15 July 1991
Supreme Court
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ASSOCIATED ENGINEERING CO. Vs GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH AND ANR.

Bench: THOMMEN,T.K. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 338 of 1991


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PETITIONER: ASSOCIATED ENGINEERING CO.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH AND ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT15/07/1991

BENCH: THOMMEN, T.K. (J) BENCH: THOMMEN, T.K. (J) SAHAI, R.M. (J)

CITATION:  1992 AIR  232            1991 SCR  (2) 924  1991 SCC  (4)  93        JT 1991 (3)   123  1991 SCALE  (2)50

ACT:      Arbitration  Act,  1948:  Sections  10,  14,  17,   33- Arbitrator-Jurisdiction-dispute  of-Not within the  award-To be  decided outside the award-Ambiguity of such award-To  be resolved by admitting extrinsic evidence-Jurisdiction cannot be  widened by Arbitrator-He is bound by the recital in  the contract-Conscious   disregard  of  law  or  provisions   of contract-Whether  amounts to mala fide action  and  vitiates the award.

HEADNOTE:      Some  disputes arose between the Respondent  State  and the  Contractor  in respect of the  Cement  concrete  lining under  an agreement in connection with the  construction  of Nagarjunasagar Dam.  Arbitrator Umpire was appointed and the parties  filed  their  pleading and  documents  before  him. There  were 15 claims apart from the general claim for  cost and interest.  The award made by the Umpire was filed before the  Civil Court.  The Civil Court made the award a rule  of Court  and  passed a decree in terms of the  award  together with interest at 12% per annum from the date of the decree.      On  appeal,  the  High Court set aside  the  decree  in respect  of three claims on the ground that the claims  were not supported by the agreement between the parties and  that the arbitrator had gone beyond the contract in awarding  the claims,  and confirmed the decree in respect of three  other claims.      Aggrieved  by  the  High  Court’s  Judgment,  both  the Contractor  and  the State Government preferred  appeals  by special leave.      On behalf of the Contractor it was contended that since the Umpire made a non-speaking award and did not incorporate any  document as part of the award except his  reference  to the  contract, law did not permit interference by the  Court with  the  award,  and  that the  High  Court  exceeded  its jurisdiction in interfering with a non-speaking award.      On behalf of the State Government it was contended that notwith-                                                        925 standing  the brevity of his reasoning, the  arbitrator  had given  a  speaking award, but with errors of  law  and  fact

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apparent  on the face of it; and that he acted  contrary  to the contract, thereby exceeding his jurisdiction.      Dismissing  the  appeal of the  Contractor  and  partly allowing the appeal of the State Government, this Court,      HELD:   1.  The  arbitrator  cannot  act   arbitrarily, irrationally capriciously or independently of the  contract. His sole function is to arbitrate in terms of the  contract. He  has no power apart from what the parties have given  him under the contract.  If he has travelled outside the  bounds of the contract, he has acted without jurisdiction.  But  if he  has remained inside the parameters of the  contract  and has  construed  the provisions of the  contract,  his  award cannot  be interfered with unless he has given  reasons  for the  award disclosing an error apparent on the face  of  it. [938A-B]      2. An arbitrator who acts in manifest disregard of  the contract  acts  without  jurisdiction.   His  authority   is derived from the contract and is governed by the Arbitration Act  which  embodies principles derived from  a  specialised branch  of the law of agency.  He commits misconduct  if  by his  award he decides matters excluded by the agreement.   A deliberate  departure  from  contract amounts  to  not  only manifest  disregard of his authority or a misconduct on  his part,  but  it  may tantamount to a  mala  fide  action.   A conscious  disregard  of the law or the  provisions  of  the contract  from which he has derived his  authority  vitiates the award. [938C-E]      Mustill   &  Boyd’s  Commercial   Arbitration,   Second Edition,  p. 64; Halsbury’s Laws of England, Volume II,  4th Edn., para 622, referred to.      3.  A dispute as to the jurisdiction of the  arbitrator is  not a dispute within the award, but one which has to  be decided  outside the award.  An Umpire or arbitrator  cannot widen  his jurisdiction by deciding a question not  referred to  him by the parties or by deciding a  question  otherwise than in accordance with the contract.  He cannot say that he does  not care what the contract says.  He is bound  by  it. It  must  bear his decision.  He cannot travel  outside  its bounds.   If he exceeded his jurisdiction by doing  so,  his award would be liable to be set aside. [938E-F]      Attorney General for Manitoba v. Kelly & Others, [1922] 1 AC 268, referred to.                                                        926      4.1  Evidence of matters not appearing on the  face  of the  award  would  be  admissible  to  decide  whether   the arbitrator travelled outside the bounds of the contract  and thus  exceeded his jurisdiction.  In order to see  what  the jurisdiction  of the arbitrator is, it is open to the  Court to  see what dispute was submitted to him.  If that  is  not clear  from  the  award, it is open to  the  Court  to  have recourse  to  outside sources.  The Court can  look  at  the affidavits  and pleadings of parties; the Court can look  at the agreement itself. [939A-B]      Bunge  &  Co.  v. Dewar & Webb,  [1921]  8  LI.  L.Rep. 436(K.B.), referred to.      4.2.  If  the  arbitrator  commits  an  error  in   the construction  of the contract, that is an error  within  his jurisdiction.   But if he wanders outside the  contract  and deals  with  matters  not  allotted to  him,  he  commits  a jurisdictional error.  Such error going to his  jurisdiction can  be  established by looking into  material  outside  the award.   Extrinsic  evidence  is admissible  in  such  cases because  the dispute is not something which arises under  to the  contract  or  dependent  on  the  construction  of  the contract or to be determined within the award.  The  dispute

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as to jurisdiction is a matter which is outside the award or outside  whatever  may be said about it in the  award.   The ambiguity  of the award can, in such cases, be  resolved  by admitting extrinsic evidence.  The nature of the dispute  is something which has to be determined outside and independent of  what  appears in the award.  Such  jurisdictional  error needs  to  be  proved by evidence extrinsic  to  the  award. [939C-F]      M/s.  Alopi Parshad & Sons Ltd. v. The Union of  India, [1960] 2 SCR 793; Union of India v. Kishori Lal, AIR 1959 SC 1362; Renusagar Power Co. Ltd. v. General Electric  Company, [1984]  4 SCC 679; Jivarajbhai v. Chintamanrao, AIR 1965  SC 214;  Gobardhan  Das  v. Lachhmi Ram, AIR 1954  SC  689  and Thawardas v. Union of India, AIR 1955 SC 468, relied on.      Bunge  & Co. v. Dewar & Webb, [1921] 8 LI. L. Rep.  436 (K.B.);    Christopher   Brown   Ltd.   v.    Genossenschaft Oesterreichischer,  [1954] 1 QB 8; Rex v. fulham,  [1951]  2 K.B. 1; Falkingham v. Victorian Railways Commission,  [1900] A.C.  452; Rex v. All Saints, Southampton, [1828] 7 B. &  C. 785;  Laing,  Son & Co. Ltd. v. Eastcheap Dried  Fruit  Co., [1961]  1  LI.  L.  Rep.  142,  145  (Q.B.);  Dalmia   Dairy Industries  Ltd. v. National Bank of Pakistan, [1978] 2  LI. L.  Rep.  223 (C.A.); Heyman v. Darwins  Ltd.,  [1942]  A.C. 356;  Omanhene  v.  Chief Obeng, AIR  1934  P.C.  185;  F.R. Absalom Ltd. v. Great Western (London) Garden                                                        927 Village Society, Limited, [1933] AC 592 (HL) and M. Golodetz v. Schrier & Anr., [1947] 80 LI. L.Rep. 647, referred to.      5.  In  the instant case, the  umpire  decided  matters strikingly  outside  his jurisdiction.   He  outstepped  the confines  of  the  contract.  He wandered  far  outside  the designated  area.  He diagressed far away from the  allotted task.  His error arose not by misreading or misconstruing or misunderstanding  the contract, but by acting in  excess  of what  was agreed.  It was an error going to the root of  his jurisdiction  because he asked himself the  wrong  question, disregarded  the  contract  and awarded  in  excess  of  his authority.  In many respects, the award flew in the face  of provisions  of  the contract to the  contrary.   The  umpire acted   unreasonable,  irrationally  and   capriciously   in ignoring  the  limits  and  the  clear  provisions  of   the contract.   In awarding claims which are totally opposed  to the  provisions  of the contract to which he  made  specific reference   in  allowing  them,  he  has   misdirected   and misconducted  himself by manifestly disregarding the  limits of  his  jurisdiction and the bounds of  the  contract  from which  he derived his authority thereby acting  ultra  fines compromissi. [940A-D]      M.L.  Sethi  v.  R.P.  Kapur, AIR  1972  SC  2379;  The managing  Director, J. and K. Handicrafts v. M/s. Good  Luck Carpets, AIR 1990 SC 864 and State of Andhra Pradesh &  Anr. v. R.V. Rayanim, AIR 1990 SC 626, relied on.      Anisminic  Ltd.  v.  Foreign  Compensation  Commission, [1969] 2 AC 147; Pearlman v. Keepers and Governors of Harrow School, [1979] 1 Q.B. 56 and Lee v. Showmen’s Guild of Great Britain, [1952] 2 Q.B. 329, referred to.      Mustill   &  Boyd’s  Commercial   Arbitration,   Second Edition,  p. 641 and Halsbury’s Laws of England,  4th  Edn., Vol. 2, para 622, referred to.      6.1.  In  the  instant  case,  the  contract  did   not postulate-in  fact it prohibited-payment of  any  escalation under Claim No. III for napaslabs or Claim No. VI for  extra lead of water or Claim No. IC for flattening of canal slopes or  Claim No. II for escalation in labour  charges  otherwise than  in  terms of the formula prescribed by  the  contract.

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The   umpire  travelled  totally  outside  the   permissible territory  and thus exceeded his jurisdiction in making  the award  under  those claims.  This is an error going  to  the root of his jurisdiction.  As such, the High Court was right in holding that the arbitrator acted outside the contract                                                        928 in  awarding the abovesaid claims. However, the  High  Court went wrong in confirming the decree in respect of Claim  No. II relating to escalation in labour charges since a specific formula had been prescribed under Item 35, and the  function of  the umpire was to make an award in accordance  with  the formula; he had no jurisdiction to alter the same.  [937C-D; 936F]      Jivarajbhai  Ujamshi  Sheth  & Ors.  v.  Chintaman  rao Balaji & Ors., AIR 1965 SC 214, relied on.      6.2.  Claim No. IV relating to ‘Refund of  Excess  hire charges of machinery and payment towards losses suffered  as a  result  of poor performance of department  machinery  and also  direction for the future’ was rightly allowed  by  the arbitrator  and his decision was rightly upheld by the  High Court.  The Government was, in terms of the contract,  bound to  compensate the contractor for the excess higher  charges paid  as a result of the poor performance of  the  machinery supplied by the Government. [937E-F]      6.3.  As  regards Claim No. VII(4)  relating  to  ‘Sand Conveyance’  the  arbitrator was right in stating  that  the diesel oil requirement should be taken as 0.35 lit for  item No. 5 of statement (A) at page 59 of Agreement as  indicated in the original tender and not as O.035 and price adjustment made accordingly.  The High Court Court rightly upheld  this claim. [937G-H; 938A]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 338-339 of 1991.      From  the  Judgment  and Order dated  28.12.85  of  the Hyderabad High Court in OMA No. 456 of 1984 and CRP No. 2743 of 1984.                               WITH      Civil Appeal Nos. 2692-930F 1991.      K.R. Choudhary for the Appellant.      K.  Madhava Reddy, G. Prabhakar, T.V.S.N. Chari  (N.P.) for the Respondents.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      THOMMEN. J. Leave granted in S.L.P. (C) Nos. 7071-72 of 1986.      These  appeals are brought against the common  judgment of the                                                        929 Andhra  Pradesh  High Court in O.M.A. No. 456  of  1984  and C.R.P.  No. 2743 of 1984.  The High Court set aside in  part the common judgment of the Ist Additional Chief Judge, Civil Court  at  Hyderabad, in Original Suit No. 174 of  1983  and O.P. No. 49 of 1983 whereby he made the award of the  umpire (hereinafter referred to as the ‘umpire’ or ‘arbitrator’)  a rule  of  court and passed a decree in terms  of  the  award together  with interest on the principal amount  awarded  at the  rate  of  12 per cent per annum from the  date  of  the decree.   The High Court set aside the decree in respect  of Claim  Nos. III, Vi and IX and affirmed the decree  for  the other  claims.   The  main appeal Nos. 338  &  339  of  1991 arising from S.L.P. (C) Nos. 1573 & 1574 of 1986 are by  the Associated Engineering Co. (hereinafter referred to as  ‘the

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Contractor’).  It challenges the judgment of the High  Court setting  aside the decree of the Civil Court in  respect  of Claim  Nos. III, VI and IX.  The other appeals arising  from S.L.P. (C) Nos. 7071 & 7072 of 1986 are by the Government of Andhra Pradesh and they are against the judgment of the High Court confirming the decree of the Civil Court in respect of Claim Nos. II, IV and VII(4).      The  High Court set aside Claim Nos. III, VI and IX  on the  ground  that  those claims were not  supported  by  the agreement between parties and that the arbitrator  travelled outside  the contract in awarding those claims.  While  that portion  of the judgment of the High Court is  supported  by the  Government, the Contractor submits that the High  Court exceeded  its jurisdiction in interfering with  non-speaking award.   The Government challenges the judgment of the  High Court  in  so far as it affirmed the findings of  the  Civil Court  in  respect  of Claim Nos. II IV and  VII(4)  on  the ground  that  the arbitrator awarded  those  claims  totally unsupported by the contract.      Mr.  A.B. Dewan, appearing for the Contractor,  submits that  the  umpire  made a non-speaking award.   He  did  not incorporate   any   document  as  a  part  of   the   award, notwithstanding  his  reference  to  the  contract.  In  the circumstances,  counsel  submits, the law  does  not  permit interference by the Court with such an award.      Mr. K. Madhava Reddy, appearing for the Government,  on the  other  hand, submits that the umpire  made  a  speaking award  with reference to the claims and he gave reasons  for awarding  those claims.  It is true, counsel says, that  the umpire  made only brief reference to the provisions  of  the contract   and  his  reasons  for  making  the  award.   But notwithstanding the brevity of his reasoning, he has  spoken sufficiently clearly as a result of which errors of law  and fact have become                                                        930 apparent on the face of the award disclosing that the umpire acted  contrary  to, and unsupported by,  contract,  thereby exceeding  his  jurisdiction.  He says that the  umpire  has referred  to  the  contract not merely for  the  purpose  of reciting  or narrating his authority to hear the matter  and resolve  the dispute, but for incorporating it as a part  of the  award.   In  doing so, he exceeded  the  contract,  not merely  by  misinterpreting it, but  by  travelling  totally outside  it,  and by making an award without regard  to  and independent of the contract.  A number of decision have been cited   on  either  side  in  support  of   the   respective contentions.      The  award was made in respect of disputes which  arose between  the  Government and the Contractor for  the  cement concrete   lining  under  Agreement  dated   20.1.1981   (as supplemented   subsequently)   in   connection   with    the construction of Nagarjunasagar Dam.  The parties filed their pleadings and documents before the arbitrator/umpire.  There were  15  claims apart from the general claim for  cost  and interest.   As  stated earlier, we are concerned  only  with Claim  Nos. III, VI and IX which are claims awarded  by  the umpire and decreed by the Civil Court, but set aside by  the High Court, and with Claim Nos. II, IV and VII(4) which were awarded by the umpire and decreed by the Civil Court as well as by the High Court.  The first set of claims respectively, are: ‘Escalation on Napa Slabs’; ‘Payment of Extra Lead  for water; and, ‘Extra Expenditure incurred due to flattening of canal slopes and consequent reduction in top width of  banks used   as  roadway’.   The  other  set  of   claims   relate respectively to ‘Labour Escalation’; ‘Refund of excess  Hire

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Charges of Machinery’; and’ ‘Stand conveyance’.      The umpire after reciting the background of the dispute which  led  to his entering upon reference  on  16.12.82  to decide  the dispute and the relevant agreement  between  the parties  deals with the claims seriatim.  As  regards  Claim No. III, he says:          "I   hereby  declare  and  award  and  direct   the          respondent  to  compensate  the  claimants  towards          escalation  in the cost of napaslabs calculated  at          Rs.4.25 (Rupees four and paise twenty five) per Sq.          Met. of napa slab lining, under item 11 of schedule          A  of  the agreement for the entire work  and  make          payments accordingly".      The  main criticism levelled by the Government  against this  award is that there was no provision in  the  contract for escalation of                                                        931 the  cost or price of napa-slabs.  The escalation  provision in  the  contract related to labour, diesel oil,  tyres  and tubes,  as  provided  in  Item 35  thereof.   There  was  no escalation  provision in the contract as far  as  napa-slabs were  concerned.   The  price  for  these  slabs  had   been determined  in  the contract at Rs. 4.25 Per  Sq.  Met.  and there  was  no provision for increase or  decrease  of  that price.  Both the parties to the contract were bound by  that price and the arbitrator, therefore, had no jurisdiction  to award  any  escalation in the price of napa-slabs.   In  the absence of any provision in the contract, the arbitrator had no  jurisdiction  to  make an award  for  escalation.   This contention of the Government was accepted by the High Court.      Mr.  Dewan, appearing for the Contractor, is not  in  a position to refer to any provision of the contract  allowing escalation for napa-slabs.  All that he is in a position  to refer  to is Item 35 of the contract which refers  to  price adjustment for increase or decrease inthe cost.  That  item, as stated earlier, refers to various matters such as, diesel oil,  labour,  etc., but not to napa-slabs.   On  the  other hand, at the end of that item, it is specifically stated ‘no claims  for  price  adjustment  other  than  those  provided herein,   shall   be  entertained’.   Furthermore,   it   is specifically provided in the contract ‘the contractor  shall have  to make his own arrangements to obtain the  napa-slabs as  per  standard specifications.  The Department  does  not accept  any  responsibility  either  in  handing  over   the quarries   or   procuring  the  napa-slabs  or   any   other facilities.   The  contractor will not be entitled  for  any extra rate due to change in selection of quarries as above’. There   is  thus  a  specific  prohibition   against   price adjustment  or  award for escalated cost in respect  of  any matter falling outside Item 35.      Mr.  Dewan, however, submits that being a  non-speaking award,  the  Court cannot examine the reasons.  Mr.  Madhava Reddy, appearing for the Government, submits that the  award is  not silent on the point.  It speaks  eloquently,  though briefly.   It  is  not merely in the  recital  or  narrative portion of the award that the agreement is referred to,  but in  making  the award under Claim No. III the  agreement  is specifically   incorporated   by   directing   payment   for escalation on napa-slabs under Item 11 of Schedule A of  the Agreement  at  the rate of Rs.4.25.  The agreement  is  thus bodily  incorporated  into the award thereby  disclosing  an error  apparent  on  its  face and the  total  lack  of  the arbitrator’s  jurisdiction  by reason of his  going  totally outside and opposed to the contract.  This, counsel says, is revealed   not   by  a  construction  of   the   contractual

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provisions, but by merely looking at the matters covered  by the contract.                                                        932 Claim No. VI-Payment of Extra Lead for water.      This is what the arbitrator says:          "I   hereby  declare  and  award  and  direct   the          Respondent to pay extra towards additional lead for          water  i.e. 3 K. Ms. over the specified lead  of  2          K.Ms. in the agreement for items 4, 5, 6, 10 and 11          of Schedule A". As  regards this claim, Mr. Dewan reiterates his  contention that  the award is silent as to the reasons and,  therefore, the  Court should not interfere.  Mr. Madhava Reddy  on  the other  hand submits that the award speaks as to the  reasons for  allowing the claim for extra amount towards  additional lead for water i.e. for 3 K.Ms. over and above the specified lead of 2 K.Ms. But counsel says, the agreement provides for no  payment  at  all  for any lead and  much  less  for  any additional lead.  He refers to the specific provision of the agreement regarding water.  He says that the Contractor  had to  make  its own arrangements for supply of water  at  work site  for  all  purposes  including  quarry.   There  is  no provision  in  the contract for making any  payment  to  the Contractor for the water brought by it to the site.  In  the absence   of  any  such  provision,  counsel  says,  it   is preposterous  that the arbitrator should have awarded  extra amount   for  additional  lead  for  water.   The   contract specifically  stated that it was the responsibility  of  the Contractor  to  make its on arrangements for the  supply  of water.   The Government gave no assurance to the  Contractor regarding  the availability of water or the  prices  payable therefor.   The  umpire, therefore, had no  jurisdiction  to allow Claim No. VI.  The High Court accepting the contention of  the State reversed the Civil Court’s decree  as  regards that  claim  and  held"  .........In  view  of   unequivocal agreement   that  the  contractor   should  make   his   own arrangements for supply of water for the purpose of  curing, the  award  of compensation is outside the  purview  of  the agreement and is vitiated".          Claim  No.  IX-Extra expenditure  incurred  due  to          flattening of canal slopes and consequent reduction          in top width of banks used as roadway.      Referring to this claim, this is what the award says:          "I   hereby  declare  and  award  and  direct   the          respondent to pay the claimant for 50% of the  work          done on the napa slab lining on the left side slope          of  Canal at the extra rate of Rs.4.00 per Sq.  Met          of lining work".                                                        933       Rejecting  the  contentions  of  the  Contractor   and accepting those of the Government, the High Court held  that the  contract did not provide for any payment  whatever  for the maintenance of canal slopes and consequent deduction  in top  width of banks used as roadway.  The High  Court  found that  it was the responsibility of the Contractor to  repair the  banks  and  the contract  contained  no  provision  for payment  of any amount towards the decrease in the width  or otherwise.  The High Court says ‘....the acceptance of claim on this score is beyond the purview of the agreement and  as such vitiated’.      While   counsel   for  the   Contractor   repeats   his contentions regarding the award being silent as to  reasons, Mr. Madhava Reddy submits that the contract provides for  no payment  whatever under Claim No. IX. On the other hand,  it specifically states-

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        "8(A)  SITE FACILITIES-                Haul  roads from batching plant site  to  the          work  site in the first instance will be formed  by          the  Department  as  per  site  surveys  per   each          batching  plant  site.  These haul roads  are  fair          weather  roads  only with hard passages  at  stream          crossings.   Formation  of haul  roads  within  the          batching plant area, maintenance of all haul  roads          including  those formed by the Department shall  be          the  responsibility of the  contractors.   Existing          roads  and roads under the control of N.S.  Project          can  be made use of by the Contractor.   Any  other          haul  roads  required  by the  Contractor  and  not          specified  in  plan  shall be carried  out  by  the          Contractor at his cost.          8.(A) 1.   WIDENING OF BANKS          The  canal banks will be widened to 5 meters and  3          meters  width  respectively by the  Department  for          right  and  left banks to facilitate  transport  of          materials.  The contractor however has to  maintain          the haul roads".      In  the  absence  of any provision  to  pay  for  extra expenditure  and  in  the light of  the  specific  provision placing  the sole responsibility for the maintenance of  the haul  roads  on  the  Contractor,  the  arbitrator  had   no jurisdiction  to  award 50% at extra rate of Rs. 4  per  Sq. Meter.   The contract contains no provision for  payment  of any  amount  outside what is strictly  specified  under  the clause.  In the circumstances, Mr.                                                        934 Madhava  Reddy says, the High Court was perfectly  justified in  coming to the conclusion, which it did, as  regards  the arbitrator acting outside his jurisdiction.      We shall now deal with the other set of claims, namely, Claim  Nos.  II, IV and VII(4) which had  been  awarded  and decreed by both the courts below.      The arbitrator deals with Claim No. II as follows:          "The claim is admitted.          I   hereby  declare  and  award  and   direct   the          Respondents  that due to the statutory revision  of          Minimum   rates   of  wages  payable   to   various          categories  of workers, the claimant is to be  paid          compensation as per the following formula:   P1      (WSI-WSO)0.10+      (WSSI-WSSO)0.10- (WUSI-WUSO)0.8 V2-- X R  ---- ------         ----- - ---        --------   100          WSO                 WSSO           WUSO Where     Vs-      Compensation payable due  to  statutory                    increase   in  Min.  Wages  of   labour                    notified  by  the  Government  of  A.P.                    after  22.10.1980  under the  Min.  Wages                    Act., 1948.           P-1.     Percentage Labour component of each  item                    of Work as per Appendix 9 at page 139  of                    Agreement.           R-       Value  of  work done under each  item  of                    work during the period under review.           WSO-     11.15 (Daily Minimum wage in force on the                    date of Tender for skilled labour).           WSSO-    8.50 (Daily  Minimum wage in force on the                    date of Tender for semiskilled labour).           WUSO-    5.65 (Daily Minimum wage in force on  the                    date of Tender for unskilled labour).           WSI-     Revised daily Min. wage as fixed by Govt.                    A.P.  for skilled labour  applicable  for                    the period under review.

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                                                      935           WSSI-    Revised daily Min. wage as fixed by Govt.                    of A.P. for semiskilled labour applicable                    for the period under review.           WUSI-    Revised daily Min. wage as fixed by Govt.                    of A.P. for semiskilled labour applicable                    for the period under review.           WUSI-    Revised  daily  Min. Wages  as  fixed  by                    Government  of A.P. for unskilled  labour                    applicable for the period under review.              The  above  compensation  is  payable  to   the          claimant for the work done after 23.12.80, the date          of publication of G.O. No. 835 dated 18.12.80, till          the completion of the work".      It is not seriously disputed that the observation  "The claim  is admitted" is only a reference to the  arbitrator’s decision  to  allow  the claim and not as  a  concession  or admission  on the part of the Government.  In fact from  the pleadings it is quite clear that the Government had  opposed every claim and there was no concession on its part.      Claim No. II had been, as seen above, elaborately dealt with  by  the  arbitrator.   On  account  of  the  statutory revision  of  minimum  rates of  wages  payable  to  various categories  of  workers, the arbitrator made  the  award  in respect of labour escalation.  Escalation under this item is in  fact, as stated above, provided for under the  contract, but  in terms thereof.  The grievance of the  Government  is not  because the umpire awarded escalation for  labour,  but because  he  allowed escalation otherwise than  as  provided under the contract.  The contract under Item 35 provides-          ‘Increase  or  decrease in the cost due  to  labour          shall  be calculated quarterly in  accordance  with          the following formula: V1 = 0.75 P1 X  R(i-i)          ----    -----           100     10           V1 =     increase or decrease in the cost of  work                    during  the quarter  under  consideration                    due to changes in rates for labour.           R  =     the  value  of the work  done  in  Rupees                    during the quarter under consideration                                                        936           1  =     the  average  consumer  price  index  for                    industrial workers (wholesale prices) for                    the quarter in which tenders were  opened                    (as published in Nalgonda District by the                    Director  of  Bureau  of  Economics   and                    Statistics, Andhra Pradesh).           P1  =    Percentage    of    labour     components                    (specified  in schedule in appendix-9  of                    the item).           i   =    the  average  consumer  price  index  for                    industrial workers (wholesale prices) for                    the quarter under consideration.                          Price  adjustment clause  shall  be                    applicable  only  for the  work  that  is                    carried out within the stipulated time or                    extensions    thereof    as    are    not                    attributable   to  the  contractor.    No                    claims  for price adjustment  other  than                    those    provided   herein,   shall    be                    entertained".      The  contention  of  the Government  is  that  the  two formulae  are totally different from each other as a  result of which the arbitrator awarded very much more than what  is

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warranted  under  the  agreed  formula.  Mr.  Madhava  Reddy submits that it is true that the contractor was bound to pay minimum   wages   according  to   the   relevant   statutory provisions.   In  fact  the contract  contains  a  provision making  it  necessary for the Contractor to conform  to  all laws,  regulations, bye-laws, ordinances, regulations,  etc. But  the  fact that the Contractor necessarily  had  to  pay enhanced  rates  of wages did not entitle it  to  claim  any amount  from  the  Government in excess  of  what  had  been strictly  provided under the contract.  A  specific  formula had  been prescribed under Item 35, as seen above,  and  the function  of the umpire was to make an award  in  accordance with  that  formula.  He had no jurisdiction  to  alter  the formula, which he has done, as seen from the award.      It is not disputed on behalf of the Contractor that the formula followed by the arbitrator, as seen from  the  award under Claim No. II, is different from the formula prescribed under  the  contract.  But Mr. K.R. Chowdhury,  one  of  the counsel  appearing for the Contractor, points out  that  the contract provided for payment of all wages according to  the current rates and, therefore, the arbitrator was well within his  jurisdiction to make an award by adopting a formula  in keeping  with  the  enhanced rates of wages,  and  the  High Court, he contends,                                                        937 rightly decreed the amounts under that claim in terms of the award.      We   shall   deal  with  Claim  Nos.  IV   and   VII(4) separately.   But as regards Claim Nos. III, VI and  IX,  we are  of  the view that the High Court was right  in  stating that  the arbitrator acted outside the contract in  awarding those  claims.  For the very same reason we are of the  view that  the High Court was wrong in coming to  the  conclusion, which  it  did, regarding Claim No. II.  We say  so  because there  is no justification whatsoever for the arbitrator  to act outside the contract.      These  four claims are not payable under the  contract. The contract does not postulate-in fact it prohibits payment of  any  escalation under Claim No. III  for  napa-slabs  or Claim  No.  VI for extra lead of water or Claim No.  IX  for flattening of canal slopes or Claim No. II for escalation in labour  charges  otherwise  than in  terms  of  the  formula prescribed  by the contract.  The conclusion is reached  not by construction of the contract but by merely looking at the contract.    The  umpire  travelled  totally   outside   the permissible territory and thus exceeded his jurisdiction  in making the award under those claims.  This is an error going to  the  root of his jurisdiction: See  Jivarajbhai  Ujamshi Sheth & Ors. v. Chintamanrao Balaji & Ors., AIR 1965 SC 214. We  are  in  complete agreement  with  Mr.  Madhava  Reddy’s submissions on the point.      As  regards Claim Novs. IV and VII(4), we see no  merit in Mr. Madhava Reddy’s contentions.  Claim No. IV relates to ‘Refund  of  excess hire charges of  machinery  and  payment towards  losses suffered as a result of poor performance  of department  machinery  and also direction for  the  future’. This  claim, was rightly allowed by the arbitrator  and  his decision  was rightly upheld by High Court.  The  Government was,  in  terms  of the contract, bound  to  compensate  the Contractor for the excess higher charges paid as a result of the  poor  performance  of the  machinery  supplied  by  the Government.      Claim  No. VII(4) is as regards ‘Sand Conveyance’.  The arbitrator says-          "The diesel oil requirement shall be taken as  0.35

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        lit  for item No. 5 of statement (A) at page 59  of          Agreement  as indicated in the original tender  and          not   as   0.035   and   price   adjustment    made          accordingly". The arbitrator was, in our view, right in so stating and the High Court,                                                        938 in our view, rightly upheld this claim.      The  arbitrator cannot act  arbitrarily,  irrationally, capriciously  or  independently of the contract.   His  sole function  is to arbitrate in terms of the contract.  He  has no  power apart from what the parties have given  him  under the contract.  If he has travelled outside the bounds of the contract, he has acted without jurisdiction.  But if he  has remained  inside  the  parameters of the  contract  and  has construed  the provisions of the contract; his award  cannot be interfered with unless he has given reasons for the award disclosing an error apparent on the face of it.      An  arbitrator  who acts in manifest disregard  of  the contract  acts  without  jurisdiction.   His  authority   is derived from the contract and is governed by the Arbitration Act  which  embodies principles derived from  a  specialised branch of the law of agency (see Mustill & Boyd’s Commercial Arbitration, Second Edition, p. 641). He commits  misconduct if by his award he decides matters excluded by the agreement (see Halsbury’s Laws of England, Volume II, Fourth  Edition, Para  622). A deliberate departure from contract amounts  to not only manifest disregard of his authority or a misconduct on his part, but it may tantamount to a mala fide action.  A conscious  disregard  of the law or the  provisions  of  the contract  from which he has derived his  authority  vitiates the award.      A  dispute as to the jurisdiction of the arbitrator  is not  a  dispute within the award, but one which  has  to  be decided  outside the award.  An umpire or arbitrator  cannot widen  his jurisdiction by deciding a question not  referred to  him by the parties or by deciding a  question  otherwise than in accordance with the contract.  He cannot say that he does  not care what the contract says.  He is bound  by  it. It  must  bear his decision.  He cannot travel  outside  its bounds.   It he exceeded his jurisdiction by so  doing,  his award  would be liable to be set aside.  As stated  by  Lord Parmoor:          ".......It  would be impossible to allow an  umpire          to arrogate to himself jurisdiction over a question          which  on the true construction of  the  submission          was  not referred to him.  An umpire  cannot  widen          the  area of his jurisdiction by holding,  contrary          to  the fact, that the matter which he  affects  to          decide  is  within the submission  of  the  parties          .......".                                                        939                Attorney-General  for  Manitoba  v.  Kelly  &          Others, [1922] 1 AC 268, 276. Evidence  of matters not appearing on the face of the  award would  be  admissible  to  decide  whether  the   arbitrator travelled  outside  the  bounds of  the  contract  and  thus exceeded  his  jurisdiction.   In  order  to  see  what  the jurisdiction  of the arbitrator is, it is open to the  Court to  see what dispute was submitted to him.  If that  is  not clear  from  the  award, it is open to  the  Court  to  have recourse  to  outside sources.  The Court can  look  at  the affidavits  and pleadings of parties; the Court can look  at the agreement itself.  Bunge & Co. v. Dewar & Webb, [1921] 8 L1. L.Rep. 436(K.B.).

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    If the arbitrator commits an error in the  construction of  the contract, that is an error within his  jurisdiction. But  if  he  wanders Outside the  contract  and  deals  with matters  not  allotted to him, he commits  a  jurisdictional error.   Such  error  going  to  his  jurisdiction  can   he established  by  looking into material  outside  the  award. Extrinsic  evidence is admissible in such cases because  the dispute  is something which arises under or in  relation  to the  contract  or  dependent  on  the  construction  of  the contract or to be determined within the award.  The  dispute as to jurisdiction is a matter which is outside the award or outside  whatever  may be said about it in the  award.   The ambiguity  of the award can, in such cases, be  resolved  by admitting extrinsic evidence.  The rationale of this rule is the  nature  of  the dispute is something which  has  to  be determined  outside and independent of what  appears in  the award.   Such  jurisdictional error needs to  be  proved  by evidence  extrinsic to the award.  See M/s. Alopi Parshad  & Sons. Ltd. v. The Union of India, [1960] 2 SCR 793; Bunge  & Co.  v.  Dewar  & Webb., [1921] 8 L1. L.  Rep.  436  (K.B.); Christopher  Brown Ld. v. Genossenschaft  Oesterreichischer, [1954] 1 QB 8; Rex v. Fulham, [1951] 2 K.B. 1; Falkingham v. Victorian  Railways Commission, [1900] A.C. 452; Rex v.  All Saints, Southampton, [1828] 7 B. & C. 785; Laing. Son & Ltd. v.  Eastcheap Dried Fruit Co., [961] 1 L1.L. Rep.  142,  145 (Q.B.);  Dalmia  Dairy Industries Ltd. v. National  Bank  of Pakistan, [1978] 2 L1. L. Rep. 223 (C.A.); Heyman v. Darwing Ld., [1942] A.C. 356’ Union of India v. kishorilal, AIR 1959 SC  1362;  Renusager  Power Co.  Ltd.  v.  General  Electric Company, [1984] 4 SCC 679; Jivarajbhai v. Chintamanrao,  AIR 1965 SC  214; Gobardhan Das v. Lachhmi Ram, AIR 1954 SC 689, 692; Thawardas v. Union of India., AIR 1955 SC 468; Omanhene v.  Chief Obeng, AIR 1934 P.C. 185, 188; F.R. Absalom.  Ltd. v.  Great  Western London Garden Village  Society.  Limited, [1933]      AC     592     (HL)     and     M.      Golodetz 940 v. Schrier & Anr., [1947] 80 L1. L. Rep. 647.      In  the  instant  case,  the  umpire  decided   matters strikingly  outside  his jurisdiction.   He  outstepped  the confines  of  the  contract.  He wandered  far  outside  the designated  area.  He diagressed far away from the  allotted task.  His error arose not by misreading or misconstruing or misunderstanding  the contract, but by acting in  excess  of what  was agreed.  It was an error going to the root of  his jurisdiction  because he asked himself the  wrong  question, disregarded  the  contract  and awarded  in  excess  of  his authority.  In many respects, the award flew in the face  of provisions  of  the  contract  to  the  contrary.   See  the principles  state in Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign  Compensation Commission.,  [1969]  2  AC 147;  Pearlman  v.  Keepers  and Governors  of  Harrow  School,  [1979] 1  Q.B.  56;  Lee  v. Showmen’s  Guild of Great Britain, [1952] 2 Q.B.  329;  M.L. Sethi  v.  R.P.  Kapur,  AIR  1972  SC  2379;  The  Managing Director.  J. and K. Handicrafts v. M/s. Good Luck  Carpets, AIR  1990 SC 864 and State of Andhra Pradesh & Anr. v.  R.V. Rayanim,  AIR  1990  SC  626.  See  also  Mustill  &  Boyd’s Commercial  Arbitration, Second Edition; Halsbury’s Laws  of England, Fourth Edition,Vol. 2.      The   umpire,   in  our   view,   acted   unreasonably, irrationally and capriciously in ignoring the limits and  th clear provisions of the contract.  In awarding claims  which are  totally  opposed to the provisions of the  contract  to which  he made specific reference in allowing them,  he  has misdirected   and   misconducted   himself   by   manifestly disregarding  the limits of his jurisdiction and the  bounds

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of the contract from which he derived his authority  thereby acting ultra fines compromissi.      In  the  circumstances, we affirm the judgment  of  the High Court under appeals except in respect of Claim No.  II. Accordingly,  the appeals of the contractor  are  dismissed; and, the appeals of the Government are allowed in respect of claim  No.  II.   We do not, however make any  order  as  to costs. G.N.                                       Appeals dismissed.                                                        941