holds that disallowance of Khanna's
claim in its entirety would mean that either no WIP was lost or
that no information regarding loss of WIP was provided to
surveyor, none of which could be accepted. This paragraph, too,
therefore does not explain in any manner the the final award of
loss towards WIP, by the learned Arbitral Tribunal, of ₹ 36.17
crores.
(ix) Paras 101 and 102 set out the stand of NIA on the claim
of Khanna towards loss of WIP.
(x) Paras 103 to 106 criticise the approach of the surveyor,
and the manner in which he had proceeded to reject Khanna's
claim for loss of WIP.
(xi) Paras 107 and 108 hold that there were glaring
testimonies in the evidence of RW-1.
(xii) Para 109 rejects the NIA's contention to a column titled
"MoV" in the derivative charge of ERP annexed by Khanna
which is not of particular significance.
(xiii) Thereafter, para 110 proceeds to deal with the relief to be
granted to Khanna. The learned Arbitral Tribunal notes that
Khanna originally raised a claim of ₹ 50.77 cores towards WIP
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in its final claim bill, and that, before the learned Arbitral
Tribunal the claim was reduced to ₹ 36.17 crores. The learned
Arbitral Tribunal does not provide any analysis as to whether
the amount of ₹ 50.77 crores was correct, or not. In the entire
impugned award, one does not find any finding that, by
subtracting the figure of "batch released" from the figure of
"batch certification" as on the date of fire i.e. 12 th June 2012,
one would arrive either at the figure of ₹ 50.77 crores or ₹ 36.17
crores. While, therefore, holding that the correct method of
assessing loss towards WIP in the fire was subtracting the figure
representing the "batch released" from the "batch certification",
that exercise has not been carried out by the learned Arbitral
Tribunal or, if it has, does not stand reflected in any paragraph
of the impugned award.
(xiv) Instead, in a manner which, with greatest respect to the
learned Members to the learned Arbitral Tribunal, the law
cannot countenance, the learned Arbitral Tribunal has
proceeded, without even examining the correctness thereof, to
award to Khanna, its claim of ₹ 36.17 crores.
(xv) Clearly, the manner in which the award of ₹ 36.17 crores
was granted by the learned Arbitral Tribunal cannot sustain on
facts or in law. It is completely unreasoned. Para 110 of the
impugned award notes the submission of Khanna that it had
reduced the original claim of ₹ 50.77 crores to ₹ 36.17 crores
only because it was forced to do so by NIA. That submission
has been rejected by the learned Arbitral Tribunal in the
impugned award. Having done so, it is not possible to
understand how the learned Arbitral Tribunal proceeded to
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award ₹ 36.17 crores towards WIP loss.
98. For these reasons, I am of the opinion that the decision of the
learned Arbitral Tribunal to award ₹ 36.17 crores to Khanna, cannot
sustain.
99. I am of the opinion, with greatest respect to the learned
Members of the Arbitral Tribunal, that the various contentions made
by the parties before the learned Arbitral Tribunal have not been
adequately addressed. Mr. Mehta is correct in his contention that
there is no clear finding by the learned Arbitral Tribunal on NIA's
objection to Khanna having changed its stance with respect to the
nature of the WIP which was allegedly lost in the fire. Equally, I find
myself in agreement with Mr. Mehta in his criticism of the
observation, by the learned Arbitral Tribunal in para 101 of the
impugned order, to the effect that the surveyor had not considered the
fact that the quantity of WIP lost in fire could easily have been
reckoned by subtracting, from the Batch Certification figure, the Batch
Release figure. Mr. Mehta has submitted, quite correctly, that this
precise manner of working out the WIP did not find place in the
communications addressed by Khanna to NIA prior to institution of
the arbitral proceedings or even in the notice dated 3 rd October 2013
under Section 21 of the 1996 Act, whereby Khanna initiated arbitral
proceedings.
100. Before examining the correctness of Khanna's contention that
the quantity of WIP lost could be worked out by subtracting the
"Batch Release" figure from the "Batch Certification" figure, the
learned Arbitral Tribunal ought to have first examined whether it was
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open to Khanna to so urge, without having raised such a plea in its
Section 21 notice dated 3rd October 2013. It is trite that that arbitral
proceedings commence with the notice issued under Section 21 of the
1996 Act. It is not open to a party, therefore, to make out, in its
statement of claim before the learned Arbitral Tribunal, a case totally
different from that which was urged in the Section 21 notice.
According to Mr. Mehta, the claim towards loss of WIP, as set up by
Khanna in its statement of claim before the learned Arbitral Tribunal,
was completely alien, in nature, character and computation, to the
claim as urged in its communications with NIA at the pre-arbitral
stage. Mr. Mehta has sought to contend, relying on Section 64 of the
Insurance Act that a fresh claim would first have to be assessed by the
surveyor, before it could form subject matter of dispute in arbitration.
This aspect would also required to be examined by the learned
Arbitral Tribunal.
101. It was only, therefore, if the learned Arbitral Tribunal were to
hold, in the first instance, that it was open to Khanna to urge, before it,
that it was entitled to claim WIP loss on the basis of the difference
between the "Batch Certification" and "Batch Release" figures, as
purportedly found place in its ERP record, that the learned Arbitral
Tribunal could proceed further to examine on facts whether the said
claim was actually supported by the said figures.
102. In the present case, the learned Arbitral Tribunal appears to
have concentrated on what it felt to the errors in the approach of the
surveyor in his final survey report. Even if it were to be assumed that
the surveyor, in his final survey report, had, without due justification,
rejected Khanna's claim for WIP loss in the fire, that would not, ipso
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facto, entitle Khanna to its claim. The learned Arbitral Tribunal
would, thereafter, have to clearly set out the basis for awarding the
amount that it ultimately chose to award. At the cost of repetition,
that exercise is wanting in the impugned Award. Admittedly, the
only paragraph of the impugned Award which deals with the actual
amount to be awarded to the learned Arbitral Tribunal is para 110. All
that is to be found in para 110 is the fact that, while Khanna initially
claimed ₹ 50.77 crores, it had subsequently reduced its claim to ₹
36.17 crores at the insistence of the surveyor. The claim of ₹ 50.77
crores is not supported by any of the data on which Khanna sought to
rely. The learned Arbitral Tribunal proceeded to award, not ₹ 50.77
crores, but ₹ 36.17 crores. There is no discussion, in the impugned
Award, as to how the figure of ₹ 36.17 crores represents the actual
WIP loss suffered by Khanna in the fire. The learned Arbitral
Tribunal, if it found that Khanna was entitled to WIP loss in the fire
that gutted its premises, was empowered to award only the actual
amount of such loss, and not any amount either above or below that
amount.
103. While, therefore, the impugned Award, insofar as it awards ₹
36.17 crores to Khanna against WIP loss stated to have been suffered
by it in the fire which occurred on 12th June 2012, cannot sustain, the
matter, in my opinion, would required to be re-examined by the
learned Arbitral Tribunal after considering all the contentions of both
the parties, including the merits of NIA's contention that Khanna's
claim before the learned Arbitral Tribunal towards WIP loss was
liable to be rejected as it was completely different, in character, from
the claim towards WIP loss as made by Khanna in its pre-arbitral
communications to NIA as well as in its notice invoking arbitration.
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In case the learned Arbitral Tribunal finds the claim to have been
maintainable, then the learned Arbitral Tribunal would have to
examine whether the material on record made out the claim of Khanna
in the arbitral proceedings.
104. For this purpose, I deem it appropriate to relegate the parties to
de novo arbitration on this aspect, in case Khanna so chooses. Else,
the impugned Award, insofar as it awards ₹ 36.17 crores to Khanna
towards WIP loss in the fire, would stand set aside.
Re: Claims I - IV relating to destruction of raw material, indigenous as
well as imported
105. The dispute related only to the computation of the amount to be
awarded against the loss suffered by Khanna. There was no dispute
that loss was suffered. Equally, there is no dispute about the quantity
of loss suffered. The dispute was only with respect to the manner in
which the amount to be awarded was to be worked out. Khanna
contended that the loss had to be worked out on the basis of the value
of the replacement raw material, which had to be sourced by it to
make up for the raw material lost in fire. NIA contended, per contra,
that the loss would have to be reckoned on the basis of the cost price
of raw material which was lost in fire. NIA recompensed Khanna for
the loss of raw material, but on the basis of the cost price of the raw
material. The difference between this amount, and the amount worked
out by Khanna on the basis of the replacement value of the raw
material constituted subject matter of Claims I to IV, with Claim I
relating to imported new print, Claim II relating to other imported
paper, Claim III relating to imported pulp and Claim IV relating to
local waste paper.
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106. Additionally, NIA had reduced, from the damaged stock
quantity of raw material, 1% to 2%. The justification of the said
reduction was also, therefore, subject matter of dispute in Claims I to
IV.
107. On the first aspect, i.e. the aspect of the manner in which the
loss was to be computed, the learned Arbitral Tribunal noted, initially,
the judgment of this Court in Oriental Insurance Company Ltd v.
Ram Asrey Pandey35, which held that an insurance contract was a
contract of indemnity. The learned Arbitral Tribunal observed that the
purpose of granting insurance against loss suffered was to indemnify
the person and to place him in the position in which he would have
been, had he not suffered the loss.
108. Having so observed, the learned Arbitral Tribunal proceeded to
refer to the terms of the IAR policy and, in this context, reproduced
Clauses 5, Annexure I, general conditions and the special conditions
forming subject matter of IAR policy, thus:
"i. "5: Sum Insured
a) The policy in so far as it relates to Buildings,
Machinery Furniture, Fixtures, Fittings & Electrical
Installations shall be on Reinstatement Value basis only,
while the Stocks shall be covered on Market Value basis.
However, the facility of declarations for stocks shall not be
available under the IAR Policy.
b) The Policy shall be subject to condition of average.
However, Under Insurance on each item of the schedule will
be ignored if it does not exceed 15% threat."
35
ILR (2007) I Delhi 45
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ii. Annexure I-Industrial All Risks Policy
"Section 1- Material Damage:
...the insurer will pay to the insured the value of the
property at the time of the happening of its accidental
physical loss or destruction (being hereinafter termed
accidental physical loss or destruction or damage) or at its
option reinstate or replace such property or any part
thereof"
Provided that the liability of the Insurer in respect of
any on loss or in the aggregate in any one period of
insurance shall in no case exceed:
i. As regards buildings, plants and machinery,
furniture fixture fittings etc. the cost of replacement or
reinstatement on the date of replacement or
reinstatement subject to the maximum liability being
restricted to the sum insured in respect of that category of
item under the policy.
ii. As regards stocks, the market value of the same
not exceeding the sum insured in respect of that category of
item under the policy".
iii. General Conditions:
"8. If the Company, at its option, reinstate or
replace the property damages or destroyed, or any part
thereof Instead of paving the amount of the loss or
damage...the Company shall not be bound to reinstate
exactly or completely but only as circumstances permit
and in a reasonably sufficient manner, and in no case
shall the Company be bound to expend more in
reinstatement than it would have cost to reinstate such
property as it was at the time of the occurrence of such
lass or damage nor more than the sum insured by the
Company thereon."
iv. Special Conditions to Section I
1. "Sums Insured
It is a requirement of this insurance that the sums insured
stated in the Schedule shall not be less than the cost of
reinstatement as if such property (except for stocks) were
reinstated on the first day of the Period of insurance which
shall mean the cost of replacement of the insured items
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by new items in a condition equal to but not better or
more extensive than its condition when new."
2. Basis of loss settlement
In the event of any loss destruction or damage the
indemnification under this section shall be calculated on
the basis of reinstatement or replacement of the
property lost destroyed or damaged, subject to the
following provisions:
2.1 Reinstatement or replacement shall mean:
1. where property is lost or destroyed,
the rebuilding of any buildings or the
replacement of any other property by similar
property, in either case in a condition equal
to bur not better or more extensive than its
condition when new
2. where property in damaged, the
repair of the damage and the restoration of
the damaged portion of the property to a
condition substantially the same as but not
better or more extensive than its condition
when new."
109. The learned Arbitral Tribunal holds that, while Clause V of the
IAR policy envisaged coverage of stocks, under the policy, on market
value basis, Section (I) to the IAR policy read with Special Condition
2 applicable to stocks indicated that indemnification of loss stocks
"shall be calculated on the basis of reinstatement or replacement of the
property lost destroyed or damaged". Thus, holds the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, Khanna would be entitled to be reimbursed the loss suffered
by it on account of raw material destroyed in the fire on
replacement/reinstatement basis. The closest alternative to the
replacement value of the stocks, holds the learned Arbitral Tribunal
would be the value of the stocks on the date of fire, i.e. 12 th June 2012.
In this context, the learned Arbitral Tribunal has also relied on the
admission by RW-1 in the cross-examination that there was no real
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difference between "market value" and "reinstatement value".
110. It is on this basis that the learned Arbitral Tribunal has
proceeded to award Claims I to IV of Khanna, as raised before the
learned Arbitral Tribunal.
111. Though no oral arguments were advanced by Mr. Mehta on
Claims I to IV of Khanna as held by the learned Arbitral Tribunal in
the impugned award, NIA has, in its written submissions, contested
the said award. The only submission of NIA, in that regard, is that
Khanna had not led evidence to prove that the quality of waste paper
which was destroyed was the same as the quality which was replaced.
NIA has sought to contend that there was large variation in the grades
and quality of waste paper imported and that "no records of these
grades/sub-grades were available so as to determine what was
replaced was the same quality as what was burnt".
112. The learned Arbitral Tribunal has dealt with this aspect in paras
89, 90 and 93 of the impugned award, which read thus:
"89. Having admitted that the destroyed stocks were to be
indemnified on the market value, and having admitted that the
details of the purchase of the destroyed stock after the fire had
been provided to the Respondent, it is completely impermissible
for the Respondent to base the assessment on historical acquisition
cost. We find force in the Claimant's submission that in p. 47 of the
Final Survey Report itself, the seeming difficulty in synchronizing
the quality parameters with the rates has been dealt with by
holding that the analysis can be done on the basis of the total
quantity of imported paper, irrespective of the grades. The Final
Survey report has also taken into account the consumption trend
and rate trend of imported waste paper prior to the fire and has
noted that the High Rate period was August - October 2011, while
the low rate period was November - December 2011 and February
2012. It is the Claimant's case that the imported waste paper rate
again started increasing from March 2012, which has also been
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duly noted by the Surveyor. In our view the Respondent has tried
to raise an irrelevant consideration regarding the alleged non-
availability of information regarding the quality of paper
destroyed, and purchased after the fire. Moreover, since the
Surveyor had information regarding the purchase orders/invoices
placed closest to the date of the fire, the same should have been
used to determine the prevailing rate.
90. Therefore, we are in agreement With the Claimant that the
Final Survey Report has erred in the prevailing rate taken to assess
the loss in terms of raw material destroyed. Furthermore, practice it
is established that the indemnification is to be on reinstatement
value of the stocks, it follows that the exchange rate to be .used Is
the rate as on the date of the fire (i.e. Rs. 56.05 per USD) and not
the historical rate of Rs. 51.93 per USD.
*****
93. It is clear that no reference point has been taken by the
Surveyor to surmise that the raw material prior to the fire itself was
lost to the said extent from the Book Value. During his Cross-
examination as well, RW-1 has not been able to explain the basis
for reaching the said figure, except to baldly state (in response to
Q. 421) that the said amount is based on para 10.4 (which. as stated
above - does not provide any reasoning for quantifying the said
loss at the said percentages, and (in response to Q.422), that the
said conclusion is based on "unwritten industry protocols.'' In the
absence of any material whatsoever with respect to the said
protocols which led the surveyor to conclude losses of 1% and 2%
over book value of the storks, one can only conclude that the said
figures are completely arbitrary, which is impermissible."
113. The assessment made by the learned Arbitral Tribunal, in the
afore-extracted paragraphs from the impugned award, is a realistic
assessment. There is no real contest to the said manner of assessment
either in the oral arguments or in the written submissions tendered by
NIA.
114. Nor has NIA, either orally or in writing, questioned the decision
of the learned Arbitral Tribunal to reject NIA's reduction of the
quantity of raw material lost by 1% to 2%.
115. In that view of the matter, there is no justification, within the
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limited peripheries of Section 34 of the 1996 Act, to interfere with the
impugned award, insofar as it allows Claims I to IV of Khanna. The
award to the said extent, therefore, stands upheld.
Re: Claim XII - Claim of Khanna for additional interest @ 2% above
the prevailing the bank rate under Section 9 of IRDA Regulations
116. Khanna claimed, as Claim XII before the learned Arbitral
Tribunal, interest on the amount awarded to it, @ 2% over and above
the bank rate of interest relying, for the said purpose, on Regulations
9(5) and 9(6) of the IRDA Regulations. These regulations read thus:
"9(5) On receipt of the survey report or the additional survey
report, as the case may be, an Insurer shall within a period of 30
days offer a settlement of the claim to the insured. If the insurer;
for any reasons to lie recorded in writing and communicated to the
insured, decides to reject a claim under the policy, it shall do so
within 30 days from the receipt of the survey report or the
additional survey report; as the case may be.
9(6) Upon acceptance of an offer of settlement as stated in
subregulation (5) by tile insured, the payment of the amount due
shall be made within 7 days from the date of acceptance of the
offer by the insured. In case of delay in the payment, the insurer
shall be liable to pay interest at a rate which is 2% above the bank
rate prevalent at the beginning of the financial year in which the
claim is reviewed by it."
117. The impugned award, qua Claim XII of Khanna, has awarded
interest @ 2% above the bank rate by invoking, for the purpose,
Regulation 9(6) of the IRDA Regulations.
118. NIA had contended before the learned Arbitral Tribunal that
Regulation 9(6) was not applicable, as it applied in the case of delay in
making payment beyond seven days from the date of acceptance of
settlement. The settlement in the present case having been accepted
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on 29th May 2013, and the amount remitted on 31st May 2013, Khanna
contended that there was no delay on his part, as would attract the
provision of penal interest contained in Regulation of 9(6) of the
IRDA Regulations.
119. In dealing with this contention, the learned Arbitral Tribunal
has held, in para 157 of the impugned award, thus:
"157. While the plain reading of the said Clause 9(6) would seem
to indicate that the specific interest stated therein is applicable only
in cases where there has been a delay of more than 7 days between
acceptance of offer of settlement and payment of the said amount,
it is also clear from the facts of the present case that there has been
a clear Violation of Clause 9(5) on both counts: The, delay of
almost 3 months in finalizing the Survey Report, and also a delay
in making the offer of settlement after submission of the survey
report, all of which lead to the Claimant being forced to sign the
Blank purported Joint Discharge Voucher; as has been discussed
above. The claimant, in such a situation cannot he left remediless."
120. Any finding of the learned Arbitral Tribunal which is contrary
to the applicable contractual provisions cannot sustain, on the anvil of
the law laid down in the decisions already cited in para 62 and 72
supra. Regulation 9(6) clearly applies only where there was delay of
more than seven days between the acceptance of settlement and
remittance of the amount to the insured. The learned Arbitral Tribunal
has noted the fact that, in the present case, the terms of settlement had
been accepted, by execution of the Joint Discharge Voucher on 29 th
May 2013, and the payment, in terms thereof, had been made to
Khanna within a week thereof on 31st May 2013. Even so, the learned
Arbitral Tribunal has nonetheless invoked Regulation 9(6) on the
ground of delay, on NIA's part, in finalizing the survey report and in
making the offer of settlement after submission of the survey report.
121. Neither of these considerations constitutes a basis for charging
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higher penal interest under Regulation 9(6). The only ground on
which higher penal interest can be charged under Regulation 9(6) is
where there is a delay between the finalization of the terms of
settlement and remittance of the amount thereunder to the insured,
beyond the period of seven days therefrom. Admittedly, no such
delay had occurred. Regulation 9(6) did not, therefore, apply.
122. It was completely impermissible, on the part of the learned
Arbitral Tribunal, to conflate Regulations 9(5) and 9(6) and thereby
incorporate, into Regulation 9(6), the provisions of Regulation 9(5).
The two provisions operate in independent spheres. The learned
Arbitral Tribunal has not even sought to hold, as a principle of law,
that the two provisions could be conflated. Nonetheless, it has chosen
to do so, only on the reasoning that Khanna could not be left
remediless having been forced to sign the blank Joint Discharge
Voucher.
123. This would amount to the learned Arbitral Tribunal doing
charity beyond the expressed statutory terms, which is completely
impermissible in law and constitutes a patent error which would
vitiate the arbitral award in terms of Section 34 of the 1996 Act.
124. The learned Arbitral Tribunal has also proceeded to rely on two
decisions of the IRDA in the cases of United India Insurance
Company and the New India Insurance Company Ltd, neither of
which was provided to NIA before the impugned order was passed.
Even on this ground, therefore, the decision of the learned Arbitral
Tribunal qua Claim XII of Khanna cannot sustain.
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125. The impugned award in respect of Claim XII of Khanna is,
therefore, set aside.
126. There has been no challenge, by NIA, to the impugned award
qua Claims VII, VIII, IX and X, XI of Khanna. Claim XII of Khanna
was rejected by the learned Arbitral Tribunal.
Conclusion
127. In that view of the matter, the present petition is disposed of in
the following terms:
(i) The findings of the learned Arbitral Tribunal on the
preliminary issue relating to the claim of Khanna having been
discharged by accord and satisfaction, is upheld. It is, therefore,
held that the claims of Khanna before the learned Arbitral
Tribunal were not discharged by accord and satisfaction.
(ii) The impugned award, qua Claims I - IV of Khanna is
upheld.
(iii) The impugned award, qua Claim V is quashed and set
aside and remanded, for which purposes, the parties would be at
liberty to institute fresh arbitral proceedings for reconsideration
of the said claim.
(iv) Claim VI was never awarded by the learned Arbitral
Tribunal.
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(v) The impugned award qua Claims VII - X is upheld, in
the absence of any challenge by NIA.
(vi) The impugned award, qua Claim XI is upheld, as the said
claim was rejected and Khanna has not chosen to challenge the
award.
(vii) The impugned award, qua Claim XII is quashed and set
aside.
128. This petition along with miscellaneous applications, if any,
stand disposed of in the aforesaid terms with no order as to costs.
C. HARI SHANKAR, J.
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