30 March 1989
Supreme Court
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LACHHMAN DASS Vs RAM LAL & ANR.

Bench: MUKHARJI,SABYASACHI (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 2104 of 1989


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PETITIONER: LACHHMAN DASS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: RAM LAL & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT30/03/1989

BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) RANGNATHAN, S.

CITATION:  1989 AIR 1923            1989 SCR  (2) 250  1989 SCC  (3)  99        JT 1989  Supl.     78  1989 SCALE  (1)921

ACT:     Arbitration    Act,    1940:   Sections   14,    30    & 33--Award--Affecting  immovable property of value more  than Rs.  100--Cannot  be looked in to by  Court--Requirement  of registration--Necessity for--Court cannot pronounce judgment upon such an unregistered award.     Indian  Registration  Act: Sections 17, 23,  25  &  49-- Unless   a   document   is  clearly   brought   within   its provisions--Non  registration  no bar to being  admitted  in evidence--Award  affecting immovable property  valued  above Rs.  100  cannot be taken into evidence  unless  registered- Subsequent  registration whether in conformity or in  viola- tion of sections 23 & 25--Not relevant. Section 17--A  disa- bling section--To be construed strictly.

HEADNOTE:     By an agreement dated 7 March, 1974, both the  appellant and the respondent-Ram Lal appointed an arbitrator to  adju- dicate  through arbitration their disputes about a  plot  of land. The arbitrator gave his award on 22 May 1974  stating, inter  alia, that the land in dispute was in the joint  name of  the appellant and respondent-Ram Lal, and that the  half ownership  of the appellant shall now be owned by  Shri  Ram Lal  in  addition  to his 1/2 share owned by  him  in  those lands.     The arbitrator filed an application before Sub-Judge, II Class for making the award the rule of the Court. The appel- lant  filed objections under section 33 of  the  Arbitration Act, to set aside the award on various grounds but no  point was  raised that the award was unenforceable because it  was not  properly  stamped and not registered. The  trial  court dismissed  all the objections taken under section 14 of  the Arbitration Act and made the award the rule of the Court.     The  District Judge, in the appeal filed by  the  appel- lant, came to the conclusion that the award declared a right in  immovable  property and since it  was  unregistered  and unstamped it could not be made the rule of the Court. The  High  Court, however, allowed the appeal filed  by  the res- 251 pondent  on  the ground that the award did  not  create  any

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right  in immovable property, and that it only admitted  the already existing rights between the parties and hence it did not require any registration. The appellant appealed by special leave to this Court.     During  the  pendency of the said appeal the  award  was submitted  for  registration on 19 December,  1988  and  was registered on 3 February, 1989.     On behalf of appellant-it was argued that the High Court was  wrong in looking into an unregistered award,  and  that its  subsequent registration was obtained by  misrepresenta- tion  and  misleading the authorities did  not  validate  it retrospectively and that the registration having been beyond the period of four months was wholly bad.     On behalf of the respondent the appeal was contested  by contending that the award did not require registration as it did  not  create,  declare or assign any new  right  in  the immovable property, but that it merely declared the existing right of ownership of the respondent, that the appellant was barred  from taking the plea of its being unregistered at  a later stage as it had not been taken by him before the trial court.  It  was  further submitted that  the  appellant  was estopped  from agitating the question after the lapse of  30 days as is statutorily required under s. 30 of the  Arbitra- tion Act. Allowing the appeal, this Court,     HELD: (1) The real purpose of registration is to  secure that  every  person dealing with the  property,  where  such document  requires  registration, may rely  with  confidence upon  statements  contained in the register as  a  full  and complete  account of all transactions by which title may  be affected.  Section  17  of the said Act  being  a  disabling section,  must  be construed strictly. Therefore,  unless  a document  is  clearly brought within the provisions  of  the section,  its non-registration would be no bar to its  being admitted in evidence. [259C-D]     Ramaswamy  Ayyar  & Anr. v. Thirupathi Naik,  ILR  XXVII Madras p. 43, affirmed.     (2)  On  a  proper construction of the  award,  it  does appear that the award did create, declare or assign a right, title  and  interest in the immovable  property.  The  award declares that 1/2 share of the ownership 252 of  Shri Lachhman Dass shall "be now owned by Shri Ram  Lal, the  respondent in addition to his 1/2 share owned in  these lands."  Therefore,the said award declares the right of  Ram Lal to the said share of the said property mentioned in that clause.  It  is  not in dispute that the  said  property  is immovable property and it is not merely a declaration of the pre-existing right but creation of new right of the parties. The  award  in the instant case affects  immovable  property over  Rs.  I00 and as such was required  to  be  registered. [259D-F; 262G]     (3)  The filing of an unregistered award under s. 49  of the Act was not prohibited. What was prohibited was that  it could  not be taken into evidence so as to affect  immovable property failing under S. 17 of the Act. [260E]     (4)  An award affecting immovable property of the  value of more than Rs. I00 cannot be looked into by the Court  for pronouncement upon the award, on the application under s. 14 of  the  Arbitration  Act unless the  award  is  registered. Section  14 enjoins that when an award of an arbitrator  has been filed, the Court should give notice to the parties  and thereupon the court shall pronounce judgment upon the  award and make it a rule of the Court. But in order to do so,  the court  must be competent to look into the award. Section  49

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of  the  act enjoins that the award cannot  be  received  as evidence of any transaction affecting immovable property  or conferring power to adopt, unless it is registered. In  that view  of the matter, no judgment upon the award  could  have been pronounced upon the unregistered award. [263E-F]     Satish  Kumar & Ors. v. Surinder Kumar & Ors., [1969]  2 SCR  244 and Ratan Lal Sharma v. Purshottam Harit, [1974]  3 SCR 109, relied upon.     (5)  In the instant case, though it may not be  possible to  take  the  point that the. award is bad  because  it  is unregistered as such, it could not be taken into  considera- tion  in a proceeding under s. 30 or 33 of  the  Arbitration Act,  but it can be taken in the proceedings under s. 14  of the Arbitration Act when the award is sought to be .filed in the  Court and the Court is called upon to pass a decree  in accordance with the award. As the court could not look  into the  award,  there  is no question of the  court  passing  a decree in accordance with the award and that point can  also be taken when the award is sought to be enforced as the rule of  the Court. Further, at the relevant time the  award  was not registered. If that is the position, then the subse- 253 quent  registration of the award whether in conformity  with sections  23  and 25 of the Act or whether in breach  or  in violation of the same is not relevant. [265A-D] Gangaprashad v. Mt. Banaspati, AIR 1933 Nagpur 132, referred to.

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2 104  of 1989.                            WITH                 C.M.P. No. 26956 of 1988.     From  the  Judgment  and Order dated  22.4.1988  of  the Punjab and Haryana High Court in C.R. No. 2875 of 1979. Ashok K. Sen and G.K. Bansal for the Appellant. S.M. Ashri and C.S. Ashri for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. Special leave granted.     This  appeal is from the judgment and order of the  High Court  of  Punjab and Haryana dated 22nd  April,  1988.  The dispute  was  between  the two brothers.  Both  the  parties appointed  one  Shri  Ajit Singh as the  Arbitrator  on  7th March, 1974 for settlement of the dispute about 2 1/2 Killas of land situated near Chandni Bagh, Panipat in the State  of Haryana.  The said land stood in the name of the  appellant. According  to the respondent, Ram Lal, it was benami in  the name of the appellant. That was the dispute. The  arbitrator gave his award on 22nd May, 1974 and moved an application on 23rd  September,  1974 before the Court  of  Sub-Judge  IInd Class, Panipat, for making the award the rule of the  Court. The application was registered in the said Court and  notice was  issued to the appellant herein on 7th  November,  1974. Objections  were  filed  by  the  appellant  taking  various grounds.  It was contended that the appellant  had  informed the  sole  arbitrator  through registered notice  and  by  a telegraphic notice that he had no faith in the said arbitra- tor  and had thus repudiated his authority to  proceed  with the arbitration proceedings. It was also contended that  the award  was  lop-sided,  perverse,  and  totally  unjust  and against all cannons of justice and fair play. It was alleged that the arbitrator had acted in a partisan manner. He never heard the claim of the appellant and never

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254 called  upon him to substantiate his claim and had acted  as an agent of the respondent. It was, therefore, prayed by the appellant  that the award be set aside. It may be  mentioned that no point was raised that the award was bad and unforce- able  because it was not properly stamped nor any  plea  was taken  that the award was an unregistered one as such  could not be made the rule of the court.     Several  issues  were  framed. No  issue  was,  however, framed  on the ground that the award was bad because it  was not  properly  stamped or that it was  not  registered.  The appellant, who was respondent No. 2 in the said  proceedings before  the learned Trial Judge, gave his version about  the repudiation  of the authority. The learned Trial Judge  had, however, held that the appellant had failed to prove that he had repudiated the authority of the arbitrator to enter upon the  arbitration  through  registered  notice  or  otherwise before  the arbitrator announced his award. It  was  further held  that the award of the arbitrator was not liable to  be set aside on the grounds taken. The objections were  treated as objections under section 33 of the Arbitration Act,  1940 and it was filed within the limitation period. In that  view of the matter, the learned Sub-Judge IInd Class, Panipat  by his  order  dated 28th July, 1977 dismissed  the  objections under  Section 14 of the Arbitration Act, 1940 and made  the said award the rule of the court.     Aggrieved thereby, the appellant went up in first appeal before  the Additional District Judge, Karnal.  The  learned Additional  District Judge, while dealing with  the  conten- tions of the appellant, held that the application was  prop- erly  filed.  A point was taken before the  first  Appellate Court  that the award was on an unstamped paper and as  such could not be made the rule of the court.     The  learned District Judge held that the award has  not been properly stamped and as such could not be made the rule of  the  court.  It was also contended  before  the  learned District  Judge that the award was unregistered and as  such it  could not be made the rule of the court as  it  affected immovable  property of more than Rs. 100. The  learned  Dis- trict Judge after analysing the provisions of section 17  of the Registration Act, 1908 (hereinafter referred as to  ’the Act’)  came to the conclusion that the award declared  right in  immovable  property and since it  was  unregistered,  it could  not be made the rule of the court. The  learned  Dis- trict  Judge, however, also came to the conclusion that  the authority of the arbitrator had been repudiated. This ground no longer survives. In the aforesaid view of the matter, the learned District Judge allowed the appeal on the ground that the 255 award  was unregistered and unstamped and as such could  not be made the rule of the court and set aside the order of the learned Trial Judge.     There  was a second appeal to the High Court.  The  High Court upheld the award. The High Court noted that the neces- sary  stamp  was purchased on 8th August,  1974  before  the award  was filed on the 9th September, 1974. And that  being so,  it could not be argued successfully that the award  was unstamped.  In that view of the matter, the High Court  held that the learned District Judge was in error in allowing the stamp objection to be taken.     As  regards  the registration, it was held by  the  High Court  that  the award did not create any right as  such  in immovable  property; it only admitted the  already  existing rights between the parties and hence it did not require  any

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registration. In that view of the matter, the High Court was of the opinion that the first appellate Court was wrong. The High Court was further of the view that no right was created in favour of Shri Ram Lal, the respondent herein when he was declared the owner. Both Lachhman Das, the appellant and Ram Lal,  the respondent, had claimed their ownership  and,  ac- cording to the High Court, they had the existing rights. The award only made, according to the High Court, it clear  that the ownership would vest in one of the brothers, Ram Lal. In the aforesaid view of the matter, the High Court was of  the view  that it did not require registration. The  High  Court allowed the appeal and directed the restoration of the order of the learned trial court and the award be made the rule of the court.     Aggrieved  thereby,  the appellant has come up  to  this Court. The question is--Was the High Court right in the view it took?     Mr. A.K. Sen, learned counsel for the appellant contend- ed that the High Court was clearly in error in the facts and circumstances of this case to have made this award the  rule of the court and to have looked upon this award which at all relevant  and  material  time was unregistered.  It  may  be mentioned that when this matter came up before this Court on the  5th  December, 1988, the matter was adjourned  for  two months and it was recorded "In the meantime, the parties may take steps". Thereafter, it appears that the award was filed for  registration  on 19th December, 1988  before  the  Sub- Registrar, Panipat and was registered actually on 3rd Febru- ary,  1989. Mr. Sen, contended that the registration of  the award subsequently made in the manner indicated hereinbefore did not validate it retrospectively in 256 view of the relevant provisions of the Act. The award  being an  unregistered one could not have been looked into by  the High  Court. Mr. Sen tried to urge before us that the  award was got registered by misrepresentation of the order of this Court  dated 5th December, 1988. This Court did not, on  5th December, 1988, direct that the registration could be  made. All that this Court observed was that the parties might take steps.     It  may  be mentioned that on or  about  18th  December, 1988,  it appears at page 75 of the present paper book  that an application was made for registration of award which  was said to have been applied by Shri Ajit Singh, S/o Shri  Beer Singh. In the said letter, it was mentioned that Mr. justice J.V.  Gupta of the Hon’ble High Court of Punjab and  Haryana had  held  in favour of the said writer and it  was  further stated that on the 5th December, 1988, this Court  dismissed the  case  of  Lachhman Singh, the  appellant  herein,  copy whereof  was enclosed. The award was filed for  registration on  18th  December, 1988. The statements  contained  in  the letter were incorrect and misleading inasmuch as this  Court did  not dismiss the case of the appellant on 5th  December, 1988. On the other hand, this Court, as mentioned  hereinbe- fore  on  the 5th December, 1988, merely observed  that  the appellant  would be at liberty to do what was  needful.  Mr. Ashri,  learned counsel for the respondent,  submitted  that the registration was done in view of provisions of  sections 23 and 25 of the Act. Mr. Sen, on the other hand,  submitted before  us that this was wholly irregular to  have  obtained registration by misleading the Sub-Registrar and this was of no effect. Furthermore, in any event, according to Mr.  Sen, the  registration  having  been beyond the  period  of  four months  as  enjoined by the relevant provisions  was  wholly

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bad.     The  first question that requires consideration  in  the instant case is whether the Court could have looked into the award  for  the  purpose of pronouncing  judgment  upon  the award. In order to deal with this question, it is  necessary to  refer  to Section 17 of the Act. Section 17  deals  with documents of which registration is compulsory. Section 17 of the  said  Act mentions the documents which must  be  regis- tered. Section 17(1)(e), inter alia, provides:               "non-testamentary instruments transferring  or               assigning  any decree or order of a  Court  or               any  order of a Court or any award  when  such               decree or order or award purports or  operates               to  create, declare, assign, limit  or  extin-               guish,  whether in present or in  future,  any               right, title or interest,               257               whether  in present or in future,  any  right,               title or interest,, whether vested or  contin-               gent,  of the value of one hundred rupees  and               upwards, to or in immovable property."               Section 23 of the said Act provides as under:               "Subject  to the provisions contained in  sec-               tions  24, 25 and 26, no document  other  than               will shall be accepted for registration unless               presented  for  that  purpose  to  the  proper               officer  within four months from the  date  of               its execution:                      Provided  that  a copy of a  decree  or               order may be presented within four months from               the day on which the decree or order was made,               or, where it is appealable, within four months               from the day on which it becomes final."               Section 25 of the said Act provides as under:               "If, owing to urgent necessity or  unavoidable               accident, any document executed, or copy of  a               decree or order made, in India is not present-               ed for registration till after the  expiration               of the time hereinbefore presented in that be-               half, the Registrar, in cases where the  delay               in  presentation does not exceed four  months,               may  direct  that, on payment of  a  fine  not               exceeding  ten times the amount of the  proper               registration-fee,   such  document  shall   be               accepted for registration."               Section 49 of the said Act provides as under:               "No document required by section 17 or by  any               provision  of  the Transfer of  Property  Act,               1882, to be registered shall               (a)  affect any immovable  property  comprised               therein, or               (b) confer any power to adopt, or                  (c) be received as evidence of any transac-               tion  affecting  such property  or  conferring               such power,               unless it has been registered." 258 The  proviso to this section deals with a suit for  specific performance with which we are not concerned.     Shri  Ashri contended that the document in question  was one  which did not require registration. He  submitted  that the  High  Court was right in the view it took.  He  further submitted that the property in dispute was in the joint name of the appellant and the respondent. The dispute was whether the  half of the property held by the appellant  was  benami

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for the respondent or a declaration to that effect could  be made by the arbitrator. Mr. Ashri further submitted that  it was  the case of the appellant that he was the owner of  the property  in  question. The award in question  recites  that Shri  Ajit  Singh  had been appointed as  arbitrator  by  an agreement  dated  7th March, 1974 by both the  parties.  The award  further recites that he was appointed  arbitrator  to adjudicate  through  arbitration "their  disputes  regarding property  against  each other".  The  arbitrator  thereafter recites  the steps taken and the proceedings before him.  It was  further stated that the appellant did not orally  reply to  the contentions of the respondent nor did he submit  his claims  in  writing. In these circumstances, the  award  was bad. The award stated, inter-alia,               "Land of Tibbi comprising of rect. No. 13 Kila               No.  23 (3-11), 26(1-11), 16(5-15),  17(5-14),               25(4-4), 23/27 and 26/1 situated in Mauz  Ugra               Kheri,  near  Chandni Bagh, which  is  in  the               joint  name of Shri Ram Lal, Party No.  1  and               Shri  Lachhman  Dass, Party No.  2.  The  half               ownership  of Shri Lachhman Dass shall be  now               owned  by Shri Ram Lal in addition to his  1/2               share owned by him in these lands." The  award  gave certain other directions.  Regarding  other claims, it was held that lands were allotted in the names of both the brothers and in that context Rs. 16,000 were  spent by  the  respondent  from his own  sources.  The  arbitrator stated  that  he admitted these expenses at Rs.  10,000  and awarded that an amount of Rs.5,000 equal to 1/2 share should be paid by the appellant to the respondent. The other claims were  also decided by the award with which it is not  neces- sary  to deal in the present appeal. The  question  is--does this award purport or operate to create, declare or  assign, limit or extinguish any right, title or interest in  immova- ble  property? Shri Ashri submitted that as his  client  was the  real owner and as respondent No. 1 was  mere  benamdar, and the arbitrator merely declared the true position and the award  did not as such create, declare or assign any  fight, title or interest in any immovable property by the aforesaid clause in the award. 259     The Division Bench of the Madras High Court in Ramaswamy Ayyar & Anr. v. Thirupathi Naik, ILR XXVII Madras p. 43  has observed  that  the criterion for purposes  of  registration under the Registration Act, 1877 (III of 1877), which was in the same term as the provision of the present Act, was  what was  expressed on the face of the document, not  what  inci- dents  might  be annexed by custom to a grant of  the  kind. Therefore,  we have to see not what the document intends  to convey  really,  but what it purports to  convey.  In  other words,  it  is  necessary. to examine not so  much  what  it intends to do but what it purports to do.     The real purpose of registration is to secure that every person  dealing with the property, where such  document  re- quires  registration, may rely with confidence  upon  state- ments  contained  in  the register as a  full  and  complete account of all transactions by which title may be  affected. Section  17 of the said Act being a disabling section,  must be  construed  strictly.  Therefore, unless  a  document  is clearly  brought within the provisions of the  section,  its non-registration  would be no bar to its being  admitted  in evidence.     On a proper construction of the award, it does appear to us  that  the award did create, declare or assign  a  right, title  and  interest in the immovable  property.  The  award

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declares  that 1/2 share of the ownership of  Shri  Lachhman Dass shall "be now owned by Shri Ram Lal, the respondent  in addition to his 1/2 share owned in those lands".  Therefore, the  said  award declares the right of Ram Lal to  the  said share  of the said property mentioned in that clause. It  is not in dispute that the said property is immovable  property and it is not merely a declaration of the pre-existing right but creation of new right of the parties. It is  significant to bear in mind that the section enjoins registration  wher- ever  the  award "purports or operates to  create,  declare, assign, limit or extinguish" whether in present or in future any  right,  title or interest of the value of  Rs.  100  or upwards in immovable property.     Shri Ashri tried to submit that while reading the  award reasonably  and fairly, it must be construed that there  was no creation or declaration of any new right in the immovable property. What was done was only, according to Shri Ashri, a declaration  of  existing right, that is to say,  Ram  Lal’s full  ownership  of the property in question.  The  section, however,  enjoins registration in respect of  any  document, which purports not which intends to create a right in immov- able  property or declare a right in immovable property.  It is not a question of declaration of an existing right. It is by this award that a new right was 260 being  created in favour of Ram Lal, the respondent  herein. In  that  view of the matter, in our opinion, it  cannot  be contended that the award did not require registration.  This question was considered by this Court in Satish Kumar & Ors. v.  Surinder Kumar & Ors., [1969] 2 SCR 244. There an  arbi- trator  appointed  by  the appellants  and  the  respondents partitioned their immovable property exceeding the value  of Rs.  100.  The arbitrator applied under section  14  of  the Arbitration  Act, 1940 to the Court for making the  award  a rule  of  the Court. On the question whether the  award  was admissible in evidence as it was not registered it was  held that the award required registration. It was further held by Justice  Sikri, as the Chief Justice then was,  and  Justice Bachawat that all claims which were the subject matter of  a reference  to  arbitration  merged in the  award  which  was pronounced  in  the proceedings before  the  arbitrator  and after an award had been pronounced, the rights and  liabili- ties  of the parties in respect of the said claims could  be determined  only  on the basis of the said award.  After  an award  was  pronounced, no action could be  started  on  the original  claim  which had been the subject  matter  of  the reference. The position under the registration Act is in  no way  different  from what it was before the  Act  came  into force.  Therefore, the conferment of exclusive  jurisdiction on  a court under the Arbitration Act did not make an  award any  less  binding than it was under the provisions  of  the Second  Schedule  of  the Code of Civil  Procedure.  It  was further held that the filing of an unregistered award  under section 49 of the Act was not prohibited. What was prohibit- ed  was  that it could not be taken into evidence so  as  to affect immovable property falling under s. 17 of the Act. It was  further reiterated that it could not be said  that  the registration  did not in any manner add to its  efficacy  or give  it  added competence. If an award  affected  immovable property above the value of Rs. 100, its registration  would not  rid of the disability created by s. 49 of the Act.  The award  in question was not a mere waste paper but  had  some legal effect and it plainly purported to affect or  affected property  within  the  meaning of s. 17(1)(b)  of  the  Act. Justice  Hegde gave a separate but concurring  judgment.  He

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observed  that it was one thing to say that a right was  not created, it was an entirely different thing to say that  the right  created could not be enforced without further  steps. An award did create rights in that property but those rights could  not be enforced until the award was made a decree  of the  Court. For the purpose of s. 17(1)(b) of the  Act,  all that  had to be seen was whether the award in question  pur- ported  or operated to create or declare, assign,  limit  or extinguish whether in present or future any right, title  or interest  whether vested or contingent of the value  of  one hundred rupees and upwards to or in immovable property. 261     It was incorrect to state that an award which could  not be enforced was not an award and the same did not create any right  in the property which was the subject matter  of  the award. An award whether registered or unregistered,  accord- ing  to Justice Hegde, does create rights but  those  rights could not be enforced until the award is made the decree  of the  court.  The learned Judge made it clear  that  for  the purpose  of s. 17(1)(b) of the Act, all that had to be  seen was  whether the award in question purported or operated  to create  or declare, assign, limit or extinguish  whether  in present  or  future  any right, title  or  interest  whether vested or contingent of the value of Rs. 100 and upwards  in the  immovable  property.  If it does,  it  is  compulsorily registerable.  A  document might validly create  rights  but those rights might not be enforced for various reasons.  The Court  found  that the award in that case created  right  in immovable property and it required registration.     This  Court  in Ratan Lal Sharma  v.  Purshottam  Harit, [1974]  3 SCR 109 had to consider the question of  registra- tion  and  the effect of non-registration of an  award.  The appellant  and the respondent therein had set-up a  partner- ship business in the year 1962. The parties, however, there- after fell out. At the time the disputes arose, the  running business  had  a factory and various movable  and  immovable properties. On August 22, 1963, by agreement in writing, the parties referred "the disputes of our concern" to the  arbi- tration of two persons and gave "the arbirators full author- ity  to  decide their dispute". The arbitrators  gave  their award  on  September 10, 1963. The award made  an  exclusive allotment of the partnership assets, including the  factory, and  liabilities to the appellant. He was "absolutely  enti- tled  to the same" in consideration of a sum of  Rs.  17,000 plus half the amount of the realisable debts of the business to the respondent and of the appellants renouncement of  the right  to share in amounts already received by the  respond- ent. The award, stipulated that the appellant should not run the factory unless he had paid the awarded consideration  to the respondent. The arbitrators filed the award in the  High Court  on November 8, 1963. On September 10, 1964,  the  re- spondent  filed an application for determining the  validity of the agreement and for setting aside the award. On May 27, 1966, a learned Single Judge of the High Court dismissed the application  as time-barred. But he declined the request  of the appellant to proceed to pronounce judgment according  to the  award because in his view; (i) the award was  void  for uncertainty  and  (ii) the award, which  created  rights  in favour  of the appellant over immovable property worth  over Rs.  100  required registration and was  unregistered.  From this part of the order, the 262 appellant  filed an appeal which was dismissed as not  main- tainable by the Division Bench of the High Court. The appel- lant  preferred  an appeal by special leave  to  this  Court

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against  the decision of the Single Judge declining to  pro- nounce judgment in accordance with the award. He also  filed a  special leave petition against the judgment of the  Divi- sion  Bench. In the appeal before this Court, the  appellant contended  that the award was not void for  uncertainty  and that  the award sought to assign the respondent’s  share  in the  partnership  to the appellant and so  did  not  require registration and that under sec. 17 of the Arbitration  Act, the Court was bound to pronounce judgment in accordance with the  award after it had dismissed the respondent’s  applica- tion  for setting it aside. It was held that the share of  a partner  in  the assets of the partnership, which  had  also immovable  properties, was movable property and the  assign- ment  of the share did not require registration under s.  17 of  the Act. But the award in the instant case,  this  Court observed, did not seek to assign the share of the respondent to  the appellant, either in express words or  by  necessary implication.  The award expressly makes an exclusive  allot- ment  of  the partnership assets including the  factory  and liabilities  to the appellant. It went further and made  him "absolutely entitled to the same", in consideration of a sum of  Rs. 17,000 plus half of the amount of Rs. 1924.88 P.  to the respondent and the appellant’s renouncement of the right to share in the amounts already received by the  respondent. In  express  words the award purported to create  rights  in immovable  property  worth above Rs. 100 in  favour  of  the appellant.  It would require accordingly registration  under s.  17 of the Act. As the award was unregistered, the  court could  not  look into it. The award  being  inadmissible  in evidence  for want of registration the Court could not  pro- nounce  judgment  in accordance with it. Section 17  of  the Arbitration Act presupposes an award which could be  validly looked  into by the Court. The appellant could not  success- fully  invoke s. 17. The award is an inseparable  tangle  of several  clauses and cannot be enforced as to the  part  not dealing with immovable property.     In  the  instant case also, it appears to  us  that  the award  affects immovable property over Rs. I00 and  as  such was required to be registered. Shri Ashn, however, contended that  the fact that the award was unregistered had not  been taken  before the learned trial judge. Indeed, this was  not urged within 30 days and the time for filing of  application for setting aside an award under section 30 of the  Arbitra- tion  Act,  was  30 days and as such this  not  having  been taken, the appellant was not entitled to take this point  at a  later  stage.  1t is. true that in  the  application  for making the award a rule of the court before 263 the learned trial judge this point had not been taken.               Section  33  of the Arbitration  Act  provides               that:               "Any  party to an arbitration agreement or  of               any  person  claiming under  him  desiring  to               challenge  the  existence or  validity  of  an               arbitration  agreement or an award or to  have               the effect of either determined shall apply to               the  Court  and  the Court  shall  decide  the               question on affidavits."     It has been held by the majority of three learned Judges in  a full Bench decision of the Calcutta High Court in  the case  of  Saha & Co. v. Ishar Singh Kirpal Singh,  AIR  1956 Cal. 321 that under the Indian Arbitration Act, there was no distinction  between an application for setting aside of  an award  and an application for adjudgment of the award  as  a nullity and all applications must be under s. 30 within  the

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time  stipulated for that application. The existence  of  an award  and validity of the reference both have to  be  chal- lenged  in  the  same manner. But the  next  question  that- arises,  is, whether an unregistered award can be set  aside or  not.  It was submitted by Mr. Ashri that the  award  was otherwise invalid, under s. 30(c) of the Arbitration Act. It is, however, not necessary for the present purpose to decide this  question. It is sufficient to emphasise that an  award affecting  immovable property of the value of more than  Rs. 100  cannot  be looked into by the Court  for  pronouncement upon  the award on the application under s. 14 of the  Arbi- tration  Act unless the award is registered. S.  14  enjoins that  when  an award of an arbitrator has  been  filed,  the Court  should give notice to the parties and  thereupon  the court shall pronounce judgment upon the award and made it  a rule of the court. But in order to do so, the court must  be competent  to look into the award. S. 49 of the Act  enjoins that the award cannot be received as evidence of any  trans- action  affecting immovable property or confering  power  to adopt, unless it is registered. In that view of the  matter, no  judgment upon the award could have been pronounced  upon the unregistered award.     Mr. Ashri, however, relied on a decision of the  learned Single Judge of the Calcutta High Court, in which one of  us (Sabyasachi  Mukharji,  J)  had occasion to  deal  with  the question  whether  an application for determination  of  the validity of an award could be entertained after the lapse of 30 days time. It was held that an application challenging an award on the ground of non-registration must be by procedure under s. 30 of the Arbitration Act and the party not  apply- ing with in the time under s. 30 was estopped from agitating the 264 question  subsequently. The relevant case law was  discussed and it was held that where an adjudication was necessary  as to  whether  registration  was required or not  and  it  was emphasised that in the instant case also an adjudication was necessary because the High Court had held that  registration was not necessary, while the appellant is contending and  as we are inclined to agree that registration was necessary, in such  a  case, it must be done by means  of  an  application within 30 days. It is true that where an application is made for determining the validity and effect of an award in  such a  case,  as  was the case in the application  made  to  the Calcutta  High Court for determination and admissibility  of the award and for a declaration that the award was void,  it is  necessary that the application should be made within  30 days.  But  that problem does not arise  here  because  here under  section  14  of the Arbitration Act,  a  judgment  is sought  in favour of the award. In order to  pronounce  that judgment, the award has to be looked into. The court  cannot do  it  when  the award affects the  immovable  property  or purports  to affect the immovable property of the  value  of more  than Rs. 100 and it is not registered and as  such  it cannot be looked into. In that view of the matter, we are of the  opinion that the High Court was in error in  the  order under appeal.     It may be appropriate in this connection to refer to the observations of Justice Vivian Bose, in the Gangaprashad  v. Mt. Banaspati, AIR 1933 Nagpur 132. In that decision Justice Bose speaking for the Nagpur High Court observed at page 134 of  the  report,  that it was argued before  him  that  even though  it was not possible for the plaintiff  to  challenge the  fact that there was a reference to arbitration, and  an award,  and  that there was no misconduct,  etc.,  he  could

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still  question its validity on the ground that it  had  not been registered. But this question was barred by the rule of constructive  res judicata. He referred to Mulla that if  an application  was made to the court to file  an  unregistered award  which  requires  registration, then  the  court  must reject  it.  It followed that this was one  of  the  grounds which  could be urged against the filing of an award. If  it was  not urged, and the award was filed, then that  question was as much barred in a subsequent suit as the others.     In this case, however, this point that the award is  not registered  and  as such it could not be filed,  though  not taken  subsequently in argument before the trial  Judge,  it was  urged before the First Appellate Court and it was  held in  favour of the present respondent. This is an  appeal  by special  leave  in subsequent decision  from  that  decision where  the  filing of the award is being challenged  on  the ground that it 265 is  unregistered. Therefore, in our opinion, though  it  may not  be  possible to take the point that the  award  is  bad because  it  is unregistered as such it could not  be  taken into consideration in a proceeding under section 30 or 33 of the  Arbitration  Act, but can be taken in  the  proceedings under s. 14 of the Arbitration Act when the award is  sought to  be  filed in the court and the court is called  upon  to pass a decree in accordance with the award. As the court, as mentioned hereinbefore, could not look into the award, there is  no question of the court passing a decree in  accordance with  the  award and that point can also be taken  when  the award is sought to be enforced as the rule of the court.     Mr.  Ashri, however, contended that the award  had  been subsequently registered and unless the registration was  set aside  the  award did not suffer from any defect.  We  have, however,  to  examine whether the High Court  was  fight  in accepting the award and in pronouncing the judgment in terms of the award. At the relevant time, the award was not regis- tered.  If that is the position, then the subsequent  regis- tration of the award whether in confirmity with sections  23 and  25 of the Act or whether in breach or in  violation  of the same is not relevant.     It is not necessary in the view that we have taken to go into the question whether the appellant was right in getting this  document registered in the manner it has been done  by making certain representation, which was not correct, to the Sub-Registrar.     Learned Counsel for the respondent drew our attention to certain  observations  of this court in Raj  Kumar  Dey  and Others  v. Tarapada Dey and Others, [1987] 4 SCC  398  where registration  was permitted by the Court after the lapse  of four  months as enjoined by s. 23 of the Act. But the  facts and  the circumstances and the grounds upon which  registra- tion was permitted, were entirely different from the present case.     In  the  premises,  the observations made  in  the  said decision are not relevant or germane for the present contro- versy.     In the aforesaid view of the matter, the decision of the High  Court cannot be sustained. The appeal  is,  therefore, allowed. The judgment and/or order of the High Court are set aside.  But in the facts and circumstances of the case,  the parties will pay and bear their own costs. R.P.D.                                                Appeal allowed. 266

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