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[Cites 16, Cited by 81]

Supreme Court of India

Union Of India vs Om Parkash on 2 April, 1976

Equivalent citations: 1976 AIR 1745, 1976 SCR (3) 998

Author: A.C. Gupta

Bench: A.C. Gupta, Jaswant Singh

           PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
OM PARKASH

DATE OF JUDGMENT02/04/1976

BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
SINGH, JASWANT

CITATION:
 1976 AIR 1745		  1976 SCR  (3) 998
 1976 SCC  (4)	32
 CITATOR INFO :
 RF	    1992 SC1124	 (12)


ACT:
     Arbitration  Act,	1940-Secs.  8,	20,30  32,33-Whether
court appointing  an arbitrator	 can further  make an  order
referring disputes to arbitrator - Award can be set aside on
the ground  of invalidity of reference-Whether "otherwise in
valid' includes invalid reference.



HEADNOTE:
     The respondent, a contractor, entered into 7 agreements
with the  Union of India for the construction of a hospital,
some  buildings	 and  tube  wells.  In	each  one  of  these
agreements there  was a	 clause providing  that any  dispute
arising	 between   the	parties	 would	be  referred  to  an
arbitrator. The	 designations of  the arbitrators  were also
mentioned in  4 agreements  as	Director  of  Farms  in	 two
agreements as  the officer  Commanding, Lucknow,  and in one
agreement as the Quartermaster General at Delhi. The offices
by reference  to which the arbitrators were mentioned in the
agreement were	abolished. The	respondent therefore, made 7
applications in	 the court  of Civil  Judge at	Meerut under
section 8(2)  of the  Arbitration  Act,	 1940,	praying	 for
appointment of an arbitrator. The Trial Court appointed Col.
Ranbir Singh  to act as an arbitrator in all the 7 cases and
further directed  the papers to be sent to him asking him to
give his  award within	2 months  from that  date. With	 the
consent	 of  both  the	parties	 the  arbitrator  made	some
progress. However,  the Government  counsel submitted before
the arbitrator	that he	 should not proceed further since he
was not	 competent to deal with the questions of law arising
for  decision.	 Thereafter  the   District   Judge   Meerut
transferred the cases to the Judge of the Small Causes Court
at Meerut presumably on the assumption that the respondent's
application for	 the appointment of arbitrator were pending.
The learned  Judge of  Small Causes Court appointed Director
of Farms,  General Headquarters. to act as arbitrator in all
the 7  cases and  he was  further directed to file his award
within one  month of  the said	order. The  papers were then
sent to	 Brig. Bhandari assuming that he was the Director of
Farms. Later  on, the  respondent applied  to the  court for
review of its order alleging that the office of the Director
of Farms  was abolished and, therefore, Brig. Bhandari could
not be	the officer  mentioned in  the order. The respondent
did not	 take part in the arbitration proceedings but before
the respondent	could obtain a stay the arbitrator filed his
award in the Court.
     The respondent  made 7  applications for  setting aside
the award  before the Small Causes Court, Meerut, which were
rejected. Against that the respondent preferred 7 appeals to
the Allahabad High Court. The High Court allowed the appeals
accepting the  contention of  the respondents that the Court
was functions  officio after appointing the arbitrator under
section 8(2)  and had  no jurisdiction to refer the cases to
the arbitrator.	 The High  Court held  that it	was for	 the
parties to refer the disputes to the arbitrator after he was
appointed by  the court and the reference by the court being
without jurisdiction the awards were invalid. The High Court
also held  that when  the court	 made the order of reference
there was  no post  of Director	 of Farms and as such, Brig.
Bhandari was  not competent  to act  as an arbitrator on the
basis of the order of the Court.
     In	 these	 appeals  by   certificate,  the  appellants
challenged the findings of the High Court.
     Dismissing the appeals,
^
     HELD: An agreement to submit differences to arbitration
implies	 an  agreement	to  refer  the	differences  to	 the
arbitrator. Section 8 only empowers the
999
Court to  appoint an  arbitrator where	the parties  do	 not
concur in  the appointment.  Section 20	 contains provisions
for arbitration with the intervention of a Court,where there
is no  suit pending. This section confers power on the court
to order  the agreement	 to be	filed and further to make an
order of  reference  to	 the  arbitrator  appointed  by	 the
parties	 or   where  the   parties  cannot   agree  upon  an
appointment, to an arbitrator appointed by the court. On the
other  hand,  section  8  does	not  contain  any  provision
empowering the	court to  make a reference to the arbitrator
as one	finds in  section 20.  Therefore. the  Small  Causes
Court at  Meerut had  no jurisdiction  after  appointing  an
arbitrator under  section 8(2) to proceed further to make an
order referring	 the disputes  to the  arbitrator. [1002D-E.
1003C-E]
     2. Section	 30 of	the Act	 sets out  the	grounds	 for
setting aside an award. Section 30(c) provides that an award
shall not  be set  aside except	 when it has been improperly
procured or  is otherwise invalid. The decision of the Privy
Council in  the case  of Chhabbe Lal v. Kallu Lal and others
holding that  an objection to the validity of a reference to
the arbitration	 did not  come within the provisions of Dara
15 of  the second  schedule to	the Code  of Civil Procedure
which provided	that no	 award was to be set aside except on
the specific  grounds mentioned	 therein or  the award being
otherwise invalid  cannot apply	 to the present case because
in the	second schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure which
was repealed  by Arbitration  Act  of  1940.  there  was  no
provision like	section 32 or 33 of the Act. Section 32 bars
the institution	 of suits  concerning arbitration agreements
or awards  and provides	 that no  arbitration  agreement  or
award shall  be set  aside. amended.  modified or in any way
affected otherwise  than as  provided in the Act. Section 33
provides that a party to an arbitration agreement seeking to
challenge the agreement or the award must do so by making an
application to	the court.  When the  second schedule to the
Civil Procedure	 Code was  in force  an	 award	made  on  an
invalid reference  could he set aside by filing a suit which
was then  the appropriate proceeding but now the appropriate
proceeding is  the filing  of an application to the court as
has been  made	in  the	 present  case.	 The  words  'or  is
otherwise invalid'  in clause  (c) in  section 30  are	wide
enough to cover all forms of invalidity including invalidity
of the reference. [1003E, H,1004A-F]



JUDGMENT:

ClVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 1284 to 1290 of 1968.

Appeals from the Judgment; and Decrees dated the 30th July 1962 of the Allahabad High Court in F.A.F.O's Nos. 220 to 226 of 1952.

L.N. Sinha, Solicitor General, G. L. Sanghi, (In CA 1284/68) and Girish Chandra, for the Appellants.

S.L. Bhatia and N. K. Puri, for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by GUPTA, J. These seven appeals by certificate have been preferred by the Union of India against a common judgment of the Allahabad High Court disposing of seven appeals under section 39(1)(vi) of the Arbitration Act, 1940. The appeals turn on the true meaning and scope of sections 8 and 30 of the Act. Section 8 is in these terms:

Power of Court to appoint arbitrator or umpire "8. (1) In any of the following cases-

(a) where an arbitration agreement provides that the reference shall be to one or more arbitrators to be appointed by consent of the parties, and all the partes do not, after differences have arisen" concur in the appointment or appointments; or 1000

(b) if any appointed arbitrator or umpire neglects or re fuses to act, or is incapable of acting, or dies, and the arbitration agreement does not show that it was intended that the vacancy should not be supplied, and the parties or the arbitrators, as the case may be, do not supply the vacancy; or

(c) where the parties or the arbitrators are required to appoint an umpire and do not appoint him;

any party may serve the other parties or the arbitrators, as the case may be, with a written notice to concur in the appointment or appointments or in supplying the vacancy.

(2) If the appointment is not made within fifteen clear days after the service of the said notice, the Court may, on the application of the party who gave the notice and after giving the other parties an opportunity of being heard, ap point an arbitrator or arbitrators or umpire, as the case may be, who shall have like power to act in the reference and to make an award as if he or they had been appointed by consent of all parties."

The question that arises for consideration is whether the court having appointed an arbitrator under subsection (2) of section 8 can proceed further to make an order of reference to the arbitrator. According to the respondent the court becomes functions officio after appointing an arbitrator and has no jurisdiction to refer the matter to him.

The facts leading to the appeals are these. During the last world war the respondents a contractor, entered into seven agreements with the military department of the Government of India for the construction of a hospital"

three other buildings and three tube wells. In each of these agreements there was a clause providing that any dispute arising between the parties would be referred to an arbitrator. In four cases the agreements provided for arbitration by the Director of Farms, General Headquarters, Simla, in two cases the officer Commanding, Lucknow, was to be the arbitrator, and in the remaining other case, a Quarter-Master at Delhi was chosen as the arbitrator. Disputes having arisen between the parties, the respondent made seven applications in the court of the First Civil Judge, Meerut, under section 8(2) of the Act stating that the offices by reference to which the arbitrators were selected in the agreements had been abolished and it was therefore necessary to appoint new arbitrators. In the applications the respondent named several officers praying that one of them be appointed to act an arbitrator "who shall have like power to act in the reference and to make an award as if he has been appointed by the consent of the parties". It will be noticed that the prayer repeats the material portion of sub-section (2) of section 8. On February 13, 1950 the court appointed Col. Ranbir Singh whose name was not in the respondent's list, to act as arbitrator in all the seven cases and further directed the papers to be sent to him, asking him to give his award within 1001 two months from that date. If the respondent's contention in these A appeals is correct that after appointing an arbitrator under section 8(2) the court ceases to have jurisdiction and cannot make an order of reference, the further directions given in the order of February 13, 1950 were invalid. However, the question did not assume importance at that stage because both sides agreed to submit the disputes to Col. Ranbir Singh for arbitration. After the arbitration had made some progress, Col. Ranbir Singh returned the papers to the court on being asked not to proceed further by the Government counsel who thought that the arbitrator was not competent to deal with the questions of law arising for decision. After this the District Judge, Meerut, transferred the cases to the Judge of the Small Cause Court, Meerut, presumably on the assumption that the respondent's applications for the appointment of an arbitrator were pending. If the respondents contention is right, this was an erroneous assumption, but no objection was raised at the time and the Judge of the Small Cause Court by his order dated February 13, 1951 appointed Director of Farms, General Headquarters, Simla, to act as arbitrator in all the seven cases. In that order the court further directed as follows:
"All these cases should be referred to him for arbitration. He must file his award within one month of this order."

The papers were then sent to Brigadier H. L. Bhandari who was. said to be the officer concerned. The respondent applied to the court on March 8, 1951 for review of the order alleging that the office of the Director of Farms, General Headquarters, Simla, had been abolished and as such Brig. H. L. Bhandari could not be the officer mentioned in the order. The respondent did not take part in the proceedings be fore Brig. Bhandari, but before he moved the court on May 4, 1951 for stay of the proceedings before the arbitrator, the latter had made his awards which were filed in court on that very day. The review application was ultimately dismissed on May 12, 1951.

The respondent made seven applications urging several grounds for setting aside the awards, but the Judge of the small Cause Court, Meerut, overruled all objections and conferred the awards, and a decree in terms of the award in each case was passed on May 26, 1952. Against that order the respondent preferred seven appeals to the Allahabad High Court. The High Court allowed the appeals accepting the contention that the court was functus officio after appointing the arbitrator under section 8(2) and had no jurisdiction to refer the cases to the arbitrator. The High Court was of the view that it was for the parties to refer their disputes to the arbitrator after he was appointed by the court, and the reference by the court being without jurisdiction the awards were invalid. The High Court further held that when the court below made the order of reference there was no post of Director of Farms, General Headquarters, Simla, in existence and, as such, Brig. Bhandari was not competent to act as arbitrator on the basis of the order dated February 13, 1951. The Union of Indra questions the correctness of the High Court's decision in these appeals.

1002

The validity of the order of reference depends upon the scope of section 8 which deals with the power of the court to appoint an arbitrator or umpire. Sub-section (1) of section 8, so far as it is relevant for the present purpose, provides that if any appointed arbitrator is incapable of acting, and the arbitration agreement does not show that it was intended that the vacancy should not be supplied, any party to the agreement may serve the other parties with a written notice to concur in supplying the vacancy. Sub- section (2) of section 8 lays down that if no appointment is made within 15 days after the service of the said notice the Court may, on the application of the party who gave the notice and after giving the; other parties an opportunity of being heard" appoint an arbitrator or arbitrators "who shall have like powers to act in the reference and to make an award as if he or they had been appointed by consent of all parties '. The question is whether, having made the appointment, the court acting sub-section (2) can also make an order of reference to the arbitrator. The Act contemplates three kinds of arbitration: (i) arbitration without intervention of a court, dealt with in chapter II of the Act which includes section 3 to section 19; (ii) arbitration with intervention of a court where there is no suit pending, dealt with in chapter III which consists of only one section, viz. section 20; and (iii) arbitration in suits which is covered by chapter IV. It is clear from the provisions of chapter II that after the appointment of arbitrator, the proceedings are to be outside court, and up to the stage of filing the award intervention of court is not of unless any occasion arises requiring the court to remove the arbitrator under section 11. An agreement to submit differences to arbitration implies an agreement to refer the differences to the arbitrator. Section only empowers the court to appoint an arbitrator where the parties do not concur in the appointment. Section 20 occurring in chapter III. contains provisions for arbitration with the intervention of a court where there is no suit pending. Section 20 reads:

Application to file in Court arbitration agreement.
"20(l) Where any persons have entered into an arbitration agreement before the institution of any suit with respect to the subject-matter of the agreement or any part of it, and where a difference has arisen to which the agreement applies they or any of them, instead of proceeding under Chapter II, may apply to a Court having jurisdiction in the matter to which the agreement relates, that the agreement be filed in court.
(2) The application shall be in writing and shall be numbered and registered as a suit between one or more of the parties interested or claiming to be interested as plain tiff or plaintiffs and the remainder as defendant or defendants, if the application has been presented by an the parties, or, if otherwise, between the applicant as plaintiff and the other parties as defendants.
1003
(3) on such application being made, the Court shall direct notice thereof to be given to all parties to the agreement other than the applicants, requiring them to show cause within the time specified in the notice why the agreement should not be filed. (4) Where no sufficient cause is shown, the Court shall order the agreement to be filed, and shall make an order of reference to the arbitrator appointed by the parties, whether in the agreement or otherwise, or, where the parties cannot agree upon an arbitrator, to an arbitrator appointed by the Court. (5) Thereafter the arbitration shall proceed in accordance with, and shall be governed by, the other provisions of this Act, so far as they can be made applicable."

This section confers power on the court to order the agreement to be filed and, further, to make an order of reference to the arbitrator appointed by the parties, or, where the parties cannot agree upon an appointment, to an arbitrator appointed by the court. Sub-section (1) of section 20 makes it plain that the provisions of the section can be availed of only if no providing under chapter II has been initiated. Section 8 does not contain any provision empowering the court to make an order of reference to the arbitrator as one finds in subsection (4) of section 20. Thus it seems clear that the court in the instant cases had no jurisdiction, after appointing an arbitrator under section 8(2), to proceed further to make an order referring the disputes to the arbitrator.

The question which now arises is whether the awards could be set aside as invalid because the reference was incompetent. Section 30 of the Act which sets out the grounds for setting aside an award is in these terms:-

Grounds for setting aside award.
"30. An award shall not be set aside except on one or more of the following grounds, namely:
(a) that an arbitrator or umpire has misconducted him self or the proceedings;
(b) that an award has been made after his issue of an order by the Court superseding the arbitration or after arbitration proceedings have become invalid under section 35;
(c) that an award has been improperly procured or is otherwise invalid."

According to the respondent an award obtained on an invalid reference is also invalid and is covered by clause (c) of section 30. It was argued on behalf of the appellant, on the authority of the Privy Council in Chhabbe Lal v. Kallu Lal and others(1), that the 1004 words "otherwise invalid" in section 30(c) did not cover a case where the award was challenged on the ground of some invalidity attaching to anything outside the award itself. In Chhabbe Lal's case the Privy Council held that an objection to the validity of a reference to arbitration did not come within the provisions of paragraph 15 of the 2nd schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, which provided that no award was to be set aside except on the sp civic grounds mentioned therein, or the award "being otherwise invalid". This view which affirms that of Iqbal Ahmed J. in his dissenting judgment in a Full Bench decision of the Allahabad High Court, Mt. Mariam v. Mt. Amisa(l) was taken in relation to an award on a reference made in a suit. Their Lordships observed:

".... all the powers conferred on the court in relation to an award on a reference made in a suit presuppose a valid reference on which an award has been made which may be open to question. If there is no valid reference, the purported award is a nullity, and can be challenged in any appropriate proceeding."

There was no provision in the 2nd schedule to the Choice of Civil Procedure, which was repealed by the Arbitration Act, 1940, like section 32 or section 33 of the Act. Section 32 bars the institution of suits concerning arbitration agreements or awards and provides that no arbitration agreement or award shall bet set aside,, amended, . modified or in anyway affected otherwise than as provided in this Act; section 33 says that a party to an arbitration agreement seeking to challenge the agreement or the award must do so by making an application to the court. When the 2nd schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure was in force, an award made on an invalid reference could be set aside only by filing a suit which was then the "appropriate proceeding", but now the proceeding appropriate for the same purpose is an application to the court as the respondent in these cases has done. Also, these are cases of arbitration without the intervention of court, and the obsenation from the judgment in Chhabe Lal's case, quoted above, that a reference in a suit should be presumed to be a valid reference, does not apply to these cases. The words "or is otherwise invalid" in clause (c) of section 30 are wide enough to cover all forms of invalidity including invalidity of the reference. We do not find any reason why the general and unqualified language of clause (c) should not include an award on an invalid reference which is a nullity. The cases cited at the Bar show that all the High Courts with only one or two exceptions have taken this view. We hold therefore that the awards challenged in these appeals are nullities and have been rightly set aside by the High Court. In the view we have taken that is not necessary to consider the other question, whether Brig. Bhandari who made the awards was the officer answering the description on Director of Farms, General Headquarters, Simla, to whom the court had referred the disputes. In the result the appeals fail and are dismissed with costs. One set of hearing fee. P.H.P. Appeals dismissed.

1005