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[Cites 7, Cited by 277]

Supreme Court of India

Patel Roadways Limited, Bombay vs Prasad Trading Company on 6 August, 1991

Equivalent citations: 1992 AIR 1514, 1991 SCR (3) 391, AIR 1992 SUPREME COURT 1514, 1992 AIR SCW 1621, AIRONLINE 1991 SC 45, (1991) MAH LJ 1386, (1991) 3 SCR 391, 1991 (4) SCC 270, (1991) 3 CUR CC 1, (1992) 74 COM CAS 11, (1992) 2 REN CR 313, (1992) 1 CIV LJ 24, (1992) 1 BOM CR 456, 1992 CHAND LR (CIV&CRI) 648, (1991) 2 GUJ LH 574, (1992) 1 TAC 109, (1991) 3 JT 337, (1992) 1 ACC 532, (1991) 3 COM LJ 80, (1992) 1 MAH LR 308, (1991) 2 LJR 731, (1991) 2 ORISSA LR 342, (1991) 2 ACJ 1001, 1991 ALL CJ 2 1337, (1991) 3 JT 337 (SC), 1991 UJ(SC) 2 432, (1991) 3 SCR 391 (SC)

Author: M. Fathima Beevi

Bench: M. Fathima Beevi

           PETITIONER:
PATEL ROADWAYS LIMITED, BOMBAY

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
PRASAD TRADING COMPANY.

DATE OF JUDGMENT06/08/1991

BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)

CITATION:
 1992 AIR 1514		  1991 SCR  (3) 391
 1991 SCC  (4) 270	  JT 1991 (3)	337
 1991 SCALE  (2)257


ACT:
    Civil      Procedure      Code,	 1908:	     Section
20--Explanation--Suits-Institution    of--Whether    parties
entitled  to  agree  that only a certain  court	 would	have
jurisdiction.



HEADNOTE:
    The	 appellant in both the appeals carried on the  busi-
ness of a carrier and transported goods on hire. It had	 its
principal  office  at Bombay and branch offices	 at  various
other places.
    The respondent in the first appeal a dealer in  cardamom
entrusted a consignment of cardamom to the appellant at	 its
branch office at Bodinayakanur in Tamilnadu to be  delivered
at Delhi. After the goods had been transported by the appel-
lant  and kept in a godown at Delhi the same  got  destroyed
and  damaged  in a fire as a result  whereof  the  consignee
refused	 to take delivery. The respondent instituted a	suit
in  the sub-court within whose territorial jurisdiction	 the
branch	office	of the appellant was  situated	for  damages
alleging  that the fire was due to the negligence and  care-
lessness on the part of the staff of the appellant.
    Respondent No. 4 in the second appeal entrusted  certain
packets	 of  pesticides insured with the  second  respondent
Insurance  Company to the appellant at its branch office  at
Madras	for being carried to Delhi. The	 respondent  alleged
that  the  goods were delivered at New Delhi  in  a  damaged
condition  resulting in loss and a suit was  instituted	 for
recovery of the loss in the City Civil Court at Madras.
    In both the aforesaid civil suits the appellant  pleaded
in  defence that in the contract entered into between  them,
the  parties  had  agreed that jurisdiction  to	 decide	 any
dispute	 between them would be only with the courts at	Bom-
bay,  and consequently the courts in Madras ' where the	 two
suits had been instituted had no jurisdiction. This plea was
repelled by the Trial Court in each of the suits.
The aforesaid orders were challenged by the appellant in the
High
392
Court under Section 115 C.P.C. and having failed, the appel-
lant appealed to this Court.
    In the appeal, it was contended on behalf of the  appel-
lant  that since the courts at two places namely Madras	 and
Bombay	had jurisdiction in the matter, the jurisdiction  of
the  courts in Madras was ousted by the clause in  the	con-
tract whereunder the parties had agreed that jurisdiction to
decide	any dispute under the contract would be only in	 the
courts at Bombay.
    On the question: whether in view of the relevant  clause
in  the	 contract between the parties the courts  at  Bombay
alone had jurisdiction and the jurisdiction of the courts at
Madras where the two suits were instituted was barred.
Dismissing the appeals, this Court,
    HELD: 1. The courts at Bombay in these two cases did not
at  all	 have jurisdiction and	consequently  the  agreement
between	 the  parties conferring exclusive  jurisdiction  on
courts at Bombay is of no avail. [401D]
    2.	Clauses (a) and (b) of Section 20 refer to  a  court
within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the  defendant
"carries  on business". Clause (c) on the other hand  refers
to a court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the
cause of action wholly or in part arises. [397H-398A]
    3.	Section 20 of the Code before its amendment  by	 the
Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act, 1976 had two Expla-
nations	 being	Explanation I and II. By the  Amendment	 Act
Explanation I was omitted and Explanation II was  renumbered
as the present Explanation. [398G]
    4. The Explanation is in two parts, one before the	word
"or"  occurring between the wOrds "office in India" and	 the
words "in respect of" and the other thereafter. The Explana-
tion  applies  to a defendant which is a  corporation  which
term, would include even a company such as the appellant  in
the instant case. The first part of the Explanation  applies
only  to such a corporation which has its sole or  principal
office	at  a  particular place. In that  event	 the  courts
within	whose jurisdiction the sole or principal  office  of
the  defendant is situate will also have jurisdiction  inas-
much  as even if the defendant may not be actually  carrying
on  business at that place, it will "be deemed	to carry  on
business"  at that place because of the fiction	 created  by
the Explanation. [398C-F]
393
   5.  The  latter part of the Explanation takes care  of  a
case where the defendant does not have a sole office but has
a  principal office at one place and has also a	 subordinate
office at another place. The words "at such place" occurring
at the end of the Explanation and the word "or" referred  to
above which is disjunctive clearly suggest that if the	case
fails  within the latter part of the Explanation it  is	 not
the court within whose jurisdiction the principal office  of
the  defendant is situate but the court within whose  juris-
diction	 it has a subordinate office which alone shall	have
jurisdiction  "in respect of any cause of action arising  at
any place where it has also a subordinate office".  [398E-F]
    6.	The Explanation is really an explanation  to  clause
(a). It is in the nature of a clarification on the scope  of
clause	(a) viz. as to where the corporation can be said  to
carry on business. This, it is clarified, will be the  place
where  the principal office is situated (whether or not	 any
business actually is carried on there) or the place where  a
business  is  carried on giving rise to a  cause  of  action
(even though the principal office of the corporation is	 not
located	 there) so long as there is a subordinate office  of
the corporation situated at such place. The linking together
of the place where the cause of action arises with the place
where a subordinate office is located clearly shows that the
intention  of  the legislature was that, in the	 case  of  a
corporation, for the purposes of clause (a), the location of
the  subordinate office, within the local limits of which  a
cause of action arises, is to be the relevant place for	 the
filing	of a suit and not the principal place  of  business.
[399G-400B]
    7. If the intention was that the location of the sole or
principal office as well as the location of the	 subordinate
office (within the limits of which a cause of action arises)
are  to	 be  deemed to be places where	the  corporation  is
deemed to be carrying or business, the disjunctive "or" will
not  he there. Instead, the second part of  the	 explanation
would  have  read "and, in respect of any  cause  of  action
arising at any place where it has a subordinate office, also
at such place' '. [400C]
    8. The clear intendment of the Explanation, however,  is
that, where the corporation has a subordinate office in	 the
place  where the cause of action arises, it cannot be  heard
to  say	 that it cannot be sued there because  it  does	 not
carry  on business at that place. It would be a great  hard-
ship  if, in spite of the corporation having  a	 subordinate
office	at the place where the cause of action arises  (with
which  in all probability the plaintiff has  had  dealings),
such  plaintiff	 is to be compelled to travel to  the  place
where  the corporation has its principal place.	 That  place
should be convenient to the plaintiff; and since the  corpo-
ration
394
has an office at such place, it will also be under no disad-
vantage. Thus the Explanation provides an alternative  locus
for  the corporation's place of business, not an  additional
one. [400F-G]
9. In the instant two cases since clause (c) is not attract-
ed to confer jurisdiction on courts at Bombay and the appel-
lant  has admittedly its subordinate offices at the  respec-
tive  places where the goods in these two cases were  deliv-
ered  to it for purposes of transport, the courts at  Bombay
had  no jurisdiction at all to entertain the suits filed  by
the  respondents and the parties could not confer  jurisdic-
tion  on the courts at Bombay by an agreement.	Accordingly,
no  exception  can be taken to the findings in	this  behalf
recorded by the trial court and the High Court. [401C-D]
      Hakam Singh v. M/s. Gammon (India) Ltd., [1971] 3	 SCR
page 314, referred to.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 3050- 305 1 of 199 1.

From the Judgment and Orders dated 23.8.90 & 13.6.1990 of the Madras High Court in Civil Revision Petition Nos. 1236/85 and 2758 of 1988.

T.S.K. lyer, Rajiv Datta and Shahid Azad for the Appellant.

M.S. Nargolkar, D.M. Nargolkar and A.T.M. Sampath for the Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by OJHA, J. Special leave granted.

Since in both these appeals an identical question of law arises they are being decided by a common judgment. Facts in a nutshell necessary for appreciating the question involved may be stated. M/s Patel Roadways (P) Limited, the appellant in both these appeals carries on the business of a carrier and transports goods on hire. It has its principal office at Bombay and branch offices at various other places which shall hereinafter be referred to as subordinate of- fices.

M/s Prasad Trading Company, the respondent in the Civil Appeal arising out of SLP (C) No. 14660 of 1990 who is a dealer in 395 cardamom entrusted a consignment of 851) kilograms of carda- mora to the appellant at its subordinate office at Bodinaya- kanur in Tamil Nadu to be delivered at Delhi. After the goods had been transported by the appellant and kept in a godown at Delhi the same got destroyed and damaged in a fire as a result whereof the consignee refused to take delivery. The respondent instituted a suit in the Court of Subordinate Judge, Periakulam within whose territorial jurisdiction the subordinate office of the appellant where the goods were entrusted for transport is situate for damages alleging that the fire was due to the negligence and carelessness on the part of the staff of the appellant.

M/s Tropical Agro Systems Private Limited, the respond- ent 1 in the Civil Appeal arising out of SLP (C) No. 14692 of 1990 on the other hand entrusted certain packets of pesticides insured with the second respondent, M/s Oriental Insurance Company Limited to the appellant at its subordi- nate office at Madras for being carried to New Delhi. Ac- cording to the respondents the goods aforesaid were deliv- ered at New Delhi in a damaged condition resulting in loss to the first respondent and a suit was instituted for recov- ery of the loss so sustained by the respondents in the Court of the Third Assistant Judge, City Civil Court, Madras. In both the suits the appellant inter alia took the plea in its defence. that in the contract entered into between them the parties had agreed that jurisdiction to decide any dispute between them would be only with the courts at Bombay and consequently the courts in Madras where the two suits re- ferred to above had been instituted had no jurisdiction. This plea was repelled in both the suits by the trial court. The order of the trial court in each of the two suits was challenged by the appellant before the High Court of Judica- ture at Madras under Section 115 of the Code of Civil Proce- dure (hereinafter referred to as the Code). This challenge having failed in each of the civil revisions, the appellant has preferred these civil appeals. The question which arises in both these civil appeals, therefore, is as to whether in view of the relevant clause in the contract between the parties the courts at Bombay alone had jurisdiction and the jurisdiction of the courts at Madras where the two suits were instituted was barred.

It has been urged by the learned counsel for the appel- lant that apart from the courts within whose territorial jurisdiction the goods were delivered to the appellant for transport, the courts at Bombay also had jurisdiction to entertain a suit arising out of the contract between the parties in view of the Explanation to Section 20 of the Code inasmuch as the principal office of the appellant was situ- ate in 396 Bombay. According to learned counsel for the appellant since courts at two places namely Madras and Bombay had jurisdic- tion in the matter, the jurisdiction of the courts in Madras was ousted by the clause in the contract whereunder the parties had agreed that jurisdiction to decide any dispute under the contract would be only in the courts at Bombay. Consequently the courts where the two suits were instituted had no jurisdiction to entertain them and the trial court in each of the two cases as well as the High Court erred in law in taking a contrary view.

Having heard learned counsel for the parties we find it difficult to agree with this submission. For the sake of convenience Section 20 of the Code except the illustrations is reproduced hereunder:

"20. Other suits to be instituted where de- fendants reside or cause of action arises:-
Subject to the limitations aforesaid, every suit shall be instituted in a Court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction :--
(a) the defendant, or each of the defendants where there are more than one, at the time of the commencement of the suit, actually and voluntarily resides, or carries on business, or personally works for gain; or
(b) any of the defendants, where there are more than one, at the time of the commencement of the suit, actually and voluntarily resides, or carries on business, or personally works for gain, provided that in such case either the leave of the Court is given, or the de-

fendants who do not reside, or carry on busi- ness, or personally work for gain, as afore- said, acquiesce in such institution; or

(c) the cause of action, wholly or in part, arises.

Explanation:- A corporation shall be deemed to carry on business at its sole or principal office in India or, in respect of any cause of action arising at any place where it has also a subordinate office, at such place."

In Hakam Singh v. M/s. Gammon (India) Ltd., [1971] 3 SCR Page 314 it was held that "corporation" referred to in Section 20 397 meant not only a statutory corporation but also a company registered under the Indian Companies Act. It was also held that it is not open to the parties by agreement to confer jurisdiction on any court which it did not otherwise possess under the Code. But where two courts have jurisdiction under the Code to try a suit or proceeding an agreement between the parties that the dispute between them shall be tried in one of such courts is not contrary to public policy nor does such an agreement contravene Section 28 of the Contract Act. In that case also there was a clause in the agreement being clause No. 13 which provided that notwithstanding the place where the work under the contract was to be executed the contract shall be deemed to have been entered into between the parties at Bombay and the court in Bombay alone shall have jurisdiction to adjudicate thereon. The trial court had held that the entire cause of action had arisen at Varanasi and the parties could not by agreement confer jurisdiction on the courts at Bombay which they did not otherwise pos- sess. In a civil revision filed by the respondent the Alla- habad High Court held that the courts at Bombay had also jurisdiction and in view of clause 13 of the agreement the jurisdiction of the courts at Varanasi stood ousted. It is in the appeal against the said judgment of the High Court that the propositions of law referred to above were laid down by this Court. It was held that since the respondent had its head office at Bombay the courts at Bombay also had 'jurisdiction by virtue of Section 20 of the Code read with its Explanation and in view of clause 13 of the agreement between the parties the courts in Bombay alone had jurisdic- tion in the matter. The appeal was accordingly dismissed. This view was reiterated by this Court in Globe Transport Corporation v. Triveni Engineering Works and Another, [1983] 4 SCC Page 707.

Reliance has been placed by learned counsel for the appellant on these two decisions and if it can be held that the courts at Bombay also had jurisdiction in the two suits referred to above the judgments appealed against will have to be set aside on the basis of these decisions. The ques- tion, however, is as to whether in any of these two suits the courts at Bombay also had jurisdiction apart from the courts within whose jurisdiction the goods were entrusted to the appellant for purposes of transport. Having given our anxious consideration to the matter we are of the opinion that the courts at Bombay in these two cases did not at all have jurisdiction and consequently the agreement between the parties conferring exclusive jurisdiction on courts at Bombay is of no avail.

Clauses(a) and (b) of Section 20 inter alia refer to a court within 398 the local limits of whose jurisdiction the defendant inter alia "carries on business". Clause (c) on the other hand refers to a court within the local limits of whose jurisdic- tion the cause of action wholly or in part arises. It has not been urged before us on behalf of the appellant that the cause of action wholly or in part arose in Bombay. Conse- quently clause (c) is not attracted to the facts of these cases. What has been urged with the aid of the Explanation to Section 20 of the Code is that since the appellant has its principal office in Bombay it shall be deemed to carry on business at Bombay and consequently the courts at Bombay will also have jurisdiction. On a plain reading of the Explanation to Section 20 of the Code we find an apparent fallacy in the aforesaid argument. The Explanation is in two parts, one before the word "or" occurring between the words "office in India" and the words "in respect of" and the other thereafter. The Explanation applies to a defendant which is a corporation which term, as seen above, would include even a company such as the appellant in the instant case. The first part of the Explanation applies only to such a corporation which has its sole or principal office at a particular place. In that event the courts within whose jurisdiction the sole or principal office of the defendant is situate will also have jurisdiction inasmuch as even if the defendant may not be actually carrying on business at that place, it will "be deemed to carry on business" at that place because of the fiction created by the Explanation. The latter part of the Explanation takes care of a case where the defendant does not have a sole office but has a princi- pal office at one place and has also a subordinate office at another place. The words "at such place" occurring at the end of the Explanation and the word "or" referred to above which is disjunctive clearly suggest that if the ease falls within the latter part of the Explanation it is not the Court within whose jurisdiction the principal office of the defendant is situate but the court within whose jurisdiction it has a subordinate office which alone shall have jurisdic- tion "in respect of any cause of action arising at any place where it has also a subordinate office".

Here we may point out that the view which we take finds support from a circumstance which, in our opinion, is rele- vant. Section 20 of the Code before its amendment by the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act, 2976 had two Expla- nations being Explanations I and II. By the Amendment Act Explanation I was omitted and Explanation II was renumbered as the present Explanation. Explanation I so omitted read as hereunder:-

"Explanation I: Where a person has a permanent dwelling 399 at one place and also temporary residence at another place, he shall be deemed to reside at both places in respect of any cause of action arising at the place where he has such tempo- rary residence."

This Explanation dealt with the case of place of resi- dence of the defendant and provided with regard to a person having a permanent dwelling at one place and also temporary at another place that such person shall be deemed to reside at both places in respect of any cause of action arising at the place where he has such temporary residence. The lan- guage used in Explanation II on the other hand which is the present Explanation was entirely different. Had the inten- tion been that if a corporation had its principal office at one place and a subordinate office at another place and the cause of action arose at the place where it had its subordi- nate office it shall be deemed to be carrying on business at both places the language used in Explanation II would have been identical to that of Explanation I which was dealing with a case of a person having a permanent dwelling at one place and also temporary residence at another place. The marked difference in the language of the two Explanations clearly supports the view which we have taken with regard to the interpretation of the present Explanation to Section 20 of the Code which was Explanation II earlier as indicated above.

We would also like to add that the interpretation sought to be placed by the appellant on the provision in question renders the explanation totally redundant. If the intention of the legislature was, as is said on their behalf, that a suit against a corporation could be instituted either at the place of its sole or principal office (whether or not the corporation carries on business at that place) or at any other place where the cause of action arises, the provisions of clauses (a), (b) and (c) together with the first .part of the explanation would have completely achieved the purpose. Indeed the effect would have been wider. The suit could have been instituted at the place of the principal office because of the situation of such office (whether or not any actual business was carried on there). Alternatively, a suit could have been instituted at the place where the cause of action arose under clause (c) (irrespective of whether the corpora- tion had a subordinate office in such place or not). This was, Therefore, not the purpose of the explanation. The explanation is really an explanation to clause (a). It is in the nature of a clarification on the scope of clause (a) viz. as to where the corporation can be said to carry on business. T'his, it is clarified, will be the place where the principal office is ituated (whether or not any business actually is carried on there) or the place where a business 400 is carried on giving rise to a cause of action (even though the principal office of the corporation is not located there) so long as there is a subordinate office of the corporation situated at such place. The linking together of the place where the cause of action arises with the place where a subordinate office is located clearly shows that the intention of the legislature was that, in the case of a corporation, for the purposes of clause (a), the location of the subordinate office, within the local limits of which a cause of action arises, is to be the relevant place for the filing of a suit and not the principal place of business. If the intention was that the location of the sole or principal office as well as the location of the subordinate office (within the limits of which a cause of action arises) are to be deemed to be places where the corporation is deemed to be carrying on business, the disjunctive "or" will not be there. Instead, the second part of the explanation would have read "and in respect of any cause of action arising at any place where it has a subordinate office, also at such place".

As far as we can see the interpretation which we have placed on this section does not create any practical or undue difficulties or disadvantage either to the plaintiff or a defendant corporation. It is true that, normally, under clauses (a) to (c), the plaintiff has a choice of forum and cannot be compelled to go to the place of residence or business of the corporation and can file a suit at a place where the cause of action arises. If a corporation desires to be protected from being dragged into litigation at some place merely because a casue of action arises there it can save itself from such a situation by an exclusion clause as has been done in the present case. The clear intendment of the Explanation, however, is that, where the corporation has a subordinate office in the place where the cause of action arises, it cannot be heard to say that it cannot be sued there because it does not carry on business at that place. It would be a great hardship if, in spite of the corporation having a subordinate office at the place where the cause of action arises (with which in all probability the plaintiff has had dealings), such plaintiff is to be compelled to travel to the place where the corporation has its principal place. That place should be convenient to the plaintiff; and since the corporation has an office at such place, it will also be under no disadvantage. Thus the Explanation provides an alternative locus for the corporation's place of busi- ness, not an additional one.

There may be only one extra-ordinary situation in which this interpretation may cause an apparent anomaly. This is where the plaintiff has also his/its place of business at the same place as the 401 corporation but the cause of action has arisen at some other place. The above interpretation would preclude him from filing a suit in that place of business common to both parties and compel him to go to a court having jurisdiction over the place where the cause of action has arisen. But this is not really a hardship because such plaintiff must have had some nexus or connection with the place since some part of the cause of action had arisen there; if he can have dealings with the corporation at such a place giving rise to the cause of action, there is no reason why he should find it disadvantageous or difficult to file a suit at such place. Equally, the corporation, having a subordinate office at the place, will suffer no disadvantage.

In this view of the matter since in the instant two cases clause (c) is not attracted to confer jurisdiction on courts at Bombay and the appellant has admittedly its subor- dinate offices at the respective places where the goods in these two cases were delivered to it for purpose of trans- port the courts at Bombay had no jurisdiction at all to entertain the suits filed by the respondents and the parties could not confer jurisdiction on the courts at Bombay by an agreement. Accordingly no exception can be taken to the findings in this behalf recorded by the trial court and the High Court in these two cases.

In the result, we find no merit in any of these two appeals and they are accordingly dismissed but in the cir- cumstances of the case the parties shall bear their own costs.

N.V.K.					  Appeals dismissed
402