12 April 1962
Supreme Court
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HINDUSTAN IDEAL INSURANCE CO. LTD. Vs LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA

Case number: Appeal (civil) 82 of 1960


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PETITIONER: HINDUSTAN IDEAL INSURANCE CO.  LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/04/1962

BENCH: SARKAR, A.K. BENCH: SARKAR, A.K. SUBBARAO, K. MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:  1963 AIR 1083            1963 SCR  Supl. (2)  56

ACT: Insurance--"Person  making  the  reference"--Meaning  of--No period  prescribed for moving the  Corporation--Effect--Life insurance  Corporation Act, 1956 (31 of 1956), ss. 16(2)  48 (2) (f)--Life Insurance Corporation Rules, 1956, r. 12  Sub- rr. (i), (ii), (iii).

HEADNOTE: The  Life  Insurance business of the  insurer.   The  Andhra insurance  Company Ltd., vested in the Life  Insurance  Cor- poration  of  India and it became entitled  in  compensation under  s.  16 of the Life Insurance  Corporation  Act.   The Corporation  made  and  offer  of  it  and  claimed  various deductions.  The 57 insurer raised certain disputes and on August 6, 1957,  made an  application to the tribunal constituted on May 25,  1937 for re-assessment of the compensation and also for extension of time for making the application by three months from  the date  of  its  constitution.  On  September  21,  1937,  the insurer filed another statement giving details of its claim. In  answer  to the claim the Corporation filed  its  written statement.    The   tribunal  held  that   the   claim   for compensation was time-barred under r. 12 of the Rules framed under  the Act and dismissed the application.  It also  held that  under s. 16(2) of the Act the insurer had no right  to move   directly  the  tribunal  regarding  the   amount   of compensation,  but  could  move  corporation  for  making  a reference of the dispute to the tribunal and that it did not show  any cause for extending time to make the reference  to the  tribunal.   Against the judgment of the  tribunal,  the insurer  obtained  special  leave  to  add  and   thereafter amalgamated  with  Hindustan Ideal  Insurance  Company  Ltd. which was substituted as appellant in place of the insurer. Held,  (Per Subba Rao and Mudholkar, JJ.) That while  sub-s. ’(1)  of  s. 48 confers a power on the  Central  Government, sub-s. (2) of s. 16 imposes a duly upon it and thercfore, it is  obligatory upon the Central Government to prescribe  the period within which the insurer is to move the  Corporation for  referring  the  claim to the Tribunal.   When  the  law requires  aperiod to be prescribed for doing a  thing,  that

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period  should be clearly specified with specific  reference to the particular purpose.  The specific purpose referred to in  Sub.s. (2) of s. 16 is, to have the matter  referred  to the  tribunal for decision.  "Making of the refer.  ence  is thus  in  the hands of the corporation and not in  these  of insurer  who  can only move the corporation for  making  the reference.   Time  has  to be prescribed  for  enabling  the insurer  to  move  the Corporation.   Prescribing  time  for making  a reference is not prescribing time for  moving  the corporation  to  make the reference.   Prescribing  time  by implication  would not be compliance with the provisions  of Sub-s. (2) of 16. West  Durby Union v. Metropolitan Life Assurance Co.  [1897] A. C. 647, referred to. While framing r. 12 the Rule making authority lost sight  of the  fact that Sub-s. (2) of s. 16 contemplates a  reference not by the insurer but by the corporation.  The pro. ceeding taken  before the tribunal were therefore misconceived.   No question of limitation arises because the period within 58 which  an  insurer  must  move the  corporation  to  make  a reference  has not yet been prescribed as required  by  Sub- s.(2)  of s. 16.  It would be open to the appellant to  move the  corporation  under  s.  16(2)  after  such  period   is prescribed.   It  was urged by the insurer  that  the  claim cannot  treated as   barred by time and this was a fit  case for extension of time under the proviso to r. 12. Held, As r. 12, read by itself does not show clearly whether it applies to the corporation or it applies to an insurer or a chief agent or a special agent, it is permissible to  look into  the  proviso for ascertaining the scope  of  the  main provisions of that rule.  Reading it along with the  proviso would not violate any well accepted rule of construction. Held (per Sarkar, J.), that the insurer had no right to move the  tribunal directly and the proceedings commenced  by  it before  the tribunal were therefore wholly misconceived  and no  relief could be granted by the tribunal to the  insurer. As  the  insurer  had  no right to  move  the  tribunal,  no question of extending time for it to do so really arose.  If the  application for extension of time to move the  tribunal is  treated as competent under the proviso of r. 12  of  the rules,  then  also,  the appellant is not  entitled  to  any relief,  for  there  is no justification on  the  merits  to interfere with the tribunal’s order refusing to extend time. The proceedings being incompetent, an enquiry as to  whether it  had been started out of time would be wholly  irrelevant and it is therefore unneces. sary to express any opinion  on the  correct  interpretation  of r. 12 of  the  Rules.   The proceeding  being incompetent from the beginning it  is  not possible for this Court to grant any relief and,  therefore, the appeal must fail in any case.

JUDGMENT:  CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 82 of 1960. Appeal  by  special  leave from  judgment  and  order  dated February 17, 1958, of the Court of Life Insurance  Tribunal, Nagpur, in case No. 16/ XVIA of 1957. B.   K. B. Naidu, for the appellant. S.   T.  Desai,  S.  J.  Banaji and V.  L.  Hathi,  for  the respondent, 59 1962.   April 12.  The following Judgments  were  delivered. The Judgment of Subba Rao and Mudholkar, JJ ; was  delivered

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by Mudholkar, J. SARKAR  J.-The  Andhra  Insurance  Company  Ltd.,  hereafter called  the  insurer, carried on life  insurance  and  other insurance   business.   On  September  1,  1956,  the   life insurance business of the insurer became vested in the  Life Insurance  Corporation of India under the provisions of  the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956.  The insurer thereupon became  entitled  to compensation from  the  Life  Insurance Corporation under s. 16 of the Act. On February 19, 1957, the Corporation having determined  the amount   of  the  compensation  and  obtained  the   Central Government’s approval made an offer of it to the insurer  as provided  in  s.  16. By the letter making  the  offer,  the Corporation claimed various deductions.  The insurer  raised certain  disputes.  It is not necessary for the  purpose  of this appeal to refer to these disputes. On  August 6, 1957, the insurer made an application  to  the Tribunal  which had been constituted on May 25, 1957 for  an order  for re-assessment of the compensation payable to  it. In that application it also made a prayer that the  Tribunal might, if necessary, extend the time for making the applica- tion by three months from the date of its constitution.   On September  21,  1957,  the insurer  filed  in  the  Tribunal another  statement  giving the details of  its  claim.   The Corporation  in  its  turn filed its  written  statement  in answer to the claim of the insurer. The  Tribunal by its judgment dated February 17,  1958  held that  under  s.  16 of the Act an Insurer bad  no  right  to approach the Tribunal directly for deciding any dispute with the Corporation regarding the amount of the compensation but had      60 to  move the Corporation to make a reference of the  dispute to the Tribunal and this, the present insurer had not  done. It  also held that the insurer had not shown any  cause  why the  time  to make the reference to the Tribunal  should  be extended.  It further held that the claim  for  compensation was  by  time.  In the result, the  Tribunal  dismissed  the insurer’s application.      The insurer obtained special leave ’from this Court  to appeal  against the judgment of the Tribunal and under  that leave  has  presented  this  appeal.  After  the  leave  was granted, the insurer amalgamated with another company called the Hindustan Ideal insurance  Company Ltd. and  the  latter company was substituted as the appellant in the place of the insurer.               Now s. 16 of the Act is in these terms               S. 16 (1) "Where the controlled business of an               insurer has been transferred to and vested  in               the  Corporation under this Act,  compensation               shall  be  given by the  Corporation  to  that               insurer  in  accordance  with  the  principles               contained in the First Schedule.  (2)  The  amount of the  compensation  to  be               given   in  accordance  with   the   aforesaid               principles   shall   be  determined   by   the               Corporation in the first insurance, and if the               amount  so  determined  is  approved  by   the               Central Government it shall be offered to  the               insurer   in   full   satisfaction   of    the               compensation  payable to him under  this  Act,               and  if,  on  the other hand,  the  amount  so               offered  is not acceptable to the  insurer  he               may within such time as may be prescribed  for               the  purpose have the matter reference to  the

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             Tribunal for decision." It  is obvious from the terms of sub-sec. (2) of s. 16,  and it is indeed not seriously in dispute, that the                              61 Tribunal  can  be,  moved by an  insurer  only  through  the Corporation.   An insurer has no right under the section  to approach the Tribunal directly.  The procedure  contemplated is  that  an  insurer has to move the  Corporation  and  the Corporation has thereupon to refer the dispute raised by the insurer  to the Tribunal.  This inevitably follows from  the words  in  section, namely, "he may......  have  the  matter referred to the Tribunal for decision." The section no doubt does  not mention the Corporation but it is clear  from  the Act as whole that the reference contemplated was through the Corporation.  The insurer had to move some authority to make the reference and the only authority under the Act could  be the Corporation.  On this part of the case I am in agreement with  the  view  expressed in the  judgment  of  my  brother Mudholkar. In  the present case however the insurer had directly  moved the Tribunal.  This it had no right to do.  The  proceedings commenced  by it were therefore wholly  misconceived.   That being  so,  the insurer could not have obtained  any  relief from the Tribunal nor could the Tribunal have granted it any relief.   In this appeal, therefore, it is not possible  for the  Court either to grant any relief to the insurer or  its successor-in-interest, the appellant.  The proceeding  being incompetent from the beginning, the appellant cannot ask for anything in it. It  would have been noticed that the insurer had  asked  the Tribunal  to  extend  the  time to enable  it  to  make  the application to the Tribunal.  As it had no right to move the Tribunal, no question of extending any time to do so really arose. Now r. 12 of the Rule framed under the Act provides for  the time within which a reference 62 may be made to the Tribunal in respect of the  determination of compensation payable under the Act." The time  prescribed for the present case was three months from the date on which the  compensation was offered to the insurer.  Within  these three  months  the  insurer bad done  nothing.   This  rule, however, contains a proviso which is in these terms :               "Provided  that  any  such  reference  may  be               admitted  by the Tribunal after the period  of               limitation prescribed thereunder this rule, if               the person making the reference satisfies  the               Tribunal that he bad sufficient cause for  not               making the reference within the said period. If it is contended that the insurer was entitled to move the Tribunal  directly under this proviso and had in  fact  done so,  then,  I think, it must be held that the  Tribunal  was right  in  its  view that no cause had  been  shown  by  the insurer  why  time  should be extended.   Therefore  if  the application  so  far as it asked for extension  of  time  is treated as a competent one under this proviso, then also  on the merits, the appellant is not entitled to any relief, for there  is no justification to interfere with the order  that the Tribunal made in this behalf The appeal must in any case fail. I  do  not  feel  called upon to go  into  any  question  of limitation  in  the  present  case.   The  proceeding  being incompetent, an inquiry as to whether it had been started of time  would  be wholly irrelevant.  L  therefore,  think  it unnecessary to express any opinion on the interpretation  of

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r. 12 of the Rules made under the Act. The result is that the appeal is dismissed.  As to costs,  I think  that  as the Corporation itself had  not  before  the Tribunal  contended that the proceeding was incompetent  nor had raised an.* such                              63 point  in  its statement of case in this appeal  it  is  not entitled to any. MUDHOLKAR, J.-The Andhra Insurance Co... Ltd.,  (hereinafter called the Company) was a composite insurance company,  that is,  doing  business in life insurance, fire  insurance  and general  insurance.  By virtue of the Provisions of s.  7(1) of  the  Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956 (31  of  1956) (hereinafter called the Act) all its assets and  liabilities pertaining to the life insurance business stood  transferred and vested in the Life Insurance Corporation on September 1, 1956.  Under s. 16(1) of the Act the Company was entitled to receive  Compensation  from the  Corporation  determined  in accordance  with the principles contained in First  Schedule to the Act.  On February 14, 1957, the Corporation wrote  to the Company stating, among other things, that the amount  of compensation  payable  to it under s. 16(1) of  the  Act  as determined  by the Corporation and approved by  the  Central Government  comes to Rs. 6,14,636.  The Corporation made  an offer of this amount to the Company in full satisfaction  of the  compensation  payable to it.  The  Corporation  further stated in its letter that the part of the paid up capital of the  Company  and assets representing such part  which  have been  allocated  to  the life business  of  the  Company  in accordance  with  s. 18 of the  Life  Insurance  Corporation Rules,  1956 (hereinafter called the Rules) amounts  to  Rs. 3,76,117/-  and that as the aforesaid assests have not  been transferred  to  the  corporation the  said  amount  of  Rs. 3,76,117/-  will  be set off against and deducted  from  the amount  of  compensation payable to  the  Company.   Certain correspondence  then  ensued  between the  Company  and  the Corporation  and  it  would appear from it  that  while  the Company   accepted   the  computation  of  the   amount   of compensation made by the Corporation there was  disagreement between the parties over the valuation 64 of the assets of the Company which stood transferred to  the Corporation.  The Company objected to the deductions of  Rs. 3,76,117/.   Eventually  on  August  6,  1957  the   Company preferred  a  petition of appeal before the  Life  Insurance Tribunal,  Nagpur,  constituted by  the  Central  Government under  s.  17(1)  of the Act.  On  September  21,  1957  the Company  lodged its statement of claim before the  Tribunal. The  Corporation  resisted  the claim  out  forward  by  the Company  on various grounds. the Tribunal framed  27  issues but it gave its findings only on the first three issues  and dismissed  the  claim.   We  may mention  that  we  are  not concerned with any of the issues except No. 3 because it  is on  the basis of its finding thereon that it  dismissed  the claim  of the Company.  That issue is whether the  claim  of the Company is barred by time. It  does  not  appear  from the  written  statement  of  the Corporation  that it had raised a plea of  limitation.   All the  same  the Tribunal in its order has said  that  as  the Company did not lodge a claim before it within three  months of   February  14,  1957,  which  was  the  date  on   which compensation  was offered by the Corporation to the  Company it  was barred by r. 12 of the Rules framed under  the  Act. The Tribunal further observed that the Company. had to  move the  Corporation  under  s.  16(2) of  the  Act  to  make  a

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reference  to the Tribunal, it failed to do so and  that  it did not show any cause whatsoever for its failure to do so,. but  instead submitted its claim direct to the  Tribunal  on August  12,  1957.  No question, therefore,  excusing  delay under the proviso to r. 12 arose. Aggrieved by the decision of the Tribunal the Company  moved this  Court under Art. 136 of the Constitution for grant  of special leave to appeal.  Leave was granted by this Court on August  18, 1958.  Subsequent to the grant of leave by  this Court the Company in pursuance of its scheme sanctioned by                              65 the  High Court of Andhra Pradesh was amalgamated  with  the Hindustan  Ideal Insurance Co., Ltd.  By reason of this  the letter  has  now  been substituted as  appellant  under  the orders of this Court dated April 14, 1959. On  behalf of the appellant Mr. B.K.B. Naidu contended  that since  the  Tribunal  itself wag not  appointed  before  the expiry of the period of three months provided in r. 12,  the claim  made by the Company cannot be treated, as  barred  by time because in his submission limitation would not commence to run till the date on which the Tribunal was  constituted. Alternatively  he  contended  that this was a  fit  case  in which,  under  the proviso to r. 12, time should  have  been extended. On behalf of the Corporation Mr. S. T. Desai contended  that under  sub-s.2 of s. 16 it was not open to ,in insurer  like the  Company to prefer a claim directly before the  Tribunal and that all that the law entitled the Company to do was  to move  the Corporation to make a reference, that this had  to be   done  within  three  months  and  that  thereupon   the Corporation  had to make a reference to the Tribunal  within the  period of three months prescribed by r. 12. Since  this procedure  was  not  adopted  the  proceedings  before   the Tribunal were incompetent. Sub-section 2 of s. 16 reads thus :               "The amount of the compensation to be given in               accordance with the aforesaid principles shall               be  determined  by the  Corporation  in  first               instance,  and if the amount so determined  is               approved by the Central Government it shall be               offered to the insurer in full satisfaction of               the  compensation  payable to him  under  this               Act, and if, on the other hand, the amount  so               offered  is not acceptable to the  insurer  he               may within such time as may be prescribed  for               the  purpose have the matter referred  to  the               Tribunal for decisions" 66 A  plain reading of this provision shows that the  reference had  to  be  made not by the insurer but  by  someone  else. Though that someone is not expressly specified in sub-s.  2, the context shows that that someone would be none other than the Corporation.  The Central Government has not at any rate specifically prescribed the period within which the  insurer has  to move the Corporation for referring its claim to  the Tribunal for decision. According to this provision the insurer is entitled to  have the  matter  referred to the Tribunal for  decision  "within such   time   as  may  be  prescribed  for   the   purpose." "Prescribed"   means   prescribed  by  Rules.    It   would, therefore,, follow that the Central Government has to make a rule  prescribing the period within which the  insurer  must move  the Corporation for making the reference.  Mr.  Desai, however,  contends  that that is not  provision  means.   A- cording  to him the provision has to be read along  with  s.

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4812)(f  of  the  Act.  Section 48 is  the  provision  which confers  power  on  the Central Government  to  make  rules. Clause  (f)  of  sub.s. 2 enable it to  prescribe  the  time within  which  any  matter  which may  be  referred  to  the Tribunal  for a decision under the Act may be  so  referred. Therefore, according to learned counsel, it is the period of limitation for this purpose which the Central Government has to  prescribe  and not the period within which  the  insurer must move the Tribunal.  He, however, says that the  insurer has to move the Corporation before the expiry of the. period within  which the Corporation is to make a reference to  the Tribunal. We  cannot accept the contention.  On the plain language  of sub-s.  2  of  S.  16 it is  obligatory  upon  the  ’Central Government to prescribe the period within which the  insurer is  to move the Corporation ’for referring its claim to  the Tribunal.   No  doubt,  cl.  (f)  does  not  refer  to   the prescription                              67 of time for such a purpose.  But the provisions of sub.s.  1 of s. 48 are wide enough to enable the Central Government to prescribe the time for this purpose.  Under that  subsection the  Central Government is empowered to make rules to  carry out the purposes of the Act.  One of the purpose of the  Act is to prescribe the time within which an insurer has to move the  Corporation for making a reference.  While sub-s. 1  of s. 48 confers a power on the Central Government, sub-s. 2 of s.  16  imposes  a  duty  upon  it  and,  therefore,  it  is obligatory  upon  the Central Government to make a  rule  in this behalf by exercising the power under s. 48 (1). Mr. Desai then contends that the rule actually framed by the Central  Government  that  is, r. 12 must be  deemed  to  be sufficient for his purpose.  That rule is in following terms :               "Reference to Tribunal.-The time within  which               a  reference  may be made to the  Tribunal  in               respect  of the determination of  compensation               payable-under  the Act, shall be  as  follows,               namely :-               (i)   in  the case of an insurer to whom  com-               pensation is payable under Part A or Part B or               Part  C  of  the First Schedule  to  the  Act,               within three months from the date on which the               compensation determined by the Corporation  is               offered to the insurer               (ii)  in  the case of an insurer to whom  com-               pensation is payable under Part B of the First               Schedule  to the Act, within six  months  from               the date on which the compensation  determined               by the Corporation is offered to the insurer               (iii) in the case of compensation payable to a               Chief agent or special agent under the               68               proviso to section 36 of the Act, within three               months from the date on which the compensation               determined  by the Corporation is  offered  to               the chief agent or special agent, as the  case               may be :               Provided  that  any  such  reference  may   be               admitted  by the Tribunal after the period  of               limitation  prescribed  therefor  under   this               rule,  if  the  person  making  the  reference               satisfies the Tribunal that he had  sufficient               cause  for not making the reference   within               the said period."

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According  to Mr. Desai, under sub-r. (1) of this  Rule  the Corporation  has to make a reference to the Tribunal  within three months.  It would, therefore, according to him, follow that the insurer must move the Corporation before the expiry of that period and that, therefore, by framing this rule the Central Government has not only carried out the requirements of  ol. (f) of sub-s. 2 of s. 48 but also of sub-s. 2 of  s. 16. It is difficult to appreciate this argument for two reasons. The  first one is that when the law requires a period to  be prescribed for doing a thing, that period should be  clearly specified   w ith  specific  reference  to  the   particular purpose.  The specific purpose referred to in sub-s. 2 of s. 16  is  "to  have the matter referred to  the  Tribunal  for decision."  Making of the reference is thus in the hands  of the  Corporation and not the insurer who can only  move  the Corporation for making the, reference.  Time is required  to be   prescribed   for  doing  this  act  by   the   insurer. Prescribing  time for making a reference is not  prescribing time  for Moving the Corporation to make the reference.   It may be that when the latter period is prescribed it would be possible  to sty that before the expiry of that  period  the insurer must move the Corporation.  But                              69 prescribing time by implication would not be compliance with the provisions of sub-s. 2 of s. 16.  For, when a period  is prescribed  for doing an act the person who has to  do  that act  is  entitled  to do it even on the last  day.   If  the construction  of learned counsel is accepted it  would  mean that  the  insurer would be within time under r.  12  if  he moves  the  Corporation on the date on which the  period  of three  months  expires.   If he does that how  would  it  be possible  for  the Corporation to make a  reference  to  the Tribunal also on the same day ? The second reason for not accepting the construction  placed by learned counsel is that the proviso to r. 12 empowers the Tribunal to admit a reference after the period of limitation prescribed  therefor  if the "person making  the  reference" satisfies the Tribunal that he had sufficient clause for not making  the  reference within the  prescribed  period.   The proviso  thus indicates that the reference to  the  Tribunal contemplated  by r. 12 is to be made by the insurer and  not by the Corporation.  This appears to be so from the language of  the proviso itself.  No doubt r. 12, considered  without the proviso, may well be construed as applying to  reference to  be  made by the Corporation.  But considering  the  rule along  with  the proviso it would appear that the  rule  was meant  to  govern a reference by someone’ else and  not  the Corporation.  That someone could be either the insurer or  a chief  agent  or  special  agent who  also  is  entitled  to compensation under the proviso to s. 36. Learned counsel then advanced a rather novel argument.   The argument  is  this.  While the opening words of  r.  12  may apply to the Corporation as to an insurer, a chief agent  or a  special agent sub-rr. (i), (ii) and (iii)  thereof  apply only to the Corporation, whereas the proviso applies only to an insurer or a chief agent or special agent as the case may be. If the provision, that is, the whole or r. 12 is 70 read thus, the contention proceeds, there would be no lacuna in the rules, and the proviso to r. 12 would not be rendered redundant. All  that Mr. Desai could say in support of  his  contention that sub-rr. (i), (ii) and (iii) of r. 12 must be  construed to   apply  to  the  Corporation  alone  is  that   such   a

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construction would avoid a lacuna in the rules.  But what is the lacuna ? We have already pointed out that the lacuna  is in  not  prescribing the time within which an  insurer  must move  the Corporation for making a reference.   That  lacuna will  not  be  removed even if we  accept  the  construction pressed  by learned counsel.  That apart, upon the  language of  the sub-rules, they cannot be construed as  applying  to the Corporation alone. "earned  counsel  then  contended that if  we  construe  the proviso in such a way as to make the substantive  provisions of  r. 12 applicable to an insurer or a chief agent and  not to  the  Corporation we would be limiting the scope  of  the main enacting provision and that is not permissible. There is no doubt that where the main provision is clear its effect  cannot be cut down by the proviso.  But where it  is not  clear  the proviso, which cannot be presumed  to  be  a surplusage,  can properly be looked into the  ascertain  the meaning and scope of the main provision.  By ’looking at the proviso  for this purpose the rule of Constiuction  referred to by learned counsel will not be infringed.’ In  the West Derby Union v. Metropolitn Life Assurance  Co.. (1) Lord Watson observed : ".........  I perfectly admit that there may be and are  any oases which the terms of ail intelligible proviso may  throw considerable (1)  (1897) A.C. 641, 652.                              71 light on the ambiguous import of the statutory words." In the same case Lord Herschell admitted that a proviso  may be  a useful guide in the selection of one or other  of  two possible constructions of words in the enactment or to  show the scope of the latter in a doubtful case. Here we find that r. 12 read by itself does not show clearly whether it appeals to the Corporation special agent.  It  is therefore,   permissible  to  look  into  the  proviso   for ascertaining  the scope of the main provisions of r.’12.  As we  have stated earlier the proviso cannot, upon its  proper construction apply to the Corporation.  When, therefore,  we read  r. 12 as a whole, that is, along with the  proviso  we would   not   be  violating  any   well-accepted   rule   of construction  though  by  so  reading  it  we  came  to  the conclusion that r. 12 applies only to an insurer or a  chief agent or a special agent but not to the Corporation. We may further point out that the proviso would be  rendered useless if we are to hold that r. 12 deals with a  reference made by the Corporation only.  The reason why we say that it will be rendered useless is this, Supposing an insurer moves the Corporation beyond three months for making a  reference, would the Corporation be bound to make the reference ?  Upon the terms of sub-s. 2 of s. 16 the Corporation would only be bound to make a reference if is moved by the insurer  within the  prescribed  period.  If that is so,  then  no  occasion would  arise for enabling the insurer to move  the  Tribunal for  condoning the delay.  According to Mr. Desai,  however, the  Corporation could be compelled by mandamus to make  the reference.  The short answer to that is that there being  no duty  upon  the Corporation to make a  reference  after  the expiry  or  the period prescribed by r. 12 no  mandamus  can issue to it. 72 Another  reason for not accepting the contention of  learned counsel  is that the proviso speak of the person making  the reference  satisfying  the Tribunal that he  has  sufficient cause for not making the reference, within the same  period. If  the insurer is not the person making the reference,  how

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can be be said to be permitted to satisfy the Tribunal about the  sufficiency  of the cause for condoning  the  delay  in making  the reference ? Mr. Desai, however, suggest that  we should  read the words "if the person making  the  reference satisfies  the  Tribunal ... etc." as if they read  "if  the person at whose instance the reference is made satisfies the Tribunal  ...  etc."’That would be rewriting  the  provision which we cannot do. It  seems  to us that while framing r. 12  the  rule  making authority  lost  sight  of  fact  that  subs.  2  of  s.  16 contemplates  a  reference  not by the insurer  but  by  the Corporation.  Learned counsel urged that we should not place an  interpretation upon the rule which will leave a  serious lacuna in the working of the act.  We-appreciate his conten- tion but there is no escape from the result. The  proceedings  before  the  Tribunal  were   misconceived because the only way in which they could be initiated was by a  reference  by  the  Corporation and  there  was  no  such reference.   No  question of limitation arises  because  the period within which an insurer Must move the Corporation  to make a reference has not yet been prescribed as required  by sub-s. 2 of s. 16.  It will be open to the Appellant to move the  Corporation  under  s.  16(2)  after  such  period   is prescribed. In  the  result  we quash all  the  proceedings  before  the Tribunal  but in the particular circumstances make no  order as to costs. Appeal Dismissed. 73