03 April 2008
Supreme Court
Download

M/S. CONSOLIDATED ENGG.ENTERPRISES Vs PRINCIPAL SECY. IRRIGATION DEPTT. .

Bench: R V RAVEENDRAN
Case number: C.A. No.-002461-002461 / 2008
Diary number: 8970 / 2005
Advocates: PRASHANT KUMAR Vs


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7  

CASE NO.: Appeal (civil)  2461 of 2008

PETITIONER: M/s. Consolidated Engineering Enterprises

RESPONDENT: The Principal Secretary (Irrigation Department) & Ors

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/04/2008

BENCH: R V Raveendran

JUDGMENT: J U D G M E N T

Civil Appeal No.2461 OF 2008 (Arising out of SLP (Civil) No.10311 of 2005)

RAVEENDRAN, J.

WITH Civil Appeal No.2462 OF 2008 (Arising out of SLP (Civil) No.15619 of 2005) Hatti Gold Mines Company Ltd.                   \005\005. Appellant (s) Vs. Vinay Heavy Equipments                          \005\005.. Respondent (s)

       I respectfully agree with the judgment proposed by learned Brother  Panchal, J. Having regard to the importance of the issue, I am adding a few  of my own reasons. 2.      Two questions of law arise for our consideration : (i)     Whether Limitation Act, 1963 is inapplicable to a proceeding in a  court, under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 ?  (ii)    Even if Limitation Act, 1963 is applicable, whether applicability of  section 14 of the said Act is excluded to proceedings under section 34(1) of  the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 ?

Re : Question No.(i) :

3.      Learned counsel for the appellant contended that the Arbitration and  Conciliation Act, 1996 (AC Act for short) is a self-contained Code relating  to arbitration and all matters incidental thereto including limitation. He  submitted  that section 34(3) of AC Act prescribes the period of limitation  for an application for setting aside the arbitral award, when such period can  be extended and the limit to which it could be extended. Section 43 of the  AC Act makes the provisions of the Limitation Act, 1963 (’Limitation Act’  for short) applicable only to proceedings in arbitration and not to  proceedings in court. Therefore, the provisions of Limitation Act are  inapplicable to proceedings in a court under the AC Act.

4.      To decide this question, reference to the relevant provisions of the AC  Act and Limitation Act is necessary.

4.1)    Part I of AC Act relates to arbitration. It contemplates a party  approaching a court in three circumstances : (a)     for grant of interim measures under section 9;  

(b)     for setting aside an arbitral award, under section 34(1); and

(c)     for filing appeals under section 37.

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7  

As section 9 deals with applications for interim measures, the question of  limitation does not arise. In regard to applications for setting aside an  award  under sub-section (1) of section 34, sub-section (3) thereof prescribes a  limitation of three months, different from the period of one month prescribed  in the Schedule to the Limitation Act. Section 37 does not prescribe any  period of Limitation for filing appeals. If Limitation Act is inapplicable to  court proceedings under AC Act, there will be no limitation for filing  appeals under section 37. If Limitation Act is applicable, the period of  Limitation for appeals filed under section 37 of AC Act will be governed by  Article 116 of the Schedule to the Limitation Act.             4.2)    Section 43 of the AC Act, relates to limitation and it is extracted  below :  

"43. Limitation. - (1) The Limitation Act, 1963 (36 of 1963), shall apply to  arbitrations as it applies to proceedings in Court.  

(2)     For the purposes of this section and the Limitation Act, 1963 (36  of 1963), an arbitration shall be deemed to have commenced on the date  referred in section 21.  

(3)     Where an arbitration agreement to submit future disputes to  arbitration provides that any claim to which the agreement applies shall be  barred unless some step to commence arbitral proceedings is taken within  a time fixed by the agreement, and a dispute arises to which the agreement  applies, the Court, if it is of opinion that in the circumstances of the case  undue hardship would otherwise be caused, and notwithstanding that the  time so fixed has expired, may on such terms, if any, as the justice of the  case may require, extend the time for such period as it thinks proper.  

(4)     Where the court orders that an arbitral award be set aside, the  period between the commencement of the arbitration and the date of the  order of the Court shall be excluded in computing the time prescribed by  the Limitation Act, 1963 (36 of 1963), for the commencement of the  proceedings (including arbitration) with respect to the dispute so  submitted."  

       Section 2(1)(e) of the Act defines ’Court’ as follows :  "2(1)(e). ’Court’ means the principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction in  a district, and includes the High Court in exercise of its ordinary original  civil jurisdiction, having jurisdiction to decide the questions forming the  subject-matter of the arbitration if the same had been the subject-matter of  a suit, but does not include any civil court of a grade inferior to such  principal Civil Court, or any Court of Small Causes."

4.3)    Let me next refer to the relevant provisions of Limitation Act. Section  3 of the Limitation Act provides for the bar of limitation. It provides that  subject to the provisions contained in sections 4 to 24 (inclusive), every suit  instituted, appeal preferred, and application made after the prescribed period  shall be dismissed although limitation has not been set up as a defence.  ’Prescribed period’ means that period of limitation computed in accordance  with the provisions of the Limitation Act. ’Period of limitation’ means the  period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by the  Schedule to the Limitation Act (vide section 2(j) of the said Act). Section 29  of Limitation Act relates to savings. Sub-section (2) thereof which is  relevant is extracted below :

"29(2) Where any special or local law prescribes for any suit, appeal or  application a period of limitation different from the period prescribed by  the Schedule, the provisions of Section 3 shall apply as if such period were  the period prescribed by the Schedule and for the purposes of determining  any period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by  any special or local law, the provisions contained in sections 4 to 24  (inclusive) shall apply only in so far as, and to the extent to which, they  are not expressly excluded by such special or local law."

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7  

4.4)    Article 116 of the Schedule prescribes the period of limitation for  appeals to High Court (90 days) and appeals to any other court (30 days)  under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. It is now well settled that the  words ’appeals under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908’ occurring in   Article 116 refer not only to appeals preferred under Code of Civil  Procedure, 1908, but also to appeals, where the procedure for filing of such  appeals and powers of the court for dealing with such appeals are governed  by Code of Civil Procedure (See decision of the Constitution Bench in  Vidyacharan Shukla v. Khubchand Baghel - AIR 1964 SC 1099). Article  119 (b) of the Schedule prescribes the period of limitation for filing an  application (under Arbitration Act, 1940), for setting aside an award, as  thirty days from the date of service of notice of filing of the award.  

5.      AC Act is no doubt, a special law, consolidating and amending the  law relating to arbitration and matters connected therewith or incidental  thereto. AC Act does not prescribe the period of limitation, for various  proceedings under that Act, except where it intends to prescribe a period  different from what is prescribed in the Limitation Act. On the other hand,  Section 43 makes the provisions of Limitation Act, 1963 applicable to  proceedings - both in court and in arbitration - under the AC Act. There is  also no express exclusion of application of any provision of the Limitation  Act to proceedings under AC Act, but there are some specific departures  from the general provisions of Limitation Act, as for example, the proviso to  section 34(3) and sub-sections (2) to (4) of section 43 of the AC Act.  

6.      Where the Schedule to the Limitation Act prescribes a period of  limitation for appeals or applications to any court, and the special or local  law provides for filing of appeals and applications to the court, but does not  prescribe any period of limitation in regard to such appeals or applications,  the period of limitation prescribed in the Schedule to the Limitation Act will  apply to such appeals or applications and consequently the provisions of  sections 4 to 24 will also apply. Where the special or local law prescribes for  any appeal or application, a period of limitation different from the period  prescribed by the Schedule to the Limitation Act, then the provisions of  section 29(2) will be attracted. In that event, the provisions of section 3 of  Limitation Act will apply, as if the period of limitation prescribed under the  special law was the period prescribed by the Schedule to Limitation Act, and  for the purpose of determining any period of limitation prescribed for the  appeal or application by the special law, the provisions contained in sections  4 to 24 will apply to the extent to which they are not expressly excluded by  such special law. The object of section 29(2) is to ensure that the principles  contained in sections 4 to 24 of Limitation Act apply to suits, appeals and  applications filed in a court under special or local laws also, even if it  prescribes a period of limitation different from what is prescribed in the  Limitation Act, except to the extent of express exclusion of the application  of any or all of those provisions.  

7.      It may be noticed at this juncture that the Schedule to the Limitation  Act prescribes the period of limitation only to proceedings in courts and not  to any proceeding before a Tribunal or quasi-judicial authority.  Consequently section 3 and section 29(2) of Limitation Act will not apply to  proceedings before Tribunal. This means that the Limitation Act will not  apply to appeals or applications before Tribunals, unless expressly provided.  

8.      Learned counsel for the appellant contended that section 43 of the AC  Act makes applicable the provisions of Limitation Act only to arbitrations,  thereby expressing an intent to exclude the application to any proceedings  relating to arbitration in a court. The contention of appellant ignores and  overlooks section 29(2) of the Limitation Act and section 43(1) of the AC  Act. Sub-section (1) of section 43 of the Act provides that the Limitation Act  shall apply to Arbitrations as it applies to proceedings in court. The purpose  of section 43 of AC Act is not to make Limitation Act inapplicable to  proceedings before court, but on the other hand, make Limitation Act  applicable to arbitrations. As already noticed, the Limitation Act applies

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7  

only to proceedings in court, and but for the express provision in section 43,  the Limitation Act would not have applied to arbitration, as Arbitrators are  Private Tribunals and not courts. Section 43 of the AC Act, apart from  making the provisions of Limitation Act, 1963 applicable to arbitrations,  reiterates that Limitation Act applies to proceedings in court.  Therefore, the  provisions of Limitation Act, 1963 apply to all proceedings under the AC  Act, both in court and in arbitration, except to the extent expressly excluded  by the provisions of the AC Act.  

Re : Question No.(ii) :

9.      The learned counsel for the appellant next contended that even if  Limitation Act applied, section 14 is excluded by reason of the proviso to  section 34(3) and at best, prosecution before a wrong forum can be  considered as a sufficient cause for explaining the delay, in which event  condonation cannot be for a period in excess of 30 days. He submitted that  sub-section (3) of section 34 prescribes the period of limitation for an  application to set aside an award as three months, and the proviso thereto  provides for extension of such period of limitation, by a period not  exceeding one month. He pointed out that the object of the AC Act is to  expedite arbitration proceedings with minimal judicial intervention as is  evident from Section 5 of that Act. He further submitted that the legislature,  while incorporating a provision for extension of time for an application  under section 34(1) of AC Act, on sufficient cause being shown, did not  choose to incorporate any provision for excluding the time spent before a  wrong court, and therefore, section 14 of the Limitation Act, 1963 is  inapplicable; and even if the principle underlying section 14(2) of Limitation  Act is held to be applicable, as a sufficient cause for extension of                the   period   of    limitation,  the   extension    on    that   ground   can    be  only for a period not exceeding thirty days as provided in the proviso to sub- section (3) of section 34 of the AC Act.  In support of the aforesaid  contentions, reliance is placed on the decisions of this Court in  Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P. v. Parson Tools and Plants, Kanpur  [1975  (3) SCR 743], Union of India vs. Popular Construction Co. [2001 (8) SCC  470] and Fairgrowth Investments Ltd vs. Custodian [2004 (11) SCC 472].  The appellant also contended that the decision rendered by two Judges  Bench of this Court in State of Goa vs. Western Builders [2006 (6) SCC  239] holding that section 14 of Limitation Act applied to applications under  section 34 of the AC Act was not good law as it failed to notice the earlier  decision of a larger Bench in Parson Tools and failed to follow Popular  Construction.  

 10.     The respondents, on the other hand, contended that having regard to  section 29(2) of the Limitation Act, provisions of sections 4 to 24 of that Act  would apply for determining the period of limitation prescribed for an  application under any special law, unless expressly excluded by such special  law. The AC Act, which is a special law, prescribes a period of limitation for  an application to set aside an award, different from what was prescribed  under the Limitation Act. It also excludes application of section 5 of the  Limitation Act to an application under section 34(1), by making an express  provision in the proviso to section 34(3), for extension of period of  limitation. Sections 4 and 6 to 24 of the Limitation Act would however  apply to an application under section 34(1) of the AC Act, as they are not  excluded. Respondents also contended that the question is squarely covered  by the decision of this Court in State of Goa v. Western Builders [2006 (6)  SCC 239]. They submitted that the decisions in Popular Construction  (supra) and Fairgrowth (supra) are inapplicable, as they deal with section 5  and not section 14 of the Limitation Act. They also contended that the  decision in Parson Tools did not relate to a proceeding before a court, but a  proceeding before a Tribunal.  

11.     Section 34 of AC Act relates to applications for setting aside an  arbitral award. Sub-section (1) provides that recourse to a court against an

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7  

arbitral award may be made only by an application for setting aside such an  award in accordance with sub-sections (2) and (3). Sub-section 2 contains  the grounds on which an arbitral award can be set aside. Sub-section (3)  which is relevant is extracted below :

"34(3). An application for setting aside may not be made after three  months have elapsed from the date on which the party making that  application had received the arbitral award or, if a request had been made  under section 33, from the date on which that request had been disposed of  by the arbitral tribunal:

Provided that if the Court is satisfied that the applicant was prevented by  sufficient cause from making the application within the said period of  three months it may entertain the application within a further period of  thirty days, but not thereafter."

11.1)   Section 5 of Limitation Act, providing for extension of prescribed  period in certain cases, reads thus:  

"5.:  Any appeal or any application, other than an application under any of  the provisions of Order XXI of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, may be  admitted after the prescribed period, if the appellant or the applicant  satisfies the court that he had sufficient cause for not preferring the appeal  or making the application within such period."

xxxxx

11.2)   Section 14 of Limitation Act relates to exclusion of time of  proceeding bona fide in court without jurisdiction. Sub-section (2) thereof  relevant for our purpose is extracted below :

"14(2) In computing the period of limitation for any application, the time  during which the applicant has been prosecuting with due diligence  another civil proceeding, whether in a court of first instance or of appeal  or revision, against the same party for the same relief shall be excluded,  where such proceeding is prosecuted in good faith in a court which, from  defect of jurisdiction or other cause of a like nature, is unable to entertain  it."

12.     Sub-section (3) of section 34 of the AC Act prescribes the period of  limitation for filing an application for setting aside an award as three months  from the date on which the applicant has received the arbitral award. The  proviso thereto vests in the court, discretion to extend the period of  limitation by a further period not exceeding thirty days if the court is  satisfied that the applicant was prevented by sufficient cause for not making  the application within three months. The use of the words "but not  thereafter" in the proviso makes it clear that even if a sufficient cause is  made out for a longer extension, the extension cannot be beyond thirty days.  The purpose of proviso to section 34(3) of AC Act is similar to that of  Section 5 of the Limitation Act which also relates to extension of the period  of limitation prescribed for any application or appeal. It vests a discretion in  a court to extend the prescribed period of limitation if the applicant satisfies  the court that he had sufficient cause for not making the application within  the prescribed period. Section 5 of Limitation Act does not place any outer  limit in regard to the period of extension, whereas the proviso to sub-section  3 of section 34 of the AC Act places a limit on the period of extension of the  period of limitation. Thus the proviso to sub-section 34(3) of the AC Act is  also a provision relating to extension of period of limitation, but differs from  section 5 of the Limitation Act, in regard to period of extension, and has the  effect of excluding section 5 alone of the Limitation Act.   14.     On the other hand, Section 14 contained in Part III of Limitation Act  does not relate to extension of the period of limitation, but relates to  exclusion of certain period while computing the period of limitation. Neither  sub-section (3) of section 34 of the AC Act nor any other provision of the

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7  

AC Act exclude the applicability of section 14 of the Limitation Act to  applications under section 34(1) of the AC Act. Nor will the proviso to  section 34(3) exclude the application of section 14, as section 14 is not a  provision for extension of period of limitation, but for exclusion of certain  period while computing the period of limitation.   Having regard to section  29(2) of Limitation Act, section 14 of that Act will be  applicable to an  application under section 34(1) of the AC Act. Even when there is cause to  apply section 14, the limitation period continues to be three months and not  more, but in computing the limitation period of three months for the  application under section 34(1) of the AC Act, the time during which the  applicant was prosecuting such application before the wrong court is  excluded, provided the proceeding in the wrong court was prosecuted bona  fide, with due diligence. Western Builders therefore lays down the correct  legal position.  

15.     Reliance placed by the appellant on the decision of three Judges of  this Court in Parson Tools (supra) is totally misplaced. That decision related  to section 10(3B) of the U P Sales Tax Act, 1958 which provided a  limitation period of one year for invoking the revisional jurisdiction and  further provided that the revising authority may on sufficient cause being  shown, entertain an application within a further period of six months. The  appellant contended that section 10(3B) of the U.P.Sales Tax Act considered  in Parsons Tools is similar to proviso to section 34(3) of the AC Act and  therefore the following observations in Parson Tools,  with reference to  section 10(3B) of U.P.Sales Tax Act, making section 14(2) of the Limitation  Act inapplicable to a revision under section 10(3B) of U.P.Sales Tax Act,  would also make section 14(2) inapplicable, to an application under section  34(1) of the AC Act :  

"Three features of the scheme of the above provision are noteworthy. The  first is the no limitation has been prescribed for the suo motu exercise of  its jurisdiction by the Revising Authority. The second is that the period of  one year prescribed as limitation for filing an application for revision by  the aggrieved party is unusually long.  The third is that the Revising  Authority has no discretion to extend this period beyond a further period  of six months, even on sufficient cause shown. As rightly pointed out in  the minority judgment of the High Court, pendency of proceedings of the  nature contemplated by section 14(2) of the Limitation Act, may amount to  a sufficient cause for condoning the delay and extending the limitation for  filing a revision application, but s. 10 (3-B) of the Sales-tax Act, gives no  jurisdiction to the Revising Authority to extend the limitation, even in such  a case, for a further period of more than six months."

"\005\005we are of the opinion that the object, the scheme and language of  s.10 of the Sales-Tax Act do not permit the invocation of s.14(2) of the  Limitation Act, either, in terms, or, in principle, for excluding the time  spent in prosecuting proceedings for setting aside the dismissal of appeals  in default, from computation of the period of limitation prescribed for  filing a revision under the Sales-tax. " [Emphasis supplied]

The said observations have to be read and understood with reference to the  issue that was being considered in that case. In  Parson Tools, this court did  not hold that section 14(2) was excluded by reason of the wording of section  10(3B) of the Sales Tax Act. This Court  was considering an appeal against  the Full Bench decision of the Allahabad High Court. Two Judges of the  High Court had held that the time spent in prosecuting the application for  setting aside the order of dismissal of appeals in default, could be excluded  when computing the period of limitation for filing a revision under section  10 of the said Act, by application of the principle underlying section 14(2) of  the Limitation Act. The minority view of the third Judge was that the  revisional authority under section 10 of the U P Sales Tax Act did not act as  a court but only as a Revenue Tribunal and therefore the Limitation Act did  not apply to the proceedings before such Tribunal, and consequently neither

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7  

section 29(2) nor section 14(2) of Limitation Act applied. The decision of  the Full Bench was challenged by the Commissioner of Sales Tax before this  Court, contending that the Limitation Act did not apply to tribunals, and  section 14(2) of Limitation Act was excluded in principle or by analogy.  This Court upheld the view that Limitation Act did not apply to Tribunals,  and that as the Revisional Authority under section 10 of UP Sales Tax Act  was a Tribunal and not a court, Limitation Act was inapplicable. This Court  further held that the period of pendency of proceedings before the wrong  forum could not be excluded while computing the period of limitation by  applying section 14(2) of Limitation Act. This Court however held that by  applying the principle underlying section 14(2), the period of pendency  before the wrong forum may be considered  as a ’sufficient cause’ for  condoning the delay, but then having regard to section 10(3B), the extension  on that ground could not  extend beyond six months. The observation that  pendency of proceedings of the nature contemplated by section 14(2) of the  Limitation Act, may amount to a sufficient cause for condoning the delay  and extending the limitation and such extension cannot be for a period in  excess of the ceiling period prescribed, are in the light of its finding that  section 14(2) of Limitation Act was inapplicable to revisions under section  10(3B) of U.P.Sales Tax Act. These observations cannot be interpreted as  laying down a proposition that even where section 14(2) of Limitation Act in  terms applied and the period spent before wrong forum could therefore be  excluded while computing the period of limitation, the pendency before the  wrong forum should be considered only as a sufficient cause for extension of  period of limitation and therefore, subjected to the ceiling relating to the  extension of the period of limitation. As we are concerned with a proceeding  before a court to which section 14(2) of Limitation Act applies, the decision  in Parson Tools which related to a proceeding before a tribunal to which  section 14(2) of Limitation Act did not apply, has no application.

15.     The decision in Popular Construction is also of no assistance. That  decision makes it clear that AC Act, 1996 being a special law, and section  34 thereof prescribing a period of limitation different from that prescribed  under the Limitation Act and providing a ceiling on the period by which the  period of limitation could be extended, the corresponding provisions in the  Limitation Act prescribing the period of limitation for filing an application  for setting aside an award [Article 119(b) of the Schedule to Limitation Act]  and for extending the period of limitation for sufficient cause (section 5 of  the Limitation Act), were inapplicable. It did not relate to applicability of  section 14(2) of Limitation Act. Nor did this Court consider the applicability  of section 14(2). Therefore, the decision in Popular Construction will not  apply. Fairgrowth merely reiterates the principle in Popular Construction in  regard to the exclusion of section 5 of Limitation Act, as is evident from the  following observations :

"\005 the general rule as far as special and local Acts are concerned is that  the specified provisions including Section 5 of the Limitation Act will  apply provided the special or local Act provides a period of limitation  different from that prescribed under the Limitation Act. There is an  additional requirement viz. that the special local Act does not expressly  exclude the application of the Limitation Act."

Therefore it has to be held that section 14(2) of the Limitation Act, 1963 is  applicable to proceedings under section 34(1) of the AC Act.  

16.     I agree that the appeal arising from SLP (C) No.10311/2005 is to be  dismissed and appeal arising from SLP (C) No.15619/2005 is to be allowed.