22 February 1977
Supreme Court
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CHANDER BHAN HARBHAJAN LAL Vs STATE OF PUNJAB

Bench: KAILASAM,P.S.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2070 of 1968


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PETITIONER: CHANDER BHAN HARBHAJAN LAL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF PUNJAB

DATE OF JUDGMENT22/02/1977

BENCH: KAILASAM, P.S. BENCH: KAILASAM, P.S. BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)

CITATION:  1977 AIR 1210            1977 SCR  (3)  38  1977 SCC  (2) 715  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1992 SC1124  (18)

ACT:             Arbitration Act, s. 8, whether applicable when  arbitra-         tion agreement stipulates appointment of Settlement  Commit-         tee  by one of the parties--On unilateral abolition of  Set-         tlement Committee. whether s. 8 applicable.

HEADNOTE:             The parties entered into an agreement for the  execution         of  some  construction work.  An arbitration clause  in  the         agreement  stipulated  that if disputes  arose,  the  matter         would be referred to a Settlement Committee to be  appointed         by the State Government.  A dispute arose, and a  Settlement         Committee  was duly constituted, but was unilaterally  abol-         ished  by  the  respondent before  it  concluded  its  work,         Subsequently  the  respondent appointed  another  Settlement         Committee  whose award was set aside by the Civil  Court  on         the  ground that it was made even before the expiry  of  the         time given by the Committee to  the appellant.  The  Commit-         tee  thereafter ceased to exist, and the respondent  applied         to the trial court for appointing an arbitrator u/s. 8(2) of         the  Arbitration Act. The appellant opposed the same on  two         grounds.  Firstly that by unilaterally abolishing the  first         Settlement Committee, the State Government had put an end to         the  arbitration  clause, and no other  committee  could  be         appointed  and secondly, that s. 8 was not applicable.   The         appellants’ objections were rejected by the trial court, and         later by the High Court in revision.             In appeal before this Court, the respondent also  argued         that  s.8  would not apply when one party  could  appoint  a         Settlement Committee without reference to the other party.         Dismissing the appeal, the Court,             HELD:  (1) The wording of s. 8, that any party may serve         the  other  parties with a written notice to concur  in  the         appointment  or appointments, or in supplying  the  vacancy,         will include not serving other parties in cases in which the         service on the other party is not contemplated.  The section         cannot  be read as not being applicable where the  agreement         provides  or the nomination of the Committee by one  of  the         parties,  for  the section itself says that  the  party  may         serve the other parties. [41F-G]

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           (2)  The Government could have appointed a Committee  by         itself  without coming to court.  There is no indication  in         the  clause  that when once the Committee  was  unilaterally         dissolved no new Committee could be formed.  When the second         Committee  ceased to function, it became "incapable of  act-         ing"  and, therefore,’ it was within the competency  of  the         Court to proceed to appoint a new Committee. [41E, F]

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2070/68.         Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order   dated         16-2-1968 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Civil  Revi-         sion Case No. 107/66 and         Civil Appeal No. 1784/69.             Appeal  by  Special Leave from the. Judgment  and  Order         dated 25-11-2968 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Civil         Revision No. 2.39 of 1967.         G.L. Sanghi and K. J. John for the Appellants.         S.N. Anand and R.N. Sachthey for the Respondents.         39         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             KAILASAM,  J.--Civil Appeal No. 2070 of 1963 is by  spe-         cial  leave  by the appellants against the judgment  of  the         Punjab  and  Haryana High Court dismissing  the  appellant’s         petition  for  revising an order passed by  the  Subordinate         Judge,  Ambala City, allowing an application by  the  State,         respondent, and appointing the Arbitration Committee.    The         appellants entered into an agreement with the’. Public Works         Department, Punjab State, for execution of certain construc-         tion works in August, 1952.  They entered into an agreement,         Ex.  A-I.  The agreement provided an arbitration  clause  in         the following terms :--                       "In  the matter of dispute, the case shall  be                       referred  to the Settlement Committee consist-                       ing of a  Superintending  Engineer, an officer                       of  the. Finance Department of the rank of  at                       least  Deputy Secretary and an Accounts  Offi-                       cer, all to                       be nominated by the Government for arbitration                       whose decision will be final."         Disputes  arose between the parties and the State of  Punjab         appointed a Settlement Committee by notification dated  31st         January,  1958. The Settlement Committee, entered  upon  the         arbitration  but before the Arbitration Committee  concluded         its  work  the State Government unilaterally  abolished  the         Committee by an order dated 27th  March, 1962.   Subsequent-         ly  by a notification dated 18th May, 1962,  the State  Gov-         ernment  constituted a Committee giving the names  of  three         officers  with headquarters at Nangal.   The  new  Committee         took  up the dispute as well as a claim made by the  Govern-         ment  and issued notice to the parties.  The new  Settlement         Committee  passed an award on 25th July, 1962.   The  appel-         lants  challenged  the validity of the award  in  the  Civil         Court.    The  Civil Court set aside the  second  Settlement         Committee’s  award  on the ground that it was  made  by  the         Committee even before the expiry of the time given by it  to         the appellants.   There after, the second Settlement Commit-         tee also ceased to function.           The  State Government gave notice to the  appellant  under         section  8(1)  of  the Arbitration Act to.  concur  in  the,         appointment of a fresh Settlement Committee to arbitrate the         matter  between the parties. The appellants did not  respond         to the notice.  The State Government made an application  to

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       the  trial  court  for appointment of  an  arbitrator  under         section  3(2)  of  the  Arbitration  Act.    The  appellants         raised  two  objections, namely that section 8 was  not  ap-         plicable  to  the case and that by abolition  of  the  first         Settlement Committee the State Government had put an end  to         the arbitration clause agreed to between the parties by  the         agreement at Ex. A-1.   The learned JUdge rejected both  the         grounds and held that after   the State Government  withdrew         the personnel of the first Settlement Committee they  became         incapable of acting and therefore the court Was entitled  to         act under section 8(1)(b) of the Act.  On the  second  point         it  held  that the terms of the arbitration  clause  in  the         agreement Ex. A-1 did not justify reading into it the condi-         tion  that the intention of the parties was that the  vacan-         cies in the Settlement Committee for arbitration were not to         be filled.         4--240SCI/77         40         In  the  Revision  Application before  the  High  Court  the         appellants in effect raised the same contentions though in a         slightly   different form.   The High Court agreed with  the         view of the trial Judge that when once the Government  abol-         ished the first Settlement Committee it became incapable  of         acting and section 8(1)(b) became applicable. It also agreed         with the trial court and found that there was nothing in the         terms  of the arbitration clause in Ex. A-1 to  justify  the         contention  that  when once a Settlement Committee  was  ap-         pointed  the    power under the clause is  exhausted.    The         High  Court  held  that the  trial court  was  justified  in         proceeding under sub-section (1) of section 8 in .asking the         appellant to give the names for consideration of   the court         for  the reconstitution of the Committee and as  the  appel-         lants  did not give the names the trial court was  Justified         in accepting the names given by the State Government.                             In the appeal before us the same conten-                       tions  were  raised.   It was  submitted  that                       when  one  of the parties to  the  arbitration                       agreement unilaterally disabled the Settlement                       Committee from functioning the court will  not                       assist that party by holding that the  Commit-                       tee  became  incapable  of  acting.    It  was                       contended that the provisions  of section 8 of                       the  Arbitration  Act will not  be  applicable                       when  one of the parties could appoint a  Set-                       tlement Committee by itself without  reference                       to the other party.   The learned counsel  for                       the  appellant  also contended that  when  the                       first  Settlement Committee ceased   to  exist                       by the government unilaterally putting an  end                       to  it, the arbitration clause  worked  itself                       out and no other committee could be  appointed                       The  relevant clause in the  agreement  though                       given earlier is  again                       "In  the matter of dispute, the case shall  be                       referred to the Settlement Committee  consist-                       ing  of a Superintending Engineer, an  officer                       of  the Finance Department of the rank  of  at                       least  Deputy Secretary and an Accounts  offi-                       cer, all to be nominated by the Government for                       arbitration whose decision will be final."         The clause is an amendment to the original condition No.  5.         The clause further provided that the agreement is supplemen-         tal to the original agreement and save as varied as  herein-         before   provided the said agreement and all the  terms  and         conditions thereof shall continue to be binding and in  full

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       force  and effect.  The submission  of  the learned  counsel         for  the appellant is that the clause referred only  to  the         matter  already  in dispute and to  a  settlement  committee         which  had been already appointed.   Reliance was placed  on         the  words  underlined in the clause "In the matter of  dis-         pute",  and "referred to the Settlement  Committee".    This         plea cannot be accepted for in the later part of the  condi-         tion it is made clear by the words "all  to be nominated  by         the Government for arbitration whose decision will b final."         "To be nominated" contemplates a future appointment. But  we         do not think that this makes any difference for there  could         be  no  doubt mat the condition enables  the  Government  to         appoint  three  persons holding the ranks specified  in  the         condition as the Settlement         41         Committee.    There is no indication at all that  when  once         the  Committee was dissolved no new committee could  be  ap-         pointed.   In fact it has to be noted that after  the  first         Settlement Committee was dissolved by the unilateral act  of         the  Government a second Committee came into  existence  and         gave an award which was set aside by the Civil Court.  After         the award was set aside the second Committee also ceased  to         function.   There is no material on record to show that  the         appellants  objected  to  the  constitution  of  the  second         Committee  on the ground that the condition did not  provide         for the appointment of a second Settlement Committee.  There         is  no reason  alleged as to why the second Settlement  Com-         mittee  ceased  to function.   If the second  Committee  was         also  not  terminated by the action of  the  Government  the         contention of the appellants that a unilateral act would put         the case outside the purview of section 8 of the Arbitration         Act would not be available.             On a careful reading of the condition relating to  arbi-         tration,  we agree with the High Court as well as the  trial         court  that there is no bar to the Government  appointing  a         fresh  Committee  for going into the dispute  consisting  of         three  officers  as  stipulated in  the  condition.  As  the         appellant  would not reply to the letter of  the  Government         seeking  to nominate a Settlement Committee  the  Government         moved  the  court for appointment of  the  Committee.    The         trial  court  gave   an option to the appellant  to  furnish         names  but as he did not furnish the names trial  court  ac-         cepted  the names suggested   by the   Government.   On  our         finding  that the Government was entitled to appoint a  Com-         mittee  under  the new agreement the Government  could  have         very well appointed a committee by itself without coming  to         court. But may be by way of abundant caution the  Government         came  to  court and the court has appointed a  committee  as         suggested  by the State.   We are equally clear  that  under         section  8, the Court is entitled to act and appoint a  com-         mittee.   As already found by us when the second  Settlement         Committee ceased to function the  Committee became  "incapa-         ble of acting" and therefore it was within the competency of         the  court to proceed to appoint a new committee.    Equally         untenable is the contention that section 8 is not applicable         to  cases where the condition stipulates the appointment  of         a Settlement Committee by one of the parties.   This submis-         sion was made relying on the wording of the section that any         party may serve the other parties or the arbitrators, as the         case may be, with a written notice to concur in the appoint-         ment  or  appointments or in supplying the    vacancy.  This         part  of the section no doubt contemplates two  parties  but         the section cannot be read as not being applicable where the         agreement  provides for the nomination of the  committee  by         one  of  the parties for the section itself  says  that  the

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       party  may serve the other    parties "May serve  the  other         parties" will include not serving other parties in cases  in         which the service on the other party is not contemplated.             In the circumstances we are satisfied that the order  of         the  High  Court is proper and cannot  be  interfered  with.         The  appeal is dismissed.   The parties will bear their  own         costs.         42         Civil Appeal No. 1734 of 1969         This  appeal  is similar to the one which we have  just  now         disposed of i.e.C.A.No. 2070 of 1968.   The High Court  also         dismissed  the petition under appeal on the ground that  the         facts  of the case are similar to the one in Civil  Revision         Petition No. 107 of 1966 out of which C.A. No. 2070 of  1968         arose  and dismissed the petition on the same grounds.    In         this appeal before, us the learned counsel for the appellant         adopted  the arguments advanced by the counsel in  C.A.  No.         2070    of  1968 and did not wish to add  anything  further.         For  the reasons stated in C.A.No. 2070 of 1968  we  dismiss         this appeal also.   No order as to costs.         P.H.P.                                               Appeals         dismissed.         43