16 January 1987
Supreme Court
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OIL & NATURAL GAS COMMISSION Vs WESTERN COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA

Bench: THAKKAR,M.P. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1557 of 1986


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PETITIONER: OIL & NATURAL GAS COMMISSION

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: WESTERN COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA

DATE OF JUDGMENT16/01/1987

BENCH: THAKKAR, M.P. (J) BENCH: THAKKAR, M.P. (J) SINGH, K.N. (J)

CITATION:  1987 AIR  674            1987 SCR  (1)1024  1987 SCC  (1) 496        JT 1987 (1)   160  1987 SCALE  (1)67  CITATOR INFO :  D          1989 SC 818  (12)

ACT:     Arbitration Act,  1940---Sections 2(e),  14, 17, 30  and 33Award-Only  when  transformed into a judgment  and  decree under    Section    17   becomes    enforceable--New    York Convention--Article  V(1)(e)--Expression  ’not  yet   become binding  on  the parties’--Interpretation  and  significance of--Test applicable--Enforceability as per law of the  coun- try  which governs the award--Arbitration  proceedings’  be- tween American Company and ONGC--Award rendered in favour of American Company--ONGC invoking jurisdiction of Bombay  High Court under Sections 30 & 33 to set aside award--HeM  Indian Court  alone has jurisdiction to pronounce  on  validity/en- forceability of award.     Arbitration (Protocol and Convention) Act, 1937--Section 7Conditions  for  enforcement of  foreign  awards--New  York Convention-Article  V(1)(e)--Effect of expression  ’not  yet become binding on the parties’--The clause--Recognition  and enforcement of award-When arises.     Specific Relief Act 1963--Section 41(b)--Conditions  for applicability. Words & Phrases--’Not yet become binding on the parties’.

HEADNOTE:     A  drilling contract was entered into by  the  appellant and  the respondent which provided that in the case of  dif- ferences  arising out of the aforesaid contract, the  matter shall  be  referred  to arbitration,  that  the  arbitration proceedings shall be held in accordance with the  provisions of  the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940, and that the  validity and interpretation thereof shall be governed by the laws  of India. The agreed venue for hearing was London.     A dispute arose between the parties and it was  referred to  Arbitration.  Consequent upon the inability of  the  two Arbitrators  to  agree  on the matters  outstanding  in  the reference,  the  Umpire  entered upon  the  arbitration  and straight away rendered his interim award, without  affording any hearing to the parties and the same was lodged in the 1025 High Court at the instance of the respondent.  Subsequently,

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the Umpire rendered a final award relating to costs.     About a mouth after the lodging of the award in the High Court,  the respondent filed a plaint in the  U.S.  District Court  seeking  an order confirming the  interim  and  final awards and a judgment against the appellant for the  payment of  a sum of $ 256,815.45 by way of interest until the  date of judgment and costs etc.     The  appellant,  however, instituted  a  Petition  under Sections 30 and 33 of the Arbitration Act for setting  aside the  aforesaid awards and for an interim  order  restraining the  respondent  from  proceeding further  with  the  action instituted in the U.S. Court.     A Single Judge of the High Court granted exparte interim restraint  order  but  vacated the same  after  hearing  the parties. The High Court held that the action to enforce  the award  as  a foreign award in the U.S. Court  was  quite  in order  and that the mere fact that a petition to  set  aside the  award had already been instituted in the  Indian  Court and was pending at the time of the institution of the action in  the  U.S. Court was a matter of no consequence  for  the purposes  of consideration of the question as to whether  or not  the  respondent should be  restrained  from  proceeding further with the action in the U.S. Court, that it was  open to  the  respondent to enforce the award in the  U.S.  Court and,  therefore,  it would not be appropriate to  grant  the injunction restraining enforcement, and that it was open  to the  appellant  to contend before the U.S.  Court  that  the petition  for setting aside the award cannot be said  to  be vexatious or oppressive.     In  the appeal to this Court it was submitted on  behalf of the appellant that the award sought to be enforced in the U.S.  Court may itself be set aside by the Indian Court  and in  that  event, an extremely anomalous situation  would  be created,  that since the validity of the award  in  question and  its enforceability have to be determined by  an  Indian Court which alone has jurisdiction under the Indian Arbitra- tion Act of 1940, the American Court would have no jurisdic- tion  in this behalf, that the enforceability of  the  award must  be determined in the context of the Indian Law as  the Arbitration  proceedings are subject to the Indian  Law  and are governed by the Indian Arbitration Act of 1940, and that if the award in question is permitted to be enforced in U.S. Court  without  its being confirmed by a court in  India  or U.S.  Court it would not be in conformity with law,  justice or equity. 1026     On  behalf of the respondent it was contended  that  the action in the U.S.A. Court could not be considered as  being oppressive  to the appellant and that even if it is so,  the High  Court  has no jurisdiction to grant such  a  restraint order,  and that the appellant had suppressed the fact  that it  had appeared in the USA Court and succeed in  pursuading the  USA Court to vacate the seizure order obtained  by  the respondent and thereby disentitled itself to seek any  equi- table order. Allowing the appeal, this Court,     HELD:  1. I Under the Indian law, an arbitral  award  is unenforceable  until it is made a rule of the Court,  and  a judgment  and consequential decree are passed’ in  terms  of the award. Till an award is transformed into a judgment  and decree under Section 17 of the Indian Arbitration Act, it is altogether lifeless, from the point of enforceability.  Life is  infused  into  the award in the sense  of  its  becoming enforceable  only after it is made a rule of the Court  upon the judgment and decree in terms of the award being  passed.

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[1042D-E]     1.2 In the instant case, the arbitration proceedings are governed  by the Indian Arbitration Act of 1940 and  a  pro- ceeding under the Act for affirming the award and making  it a rule of the Court or for setting it aside can be institut- ed  only in an Indian Court. The expression "Court"  as  de- fined by Section 2(e) of the Act leaves no room for doubt on this  score and the Indian Court alone has the  jurisdiction to pronounce on the validity or enforceability of the award. [1038A-B]     2.1 Article V(1)(e) of the New York Convention  provides that  recognition and enforcement of the award will  be  re- fused  if the award "has not yet become binding on the  par- ties  or  has  been set aside or suspended  by  a  competent authority of the country in which or under the law of  which that award was made." [1043A-B]     2.2  The significance of the expression "not yet  become binding  on the parties" employed in Article V(1)(e)  cannot be lost sight of. The expression postulates that the Conven- tion  has  visualised a time later than the  making  of  the award. [1044A-B]     2.3 The award which is sought to be enforced as  foreign award will have to be tested with reference to the key words contained  in  Article  V(1)(e) of the  Convention  and  the question  will  have to be answered whether  the  award  has become binding on the parties or has not yet become  binding on the parties. The test has to be applied in  the 1027 context of the law of the country governing the  arbitration proceedings or the country. under the law of which the award has been made. [1044C-D]     2.4 The enforceability must be determined as per the law applicable  to the award. French, German and Italian  Courts have  taken the view that the enforceability as per the  law of  the  country which governs the award  is  the  essential pre-condition for asserting that it has become binding under Article V(1)(e). [1047B-C]     2.5 India has acceded to the New York Convention. One of the Objects of the New York Convention was to evolve consen- sus amongst the covenanting nations in regard to the  execu- tion  of foreign arbitral awards in the  concerned  Nations. The necessity for such a consensus was felt with the end  in view  to  facilitate  international trade  and  commerce  by removing technical and legal bottle necks which directly  or indirectly  impede the smooth flow of the river of  interna- tional commerce. Since India has acceded to this  Convention it would be reasonable to assume that India also  subscribes to the philosophy and ideology of the New York Convention as regards  the  necessity for evolving a suitable  formula  to overcome  this problem. The Court dealing with  the  matters arising  out of arbitration agreements of the  nature  envi- sioned by the New York Convention must, therefore, adopt  an approach  informed by the spirit underlying the  Convention. [1050G-H; 1051A-B]     3.  Section  41 (b) of the Specific Relief Act  will  be attracted  only in a fact-situation where an  injunction  is sought  to restrain a party from instituting or  prosecuting any  action in a Court in India which is either of  co-ordi- nate  jurisdiction or is higher to the Court from which  the injunction  is sought in the hierarchy of Courts  in  India. [1049B-C]     4.1  There cannot be any doubt that the  respondent  can institute an action in the U.S. Court for the enforcement of the  award  in question notwithstanding the  fact  that  the application  for  setting aside the award had  already  been

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instituted  and was already pending before the Indian  Court and  that  the  appellant can approach the  U.S.  Court  for seeking a stay of the proceedings initiated by the  respond- ent for procuring a judgment in terms of the award in  ques- tion. Merely on this ground the relief claimed by the appel- lant cannot be refused. [1035B-D]     4.2 As per the contract, while the parties are  governed by the Indian Arbitration Act and the Indian Courts have the exclusive  jurisdiction  to affirm or set  aside  the  award under the said act, the respondent is seeking to violate the very arbitration clause on the basis of 1028 which the award has been obtained by seeking confirmation of the award in the New York Court under the American Law. This amounts  to  an  improper use of the forum  in  American  in violation  of the stipulation to be governed by  the  Indian law  which by necessary implication means a  stipulation  to exclude the USA Court to seek an affirmation and to seek  it only under the Indian Arbitration Act from an Indian  Court. If  the  restraint order is not granted,  serious  prejudice would be occasioned and a party violating the very  arbitra- tion  clause on the basis of which the award has  come  into existence  will  have secured an order enforcing  the  order from  a  foreign  court in violation  of  the  very  clause. [1038D-G]     5.1 The respondent has prayed for confirmation of award. The  American Court may still proceed to confirm the  award, and in doing so it would take into account the American  law and  not  the Indian law or the Indian  Arbitration  Act  of 1940. The American Court will be doing so at the behest  and at the instance of the respondent which has in terms  agreed that  the  arbitration proceedings will be governed  by  the Indian Arbitration Act of 1940. Not only the matter will  be decided by a court other than the court agreed upon  between the  parties but it will be decided by a court under  a  law other than the law agreed upon. Such an unesthetic situation should  not be allowed. Even though it was conceded  by  the respondent  that - the American Court has no jurisdiction to confirm the  award in  view  of the New York Convention, in the  event  of  the award  rendered by the Umpire, the validity of which is  not tested either by an American Court or an Indian Court, being enforced  by  an  American Court, it will  be  an  extremely uphill  task  to pursuade the Court to hold that  a  foreign award  can be enforced on the mere making of it  without  it being open to challenge in either the country of its  origin or  the country where it was sought to be enforced.  [1041H; 1042A, B-C]      5.2  In the event of the award rendered by  the  Umpire being set aside by the Indian Court, an extremely  anomolous situation  would arise inasmuch as the successful party  may well have recovered the amount awarded as per the award from the assets of the losing party in the USA after procuring  a judgment  in  terms of the award from the USA  Court,  which would result in an irreversible the damage being done to the losing  party  for the Court in USA would  have  enforced  a non-existing  award  under  which nothing  could  have  been recovered.  It would also result in the valuable court  time in  the USA being invested in a nonissue and the said  Court would  have  acted on and enforced an award  which  did  not exist  in  the  eye of law. The USA Court  would  have  done something  which could not have been done if the  respondent company 1029 had  waited  during the pendency of the proceedings  in  the

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Indian  Court.  The  losing party in  that  event  would  be obliged  to initiate fresh proceedings in the USA Court  for the amount already recovered from it, pursuant to the  judg- ment rendered by the USA Court in enforcing the award  which is  set aside by the Indian Court. All this would happen  if the  restraint  order as prayed by the losing party  is  not granted and this can be avoided if it is granted. [1037D-H]     5.3  The  American Court would have  enforced  an  award which  is a lifeless award in the country of its origin  and under the law of the country of its origin which law governs the award by choice and consent. [1042E-F]     6.  I It would neither be just nor fair on the  part  of the Indian Court to deny relief to the appellant when it  is likely  to  be placed in such an awkward  situation  if  the relief  is refused. It would be difficult to conceive  of  a more appropriate case for granting such relief. [1042G-H]     6.2  The facts of this case are eminently  suitable  for granting  a restraint order. No doubt, this Court  sparingly exercises the jurisdiction to restrain a party from proceed- ing further with an action in a foreign court. However,  the question  is whether on the facts and circumstances of  this case it would not be unjust and unreasonable not to restrain the  respondent from proceeding further with the  action  in the  American Court. This is one of those rare  cases  where the  Court would be failing in its duty if it  hesitated  in granting  the restraint order, for, to oblige the  appellant to  face  the aforesaid proceedings in  the  American  Court would  be oppressive in the facts and circumstances  of  the case. [1048C-F]     6.3 It would be unfair to refuse the restraint order  in a  case like the present one for the action in  the  foreign court would be oppressive in the facts and circumstances  of the  case and in such a situation the courts have  undoubted jurisdiction  to grant such a restraint order, whenever  the circumstances of the case make it necessary or expedient  to do so or the ends of justice so require. [1049D-E]     6.4  There was no deliberate suppression by  the  appel- lant,  and  it  would, therefore, not be  proper  to  refuse relief to the appellant on this account. [1050B-C]     6.5 While this Court is inclined to grant the  restraint order, fairness demands that it should not be unconditional. There  are good and valid reasons for making  the  restraint order conditional in the sense 1030 that  the  appellant should be required to pay  the  charges payable  in  respect  of the user of rig  belonging  to  the respondent Company at the undisputed rate regardless of  the outcome of the petition instituted by it the High Court  for setting aside the award rendered by the Umpire. [1050E-G]. 6.6  It is no doubt true that if the arbitral award  is  set aside  by  the Indian Court no amount would  be  recoverable under the said award. That, however, does not mean that  the liability  to  pay the undisputed amount which  has  already been  incurred by the appellant disappears. It would not  be fair  on  the part of the appellant to withhold  the  amount which  in  any case is admittedly due and payable.  The  re- spondent  can  accept the amount without  prejudice  to  its rights and contentious, to claim a larger amount. No  preju- dice  will  he occasioned to the appellant   by  making  the payment  of the admitted amount regardless of the fact  that the respondent is claiming a larger amount. In any case  the appellant which seeks an equitable relief cannot be heard to say  that  it is not prepared to act in a  manner  just  and equitable  regardless of the niceties and nuances  Of  legal arguments. [1051B-E]

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      [The order passed by the High Court on April 3,  1986 set aside, and the earlier order passed by it on January 20, 1986  restored subject to certain conditions imposed by  the Court.] Cotton  Corporation  of  India v.  United  Industrial  Bank, [1983] 3 SCR 962;V/O Tractoroexport, Moscow v. M/s  Tarapore JUDGMENT: England Vol. 24 page 579 para 1039 referred to.

&     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1557  of 1986     From the Judgment and Order dated 3.4.1986 of the Bombay High Court in Interim Petition No. 11 of 1986.     K.  Parasaran,  Attorney General, B.  Datta,  Additional Solicitor  General,  S.S. Shroff, S.A. Shroff,  R.K.  Joshi, Mrs. P.S. Shroff. Anil K. Sharma and Mohan Parasaran for the Appellant.     F.S.  Nariman,  S.N.  Thakkar,  Ravinder  Narain,  Gulam Vahamwati, S. Sukumaran, D.N. Mishra, Adittiya Narain,  Mrs. A.K. Verma and Miss Lira Goswami for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by 1031     THAKKAR, J.  Was the High Court ’right’ in granting  the restraint  order earlier, and ’wrong’ in vacating  the  said order later’?    By the order in question the Respondent, Western  Company of North America (Western Company), was restrained from pro- ceeding  further  with an action instituted by it in  a  USA Court against the appellant. Oil and Natural Gas  Commission (ONGC).  The said action was targeted at seeking a  judgment from the concerned court in U.S.A. on the basis of an  arbi- tral award rendered by an Umpire in arbitration  proceedings held  in London but governed by the Indian Arbitration  Act, 194.0, which was the law of choice of the parties as per the arbitration  clause contained in the drilling  contract  en- tered  into  between the parties. The  Western  Company  has moved the USA Court for a judgment in terms of the award not withstanding the fact that:-               1)  ONGC had already initiated proceedings  in               an Indian Court to set aside the award and the               said  proceeding  was as yet  pending  in  the               Indian Court.               2)  The said award was not as yet  enforceable               in  India  as a domestic award inasmuch  as  a               Judgment in accordance with the Indian law had               yet to be procured in an Indian Court, by the               Western Company.     The events culminating in the order under appeal may  be briefly  and broadly recounted. The appellant, ONGC and  the Respondent  Western  Company, had entered  into  a  drilling contract. The contract provided for any differences  arising out  of  the agreement being referred  to  arbitration.  The arbitration  proceedings were to be governed by  the  Indian Arbitration Act 1940 read with the relevant rules. A dispute had  arisen  between  the parties. It was  referred  to  two Arbitrators  and an Umpire was also appointed. The  Arbitra- tors entered on the reference in London which was the agreed venue for hearing as per the Arbitration Clause contained in the  contract. On October 1, 1985 the  Arbitrators  informed the  Umpire  that they were unable to agree on  the  matters outstanding  in the reference. Consequently the  Umpire  en- tered  upon  the arbitration and straightaway  proceeded  to

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declare his non-speaking award (styled as interim award)  on October  17, 1985 without affording any hearing to the  par- ties on the matters outstanding in the reference. The Umpire did not afford a hearing subsequent to his entering upon the arbitration  presumably  because even when  the  matter  was within the domain of the Arbitrators (and not of the 1032 Umpire), and the Arbitrators were seized of the matter,  the Umpire  used to remain present at the hearings conducted  by the Arbitrators. Having been present throughout the proceed- ings whilst the Arbitrators were in charge of the same,  the Umpire  presumably  considered it unnecessary  to  hear  the parties  or their counsel after he Was seized of the  matter and  it came within his domain in the wake of the  disagree- ment  between the two Arbitrators. And the Umpire  straight- away  proceeded to declare the interim award on October  17, 1985.  Thereafter,  on  November 5,  1985,  the  Respondent, Western Company, requested the Umpire to authorise one  Shri D.C.  Singhania to file the award dated October 17, 1985  in the  appropriate  Court  in India.  The  Umpire  accordingly authorised  the  said  Shri Singhania in  this  behalf.  And pursuant  to  the said authority the award rendered  by  the Umpire  was lodged in the Bombay High Court on November  22, 1985. Subsequently, on November 28, 1985 the Umpire rendered a  supplementary  award  relating to costs  which  has  been termed as ’final’ award. About a month after the lodging  of the  award in the High Court of Bombay by the Umpire at  the instance  of  the Respondent, Western  Company,  the  latter lodged  a  plaint in the U.S. District  Court,  inter  alia, seeking an order (1) confirming the two awards dated October 17, 1985 and November 28, 1985 rendered by the Umpire (2)  a Judgment against the ONGC. (Appellant herein) in the  amount of  $  256,815.45 by way of interest until the  date  of  he Judgment and costs etc.     On  January 20, 1986, appellant ONGC on its part  insti- tuted an Arbitration Petition No. 10 of 1986 under  Sections 30 & 33 of the Indian Arbitration Act 1940 for setting aside the awards rendered by the Umpire. Inter alia the  challenge was  rooted  in the following. reasoning. While as  per  the Indian  Arbitration Act 1940 which admittedly  governed  the arbitration  proceedings the Umpire would come on the  scene only provided and only when the Arbitrators gave him  notice in  writing that they were unable to agree, and  the  Umpire would  enter upon the reference in lieu of  the  Arbitrators only subsequent thereto, in the present case the Umpire  had neither held any proceedings nor had afforded any opportuni- ty of being heard to the ONGC after entering upon the refer- ence. The appellant, ONGC, also prayed for an interim  order restraining the Western Company from proceeding further with the action instituted in the U.S. Court. The learned  Single Judge granted an ex-parte interim restraint order on January 20,  1986 but vacated the same after hearing the parties  by his  impugned  order giving rise to the  present  appeal  by Special Leave. 1.  Interim Order No. 11 of 1986 passed on April 3, 1986  in Arbitration Petition No. 10 of 1986. 1033     In  order  to confine the dialogue strictly  within  the brackets of the scope of the problem, four points deserve to be made at the outset before adverting to the impugned order rendered by the High Court.               1) We are not concerned with the merits of the               main dispute between the parties which was the               subject-matter  of arbitration and which  per-               tains  to  the charges payable for  a  jack-up

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             drilling unit and related services provided by               Western  Company  to ONGC. The  equipment  was               utilised  beyond the period stipulated in  the               contract.  In regard to the employment of  the               equipment beyond the contractual period  West-               ern Company claimed payment at US $ 41,600 per               operating  day which was the  rate  stipulated               for  the user of the equipment for the  stipu-               lated  time-frame. The ONGC on the other  hand               has  contended  that  in the  context  of  the               correspondence between the parties  pertaining               to the employment of the equipment beyond  the               stipulated  period  the  Western  Company   is               entitled  to claim only US $ 18,500  per               day.  The dispute concerns the claim for  pay-               ment  for  the user of the equipment  for  the               extended  period (136 days and 16  hours).  We               are  however not concerned with the merits  of               the  claim  giving  rise to  the  dispute  and               differences which was referred to the Arbitra-               tors.               2) We are not concerned with the merits of the               contentions raised in the petition  instituted               by  ONGC in the High Court of Bombay in  order               to  challenge the arbitral award  rendered  by               the  Umpire  except to the limited  extent  of               examining whether ONGC has a prima facie case.               3)  We are not concerned with the question  as               to how an arbitral award which is not a domes-               tic award in India can be enforced in a  Court               in India in the context of the Indian legisla-               tion enacted in that behalf namely the Foreign               Awards  (Recognition  and  Enforcement)   Act,               1961.  The  said Act was enacted in  order  to               give  effect  to an  international  convention               known  as New York Convention to  which  India               has  acceded. The provisions of the  said  Act               would be attracted only if a foreign award  is               sought  to be enforced in an Indian Court.  We               are  not concerned with such a situation.  The               award  which is the subject-matter of  contro-               versy  in  the present case  is  admittedly  a               domestic award for the purposes of the  Indian               Courts, governed by               1034               the  provisions of the Indian Arbitration  Act               of  1940.  When the Western Company  seeks  to               enforce the award in question in the US  Court               they do so on the premise that it is a foreign               award  in  the US Court.  In  considering  the               question  as regards the proceeding  initiated               by the Western Company in the US Court,  there               is no occasion to invoke the provisions of the               aforesaid Act. The provisions of the said  Act               can be invoked only when an award which is not               a  domestic  award in India is  sought  to  be               enforced  in India. Such is not the  situation               in  the present case. We are therefore not  at               all concerned with the provisions of the  said               Act.               4) We are not directly concerned with the  law               governing the enforcement of the foreign award               in  an USA Court. We would be  undertaking  an               inappropriate  exercise in being drawn into  a               discussion in depth as regards the law govern-

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             ing enforcement of foreign awards in USA,  the               procedure to be followed, or as to the  inter-               pretation  of the relevant provisions as  made               by the US Court. So also it would be  inappro-               priate to speculate on the view that is likely               to be taken by the American Court or to antic-               ipate  its  interpretation or its  verdict  in               regard to the relevant matters at that end.     The order under appeal may now be subjected to scrutiny. The  High Court has vacated the interim order granted by  it earlier on the following grounds:-               1) That it was open to the Western Company  to               enforce  the  award in the US Court  and  that               accordingly  it  would not be  appropriate  to               grant  the  injuction  restraining  them  from               enforcing the same at that end.               2)  That  it was open to the ONGC  to  contend               before  the  US Court that  the  petition  for               setting aside the award which was sought to be               enforced  in the US Court was already  pending               in the Indian Court.               3) That the proceeding in the US Court  cannot               be said to be vexatious or oppressive. The High Court has examined the question as to whether the 1035 action  instituted by the Western Company against  ONGC  was maintainable  in the context of the New York  Convention  in the light of the relevant Articles of the Convention and has come  to the conclusion that an action to enforce the  award in question as a foreign award in the US Court was quite  in order.  The  view  is expressed that the mere  fact  that  a petition to set aside the award had already been  instituted in  the Indian Court and was pending in the Indian Court  at the  time of the institution of the action in the  US  Court was a matter of no consequence, for the purposes of  consid- eration of the question as to whether or not Western Company should be restrained from proceeding further with the action in  the  US Court. Now, there cannot be any doubt  that  the Western Company can institute an action in the US Court  for the enforcement of the award in question notwithstanding the fact  that the application for setting aside the  award  had already  been instituted and was already pending before  the Indian  Court. So also there would not be any doubt or  dis- pute about the proposition that the ONGC can approach the US Court for seeking a stay of the proceedings initiated by the Western  Company  for procuring a judgment in terms  of  the award  in  question. But merely on this  ground  the  relief claimed by ONGC cannot be refused. To say that the Court  in America has the jurisdiction to entertain the action and  to say  that the American Court can be approached  for  staying the  action is tantamount to virtually cold-shouldering  the substantial questions raised by ONGC and’ seeking an  escap- ist  over-simplification of the matter. The points urged  by the  ONGC are of considerable importance and deserve  to  be accorded serious consideration.     Prominence  deserves  to be accorded  to  the  following factors which appear to be of great significance:               1)  It is not in dispute that the  arbitration               clause  contained  in the contract  which  has               given  rise  to the disputes  and  differences               between the parties in terms provides that:               "The arbitration proceedings shall be held  in               accordance  with the provisions of the  Indian               Arbitration  Act,  1940  and  the  rules  made               thereunder  as  amended from  time  to  time."

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             (Vide clause 14 of the Contract)               2)  There  is also an  agreement  between  the               parties  that the validity and  interpretation               thereof  shall  be "governed by  the  laws  of               India" (vide clause 18 of the contract)               1036               3) Under the Indian Law, having regard to  the               scheme  of  the Arbitration Act  of  1940,  an               arbitral  award as such is not enforceable  or               executable.  It  is only after  the  award  is               filed  in the Indian Court and is made a  rule               of  the  Court  by virtue of  a  judgment  and               decree in terms of the award that life in  the               sense  of  enforceability is  infused  in  the               lifeless  award. (Vide Sections 141 and  172of               the Arbitration Act)     The  situation which emerges is somewhat  an  incongrous one. The arbitral award rendered by the Umpire may itself be set-aside  and  become non-existant if the ONGC is  able  to Successfully  assail it in the petition under section  30/33 for setting aside the award in question in’ India. The  High Court does not hold that the petition is prima facie  liable to fail. We do not wish to express any opinion on the merits of the petition as in our opinion it would be improper to do so and might occasion prejudice one way or the other. We are however  not  prepared  to assume for  the  purpose  of  the present discussion that the petition is liable to fail.  The question is wide open.The final decision of the Court cannot and need not be anticipated.     In the light of the foregoing discussion, the  following submissions,  pressed into service by the  appellant,  ONGC, require to be examined. (1)  The  award sought to be enforced in the USA  Court  may itself be set aside by the Indian Court and in that 1. 14(1)&(2): "14.(1)  When  the  arbitrators or umpire  have  made  their award,  they shall sign it and shall give notice in  writing to the parties of the making and signing thereof and of  the amount  of fees and charges payable in respect of the  arbi- tration and award. 2)  The arbitrators or umpire shall, at the request  of  any party  to the arbitration agreement or any  person  claiming under  such  party or if so directed by the Court  and  upon payment of the fees and charges due in respect of the  arbi- tration  and award and of the costs and charges  of  filing, the  award cause the award or a signed copy of it,  together with any depositions and documents which may have been taken and proved before them, to be filed in Court, and the  Court shall thereupon give notice to the parties of the filing  of the award. 3. x  x  x" 2.17.  Judgment  in terms of award-Where the Court  sees  no causc  to remit the award or any of the matters referred  to arbitration  for reconsideration or to set aside the  award, the Court shall, after the time for making an application to set aside the award has expired, or such application  having been  made, after refusing it, proceeded to pronounce  judg- ment  according to the award, and upon the judgment so  pro- nounced a decree shall follow, and no appeal shall lie  from such decree except on the ground that it is in excess of, or not otherwise in accordance with, the award." 1037 event, an anomalous situation would be created.               (2)  Since the validity of the award in  ques-               tion and its enforceability have to be  deter-

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             mined  by  an Indian Court,  which  alone  has               jurisdiction under the Indian Arbitration  Act               of  1940,  the American Court  would  have  no               jurisdiction in this behalf.               (3)  The enforceability of the award  must  be               determined in the context of the Indian Law as               the  arbitration  proceedings  are  admittedly               subject to the Indian Law and are governed  by               the Indian Arbitration Act of 1940.               (4)  If the award in question is permitted  to               be enforced in USA without its being  affirmed               by  a Court in India or a USA Court, it  would               not  be  in conformity with  law,  justice  or               equity.     There is considerable force in the argument advanced  in the context of the possibility of the award rendered by  the Umpire being set aside by the Indian Court. In that event an extremely  anomalous situation would arise inasmuch  as  the successful  party (Western Company) may well have  recovered the  amount awarded as per the award from the assets of  the losing party in the USA after procuring a judgment in  terms of the award from USA Court. It would result in an irrevers- ible  damage being done to the losing party (ONGC)  for  the Court  in the USA would have enforced a  non-existent  award under  which  nothing could have been  recovered.  It  would result  in  the valuable Court time of the USA  Court  being invested in a non-issue and the said Court would have  acted on  and enforced an award which did not exist in the eye  of law.  The  U.S.A. Court would have done something  which  it would not have done if the Western Company had waited during the  pendency  of the proceedings in the Indian  Court.  The parties would also be obliged to spend large amounts by  way of  costs incurred for engaging counsel and  for  incidental matters. The losing party in that event would be obliged  to initiate fresh proceedings in the USA Court for  restitution of  the  amount already recovered from it, pursuant  to  the judgment  rendered by the USA Court in enforcing  the  award which is set aside by the Indian Court. Both the sides would have  to incur huge expenditure in connection with  the  at- tendent  legal  proceedings  for engaging  counsel  and  for incidental matters once again. All this would happen if  the restraint order as prayed by the losing party is not  grant- ed. And all this can be avoided if it is granted. 1038     Equally forceful is the plea urged in the context of the argument that the concerned Court in India alone would  have jurisdiction  to determine the question  regarding  enforce- ability  or otherwise of the award in question, for,  admit- tedly,  the  arbitration  proceedings are  governed  by  the Indian Arbitration Act of 1940. And that a proceeding  under the  Indian  Arbitration  Act for affirming  the  award  and making  it a rule of the Court or for setting aside  can  be instituted  only in an Indian Court. The expression  "Court" as defined by Section 2(e)1 of the Arbitration Act leaves no room  for doubt on this score. Thus the Indian  Court  alone has  the  jurisdiction to pronounce on the validity  or  en- forceability  of the award in question. But  the  successful party (Western Company) has invoked the jurisdiction of  the USA Court to seek affirmation of the award. In fact  reliefs Nos. 1 and 2 claimed by the Western Company in the USA Court are in the following terms.               1) An order confirming the interim award dated               October 17, 1985.               2)  An order confirming the final award  dated               November 28, 1985.

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Thus, while as per the contract, parties are governed by the Indian Arbitration Act and the Indian Courts have the exclu- sive jurisdiction to affirm or set aside the award under the said Act, the Western Company is seeking to violate the very arbitration clause on the basis of which the award have been obtained  by  seeking confirmation of the award in  the  New York Court under the American Law. Will it not amount to  an improper  use  of the forum in America in violation  of  the stipulation to be governed by the Indian law which by neces- sary  implication  means a stipulation to  exclude  the  USA Court  to seek an affirmation and to seek it only under  the Indian  Arbitration  Act from an Indian Court?  If  the  re- straint  order  is not granted, serious prejudice  would  be occasioned and a party violating the very arbitration clause on the basis of which the award has come into existence will have  secured  an order enforcing the order from  a  foreign court in violation of that very clause. When this aspect was pointed  out to the learned counsel for the Western  Company in the context of another facet of this very question namely the possibility of the Indian Court taking one view and  the American 1. "2(e) "Court" means a Civil Court having jurisdiction  to decide  the  questions  forming the  subject-matter  of  the reference  if the same had been the subject-matter of  suit, but does not, except for the purpose of arbitration proceed- ings under section 21 include a Small Cause Court." 1039 Court taking a contrary view, counsel stated that though the Western  Company had made a prayer for confirmation  of  the award,  the  New York Court had no jurisdiction   under  the Convention  to  confirm or set aside the award.  It  is  not appropriate  on  the part of this Court  to  anticipate  the decision  of the New York Court. If the Western  Company  is aware  of the legal position and is sure of the legal  posi- tion that the New York Court has no jurisdiction to  confirm the  award, pray why has the Western Company prayed for  the said relief in the New York Court? We cannot proceed on  the basis of the assertion made on behalf of the Western Company that the New York Court has no such jurisdiction. For  ought we  know the prayer made by the Western Company may well  be granted  and  the legal position propounded by  the  counsel before  us may not prevail with the New York Court.  Surely, the  Western Company itself is not going to  contend  before the  New  York  Court that even though it  has  sought  this relief  the  Court has no jurisdiction to grant it.  In  any case,  the  Western Company could have  amended  the  plaint lodged  in the New York Court by deleting this prayer  which it  has  not done so far. Be that as it may, as  the  matter presently stands the appellant has invoked the  jurisdiction of  the  New York Court to pronounce on  the  same  question which is required to be pronounced upon by the Indian  Court notwithstanding  the fact that only an Indian Court has  the jurisdiction  to pronounce upon this vital question in  view of  the stipulation contained in the  arbitration  agreement itself.  The appellant has invoked the jurisdiction  of  the New  York Court in a matter which it could not have  invited the  New York Court to decide. The Western Company has  also invoked  the  jurisdiction of a Court other than  the  Court which as per the arbitration agreement has the  jurisdiction in  the  matter. And there is a  likelihood  of  conflicting decisions on the very vital issue resulting in legal  chaos. The apprehension about legal chaos is more than  well-found- ed.  Assuming  that the American Court decides that  it  has jurisdiction  to confirm the award and confirms  the  award, whereas the Indian Court forms the opinion that the award is

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invalid  and  sets it aside, what will happen?  The  Western Company would have recovered the amount as per the award  in question by obtaining a judgment in the American Court  upon the award being confirmed by the said Court. And the  losing party,  ONGC, would be helpless to recover the  amount  not- withstanding  the fact that the award has been set aside  by the Indian Court, for, the amount would then not be recover- able  under  the  American law in the  American  Court,  the latter  having  held the award to be  valid.  The  questions posed to the counsel for the Western Company in this  behalf and his answers relevant to the material extent, in his  own words, along with the questions deserve to be quoted: 1040 QUESTIONS                      ANSWERS It is an award under Indian law  Yes: this is precisely what regardless of the fact that it   the convention contemplates was rendered by the umpire while The N.Y.proceedings is not sitting in London.Since law in   a parallel proceeding but India does not make it enforce-  an independent concurrent able on mere filing of the award one permissible under US but only on it being made a rule Law and under Art. 1 of the (subject to its being corrected- N.Y. Convention acceded to varied-annulled or modified)     by the U.S. the N.Y. Court should a parallel proceeding be  will take into considerati- permitted for its enforcement    on the pendency of the pro- outside India before it has bec- ceedings in India; but it ome enforceable in India? Parti- is for that Court to so c ularly when the Indian Court is exercise its discretion already seized of the matter and  under Art. VI  parties are bound by Indian law? Western company has prayed for:- 1. An order confirming the       The proceedings in New York    Iterim award dated            and Bombay do not involve    October 17,1985.              "the very matters which wi-                                  ll" have to be death with Now these are the very matters   by the Bombay High Court" which will have to be dealt with The Bombay Court will not by the Bombay High Court in the  have to consider whether to matter arising out of the filing issue an order of enforcem- of the award-The award may be    ent against assets of ONGC, confirmed (or set aside) decree  as will the New York Court. may be passed (or refused). Can  Moreover, the New York Co- these very matters be permitted  urt will not have to deci- to be agitated in the parallel   de, as the Bombay Court proceedings under "American Law" will, whether to set aside when parties have in express terms the award.  While the co- agreed to be goverend by the law  mplaint in the New York in India? And what will happen if case does make a prayer the Indian Court and the American to confirm (as well as Court take conflicting views ?    enforce) the awards, the Which view will prevail? Will    New York Court is without                                  jurisdiction under the                                  convention to confirm or                                  set aside an award; it is                                  only competent 1041 there  not be legal chaos?    to "recognised and enforce"                               foreign awards, as stated in                               paragraph 13 of the New York                               complaint. Thus, whatever the                               prayer for relief, the Bombay                               Court alone will decide the                               issues of confirmation/set                               aside,and there will not be                               any conflicting jurisdiction.

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                             There is no question as to                               which Court decision would                               prevail in the event of a                               conflicting result: the Indian  Court judgment setting aside the awards. In that event ONGC could  take  the  Indian Court decision to a  court  in  the United  States to have it recognized and enforced so  as  to recover  any monies that Western may have obtained  pursuant to an American Court order. The  possibility of conflicting act comes in  parallel  pro- ceedings  such  as these does not mean that one  court  must assert  exclusive  jurisdiction in order to  prevent  "legal chaos".     The  submission that while the validity of the award  is required  to be tested in the context of the Indian  Law  if the Western Company is permitted to pursue the matter in the American  Court,  the matter would be decided  under  a  law other than the Indian Law, by the American Court.  Admitted- ly,  Western  Company  has prayed for  confirmation  of  the award.  The American Court may still proceed to confirm  the award.  And in doing so the American Court would  take  into account  the  American  law and not the Indian  law  or  the Indian Arbitration Act of 1940. And the American Court would be doing so at the behest and the instance of Western Compa- ny  which has in terms agreed that the arbitration  proceed- ings.  will  be governed by the Indian  Arbitration  Act  of 1940.  Not only the matter will be decided by a Court  other than the Court agreed upon between the parties but it will 1042 be decided by a Court under a law other than the law  agreed upon. Should or should not such an unaesthetic situation  be foreclosed?     The  last  submission is also quite impressive.  If  the Western  Company  is right in the posture assumed by  it  in this  Court  at the time of the hearing  that  the  American Court  has no jurisdiction to confirm the award in  view  of the  New York Convention is correct, the resultant  position would be this: The award rendered by the Umpire, the validi- ty of which is not tested either by an American Court or  an Indian  Court will have been enforced by an American  Court. It will be an extremely uphill task to persuade the Court to hold that a foreign award can be enforced on the mere making of  it  without  it being open to challenge  in  either  the country of its origin or the country where it was sought  to be enforced. And that its validity may perhaps be tested for academic  purposes in the country of origin after the  award is enforced and for seeking restitution later on if possible and  if there are assets which can be proceeded  against  in the country where the award has been enforced. It is  essen- tial to emphasise at this juncture and in this context  that under  the  Indian law, an arbitral award  is  unenforceable until  it  is made a rule of the Court and  a  judgment  and consequential decree are passed in terms of the award.  Till an  award  is transformed into a judgment and  decree  under Section 17 of the Arbitration Act, it is altogether lifeless from  the point of view of its enforceability. Life  is  in- fused  into the award in the sense of its becoming  enforce- able  only  after it is made a rule of the  Court  upon  the judgment and decree in terms of the award being passed.  The American Court would have therefore enforced an award  which is  a lifeless award in the country of its origin and  under the  law of the country of its origin which law governs  the award by choice and consent.     We  are of the opinion that the appellant, ONGC,  should not  be obliged to face such a situation as would  arise  in

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the  light  of  the aforesaid discussion in  the  facts  and circumstances of the present case. To drive the appellant in a  tight comer and oblige it to be placed in such  an  inex- tricable situation as would arise if the Western Company  is permitted  to go ahead with the proceedings in the  American Court  would be oppressive to the ONGC. It would be  neither just nor fair on the part of the Indian Court to deny relief to  the ONGC when it is likely to be placed in such an  awk- ward situation if the relief is refused. It would be  diffi- cult  to  conceive of a more appropriate case  for  granting such relief. The reasons which have been just now articulat- ed  are  good  and sufficient for granting  the  relief  and accordingly  it appears unnecessary to examine  the  meaning and content of the relevant arti- 1043 cles  of  the New York Convention for the  purposes  of  the present  appeal. All the same we will briefly  indicate  the questions  which were debated in the context of the  Conven- tion since considerable debate has centred around the inter- pretation  and scope of some of the articles of the  Conven- tion. Article V(1)(e) provides that recognition and enforce- ment of the award will be refused if the award "has not  yet become  binding  on  the parties or has been  set  aside  or suspended  by a competent authority of the country in  which or  under  the  law of which that award was  made."  It  was contended on behalf of Western Company that the  legislative history of the New York Convention discloses that under  the Geneva Protocol--given effect to by the Arbitration  (Proto- col and Convention) Act, 1937--it was provided that an award would  not be enforced if it was not considered  as  ’final’ and it was not ’final’ if it is proved that any  proceedings for the purpose of contesting the validity of the award were pending. This provision aroused a great deal of  controversy as it was felt that the requirement of the Geneva Convention that  the award has become final in the country in which  it has been made was considered to be burdensome and inadequate and that the New York Convention has accordingly changed the format and the word "final" was replaced by the word  "bind- ing"  in Art. V(1)(e) .In these premises it was argued  that for  the  purposes  of the Convention the  award  should  be considered  as  binding if no further  recourse  to  another arbitral  tribunal  was  open and that  the  possibility  of recourse to a Court of law should not prevent the award from being binding. On the other hand it was contended on  behalf of ONGC that an award should be treated as binding only when it  has become enforceable in the country of origin. It  was argued  that the word "binding" was used in the sense of  an award  from which the parties could not wriggle out. So  far as  the  present matter is concerned it  is  unnecessary  to examine  this  aspect at length or in depth for we  are  not resting  our  decision  on the question as  to  whether  the American Court is likely to refuse enforcement or not. As we indicated  at  the outset, it would be improper  for  us  to anticipate  the decision of the American Court on  this  as- pect. We are inclined to rest our decision on the  reasoning which we have indicated a short while ago. We would there- 1. "V(1)(d) Recognition and enforcement of the award may  be refused,  at  the request of the party against  whom  it  is invoked,  only  if  that party furnishes  to  the  competent authority  where the recognition and enforcement is  sought, proof that: (e) The award has not yet become binding on the parties,  or has been set aside or suspended by a competent authority  of the country in which, or under the law of which, that  award was made."

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1044 fore  consider it appropriate to refrain from getting  drawn into  an academic debate on this issue. We however  consider that it is desirable to bring into focus certain aspects  of the  matter in the context of the debate on this point.  The significance  of the expression "not yet become  binding  on the  parties"  employed in Article V(1)(e)  cannot  be  lost sight of. The expression postulates that the Convention  has visualised an award which becomes binding at a point of time later  than  the  making of the award. In  other  words  the provision has in its contemplation the fact that an award in some  cases may become binding on the mere making of it  and in  some cases may become binding only at a later stage.  If this  was not so there was no point in using the  expression "not  yet become binding". The award which is sought  to  be enforced  as foreign award will have thus to be tested  with reference  to the key words contained in Article V(1)(e)  of the  Convention  and the question will have to  be  answered whether  the award has become binding on the parties or  has not  yet become binding on the parties. It is  evident  that the test has to be applied in the context of the law of  the country governing the arbitration proceedings or the country under  the law of which the award was made. This  conclusion is  reinforced by the views expressed by Albert Jan Van  den Berg in his treatise--The New York Arbitration Convention of 1958--Towards a Uniform Judicial Interpretation at page  341 as under:               "Most  of the authors are also of the  opinion               that  the  moment at which  an  award  becomes               binding within the meaning of Article  V(1)(e)               is  to be determined under the  law  governing               the award. However, they also differ at  which               moment this should be assumed under that law.’ He  has also referred to a judgment rendered by the  Italian Supreme  Court  which supports this  proposition.  Says  the author:               "Furthermore,  whilst declaring that the  Con-               vention has eliminated the "double Exequatur",               the Italian Supreme Court held that the  Court               of  Appeal has correctly ascertained that  the               award in question, made in the United  States,               had  become binding under the relevant law  of               the United States."               (Corte  di Cassazione (Sez. 1), April 1,  1980               no.  2448,  Lanificio Waiter Banci  S.a.S.  v.               Bobbie  Brooks Inc. (Italy no.  40)  affirming               Corte di Appello of Florence, October 8,  1977               (Italy no. 29). 1045 The author has also adverted to this dimension of the matter at  pages 338 to 340 of his treatise in the  following  pas- sage:-               "Furthermore, the Courts have unanimously held               that the party against whom the enforcement is               sought  has  to prove that the award  has  not               become binding. It still happens in some cases               that  a  respondent merely  asserts  that  the               award  has not become binding. In these  cases               the  courts  have  invariably  held  that  the               respondent  should furnish proof to  this  ef-               fect.               The above interpretation of the term "binding"               is  also  almost unanimously affirmed  by  the               authors.  To this extent there exists  a  uni-               formity of interpretation.

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             The uniformity of the interpretation begins to               waver, however, when it comes to the  question               at which moment an award can be considered  to               have  become  binding under  Article  V(1)(e).               Although in no case has it been held  hitherto               that  the award in question was to be  consid-               ered as not having become binding, the various               reasonings  are  diverse.  If  this  situation               continues, it may occur that an award will not               be considered as binding by one court,  whilst               the  same award would have been considered  as               binding by another court.               In finding the answer to the question at which               moment  the award can be  considered  binding,               the  prevailing judicial interpretation  seems               to  be that this question is to be  determined               under the law applicable to the award. The law               applicable to the award is according to  Arti-               cle V(1)(e), the law of the country in  which,               or under the law of which, that award was made               (the country of origin). Several courts appear               to  search  under the applicable law  for  the               moment at which the award can be considered to               be inchoate for enforcement in the country  of               origin.  Others attempt to find an  equivalent               of  the term "binding" under  the  arbitration               law of the country of origin.               Before  the  Court of Appeal  of  Naples,  the               Italian respondent had resisted to request for               enforcement of an award made in London, alleg-               ing that the award should have been  declared.               enforceable in England. The Court rejected the               1046               defence,  reasoning that the legal  effect  of               the  award  was  not to  be  determined  under               Italian  law,  according  to  which  an  award               becomes binding only upon an enforcement order               of  the Pretore, but should be assessed  under               English  law according to which the leave  for               enforcement  is  not  necessary  in  order  to               confer binding force upon the award.               Another example is the Court of First Instance               of Strasbourg before which the French respond-               ent  had asserted that the enforcement  of  an               award made in F.R. Germany could not be grant-               ed  because  a leave for enforcement  had  not               been issued by a German Court. Whilst  observ-               ing  that  the Convention  has  abolished  the               "double  exequatur", the Court  reasoned  that               the award had become binding when it had  been               deposited with the German Court. The latter is               indeed  a prerequisite for the  binding  force               (verbhindliehkeit)  of an award  under  German               law.               The binding force of an award under German law               was also considered by the Court of Appeal  of               Basle. The Court referred to the Report of the               Swiss Federal Council (Conseil federal) accom-               panying  the implementation of the  Convention               in Switzerland, in which it is stated that "an               award is binding within the meaning of Article               V(1)(e)  when  the  award  complies  with  the               conditions  required  for  being  capable  for               being  declared enforceable in the country  in               which  it was made." The Court held  that  the

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             award was binding on the ground that a  decla-               ration of enforceability of the award had been               issued  by  the  Court of  First  Instance  of               Hamburg.               This decision might create the impression that               in order to be binding under Article  V(1)(e),               an  award made in F.R. Germany must have  been               declared enforceable by a German Court. Howev-               er, the Swiss Consell federal merely meant  to               say  that  "binding" should be  understood  as               "ready for enforcement" and not as "enforced".               If the Court had followed this interpretation,               it  would probably have reached the same  con-               clusion as the above-mentioned Court of  First               Instance  of Strasbourg which  considered  the               award  to be binding under German law once  it               had  been  deposited with  the  German  Court.               Nevertheless, both courts have in common  that               they considered the ques-               1047               tion at which moment an award becomes  binding               within  the meaning of Article  V(1)(e)  under               the law applicable to the award.               Following propositions emerge from the passage               quoted hereinabove.               (1) That the enforceability must be determined               as per the law applicable to the award.               (2)  French,  German and Italian  Courts  have               taken the view that the enforceability as  per               the law of the country which governs the award               is essential pre-condition for asserting  that               it has become binding under Article V(1)(e).     The  aforesaid  passages and the  propositions  emerging therefrom  thus  buttress and reinforce the view  which  has been expressed by us.     It was next contended on behalf of Western Company  that in  the  five cases decided under the  New  York  Convention involving  parallel  proceedings,  in no case  did  a  Court decide that an injunction such as sought by ONGC was  neces- sary.  In  two  of  these five  cases,  Norsolor  v.  Pabalk (France), and Fertilizer Corporation of India v. IDI Manage- ment  (US)  the Courts, concerned about the  possibility  of conflicting  results,  ordered a stay of  their  enforcement proceeding;  in the FCI case the court did so only upon  the providing  of a guarantee to secure the amount of the  award at  issue. In the other three cases, the court  declined  to exercise their discretion to stay an enforcement  proceeding (Gutaverken  (Sweden), Southern Pacific Properties v.  Egypt (The Netherlands), and St. Gobain (France). The Court in SPP did so only because the respondent refused to provide  secu- rity, thus demonstrating its bad faith. In SPP there was  in fact  a conflicting result when the Dutch Court  entered  an enforcement  order  on the very same day as a  French  Court annulled the award. Such is the argument. We are afraid that this  argument loses sight of the fact that in  the  present matter we are not concerned with the question as to  whether a foreign court should adjourn the decision on the  enforce- ment  of the award under Article VI. 1 We are not  enforcing any foreign award and the question 1.  "Article VI--If an application for the setting aside  or suspension of the award has been made to a competent author- ity  referred  to in Article V(1)(e)  the  authority  before which  the  award  is sought to be relied upon  may,  if  it considers it proper, adjourn the decision on the enforcement of  the award and may also, on the application of the  party

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claiming enforcement of the award, order the other party  to give suitable security." 1048 is  not whether or not a decision on enforcement  should  be adjourned.  It  is  the American Court which  will  have  to address itself to that question if an occasion arises. The  decisions  relied upon by the counsel for  the  Western Company  have relevance from the perspective of the  problem faced  by a Court enforcing a foreign award before  which  a prayer  for adjournment of the. decision is made. In so  far as  we  are concerned, the question is whether  the  Western Company should be restrained by us from proceeding with  the action  instituted in the American Court. We  are  therefore not  persuaded by the aforesaid submission urged by  learned counsel for the Western Company.     In  the result we are of the opinion that the  facts  of this  case are eminently suitable for granting  a  restraint order as prayed by ONGC. It is no doubt true that this Court sparingly  exercises  the jurisdiction to restrain  a  party from  proceeding further with an action in a foreign  court. We  have  the  utmost respect for the  American  Court.  The question  however is whether on the facts and  circumstances of this case it would not be unjust and unreasonable not  to restrain  the Western Company from proceeding  further  with the  action in the American Court in the facts  and  circum- stances  outlined  earlier. We would be  extremely  slow  to grant  such a restraint order but in the facts  and  circum- stances of this matter we are convinced that this is one  of those rare cases where we would be failing in our duty if we hesitate in granting the restraint order, for, to oblige the ONGC to face the aforesaid proceedings in the American Court would be opperssive in the facts and circumstances discussed earlier.  But  before we pass an appropriate order  in  this behalf, we must deal with the plea that the High Court  does not  have the jurisdiction to grant such a  restraint  order even if the proceeding in the foreign court is considered to be  oppressive. Counsel for the-Respondent has placed  reli- ance  on  Cotton Corporation of India v.  United  Industrial Bank, [1983] 3 S.C.R. 962 in support of this plea. In Cotton Corporation’s case, the question before the Court was wheth- er  in the context of Section 41(b) of the  Specific  Relief Act, the Court was justified in granting the injunction. The said provision runs thus:               "41. An injunction cannot be granted:-               (               a               )                ................................................... ....               (b) to restrain any person from instituting or               prosecuting               1049               any  proceeding in a court not subordinate  to               that from which the injuction is sought; ...................................................."               (Emphasis added) This provision, in our opinion, will be attracted only in  a fact-situation  where an injuction is sought to  restrain  a party from instituting or prosecuting any action in a  Court in  India  which is either of ordinate  jurisdiction  or  is higher  to the Court from which the injuction is  sought  in the hierarchy of Courts in India. There is nothing in Cotton Corporation’s  case which supports the proposition that  the High  Court has no jurisdiction to grant an injunction or  a restraint  order  in exercise of its inherent  powers  in  a

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situation  like  the one in the present case. In  fact  this Court had granted such a restraint order in V/O  Tractoroex- port,  Moscow v. M/s Tarapore & Company and Anr.,  [1970]  3 S.C.R, 53 and had restrained a party from proceeding with an arbitration proceedings in a foreign country (in Moscow). As we  have pointed out earlier, it would be unfair  to  refuse the restraint order in a case like the present. one for  the action in the foreign Court would be oppressive in the facts and  circumstances of the case. And in such a situation  the Courts have undoubted jurisdiction to grant such a restraint order whenever the circumstances of the case make it  neces- sary  or  expedient to do so or the ends of justice  so  re- quire.  The following passage extracted from paragraph  1039 of Halsbury’s Laws of England Vol. 24 at, page 579  supports this point of view:-               "With regard to foreign proceedings the  court               will restrain a person within its jurisdiction               from instituting or prosecuting proceedings in               a foreign court whenever the circumstances  of               the case make such an inter-position necessary               or  expedient. In a proper case the  court  in               this  country  may  restrain  person  who  has               actually recovered judgment in a foreign court               from proceeding to enforce that judgment.  The               jurisdiction  is discretionary and  the  court               will  give credit to foreign courts for  doing               justice in their own jurisdiction." It was because this position was fully realized that it  was argued  on behalf of the Respondent that the action  in  the U.S.A. Court could not be considered as being oppressive  to the ONGC. We have already dealt with this aspect and reached a  conclusion adverse to Western Company. There is  thus  no merit in the submission that the High 1050 Court of Bombay has no jurisdiction in this behalf.     It was also urged that the ONGC had suppressed the  fact that  it had appeared in the U.S.A. Court and had  succeeded in  persuading the U.S.A. Court to vacate the seizure  order obtained by the Western Company and had thereby  disentitled itself  to  seek an equitable order. In our opinion  in  the first place there was no deliberate suppression, and in  any case  it  was not necessary to apprise the Court  about  the said development. It would therefore not be proper to refuse relief to the ONGC on this account. We are therefore  unable to accede to this submission either.     Before we conclude we consider it necessary to place  on record the fact that it is perhaps on account of some under- standing  gap that it is observed by the High Court  in  its judgment:               "It was also not disputed that an award  could               be enforced in the USA without the Respondents               obtaining a decree in terms of the award  from               this Court." The learned Additional Solicitor General has solemnly stated before  us  that  no such concession was made  by  him.  The learned  counsel for the Western Company, with the  fairness expected  of him, has confirmed that the learned  Additional Solicitor  General had not made any such concession.  Whilst nothing turns on it, we are adverting to this aspect for the sake of fairness to the learned Additional Solicitor  Gener- al.     And now we come to the conclusion. While we are inclined to grant the restraint order as prayed, we are of the  opin- ion  that fairness demands that we do not make  it  uncondi- tional  but  make  it conditional to  the  extent  indicated

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hereafter.  There are good and valid reasons for making  the restraint order conditional in the sense that ONGC should be required  to pay the charges payable in respect of the  user of the rig belonging to the Western Company at the undisput- ed rate regardless of the outcome of the petition instituted by  the ONGC in the High Court for setting aside  the  award rendered  by the Umpire. India has acceded to the  New  York Convention.  One of the objects of the New  York  Convention was  to evolve consensus amongst the covenanting nations  in regard  to the execution of foreign arbitral awards  in  the concerned  Nations. The necessity for such a  consensus  was presumably felt with the end in view to facilitate  interna- tional  trade and commerce by removing technical  and  legal bottle necks which directly or indi- 1051 rectly impede the smooth flow of the river of  international commerce.  Since  India has acceded to  this  Convention  it would be reasonable to assume that India also subscribes  to the  philosophy and ideology of the New York  Convention  as regards  the  necessity for evolving a suitable  formula  to overcome  this problem. The Court dealing with  the  matters arising  out of arbitration agreements of the  nature  envi- sioned  by the New York Convention must therefore  adopt  an approach  informed by the spirit underlying the  Convention. It is no doubt true that if the arbitral award is set  aside by  the Indian Court, no amount would be  recoverable  under the said award. That however does not mean that the liabili- ty  to  pay  the undisputed amount which  has  already  been incurred  by  ONGC disappears. It would not be fair  on  the part  of  ONGC to withhold the amount which in any  case  is admittedly  due and payable. The Western Company can  accept the  amount without prejudice to its rights and  contentions to claim a larger amount. No prejudice will be occasioned to ONGC by making the payment of the admitted amount regardless of  the fact that the Western Company is claiming  a  larger amount.  And  in  any case, ONGC which  seeks  an  equitable relief cannot be heard to say that it is not prepared to act in  a just and equitable manner regardless of  the  niceties and nuances of legal arguments. These are the reasons  which make  us take the view that the restraint order deserves  to be  made conditional on the ONGC paying the undisputed  dues at an early date subject to final adjustment in the light of final determination of the dispute. We accordingly allow this appeal and direct as under:-     The  appeal  is allowed. The order passed by  the  Bomby High  Court on April 3, 1986 is set aside. The order  passed by  the  Bombay High Court on January 20, 1986  is  restored subject to the conditions engrafted hereafter. II     The  appellant ONGC shall pay to the Respondent  Western Company,  in  the manner indicated hereinafter,  the  amount payable  at the undisputed rate of $ 18,500 per day for  the period as computed by the Umpire in his award amounting to $ 2,528,339  along with interest at 12% till the date of  pay- ment. 1052 III     The said amount will be paid to the Respondent,  Western Company,  by wire transfer to their Bank Account No.  144-0- 33008  at  Manufacturers Hanover Trust  Company,  New  York, U.S.A. within four weeks of the Respondent filing an  under- taking  (without prejudice to their rights and  contentions) in  this Court in the terms indicated  hereinbelow,  namely, (a)  to accept the said amount subject to the final  outcome of  Arbitration Petition No. 10 of 1986 pending in the  High

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Court  of  Bombay or the appeal, if any,  arising  from  the order  passed by the High Court in the said matter  and  (b) further provided the Respondent files an undertaking in this Court to treat the said payment by way of protanto satisfac- tion  in  respect of (i) the Award in question, in  case  it stands confirmed or (ii) a fresh award, if any, that may  be passed  in future in connection with the original  cause  of action or (iii) in respect of the original claim giving rise to the arbitration proceedings in question. IV     In case the Respondent, Western Company, files undertak- ings in this Court as contemplated in Clause III hereinabove and yet the appellant ONGC fails to make the payment in  the manner indicated in Clause II hereinabove within four  weeks of the date of filing of the said undertakings the order  of stay granted as per Clause I hereinabove shall stand  vacat- ed. V     The  learned  Single Judge before whom  the  Arbitration Petition No. 10 of 1986 is pending shall refer the matter to a  Division  Bench  having regard to the fact  that  (1)  it raises  important and complex questions and (2) that  it  is desirable that the matter is expeditiously disposed of and a Letters  Patent  Appeal is avoided and (3) that  the  matter concerns  a commercial transaction of international  charac- ter.     The  learned  Chief  Justice of Bombay  High  Court  may constitute  a  Division  Bench to hear this  matter  with  a request to the Division Bench to dispose of the same expedi- tiously. 1053 VII     The Division Bench constituted by the Chief Justice will afford  reasonable opportunity to the parties to file  their statements  of  claims, affidavits etc. and shall  post  the matter  for directions within two weeks of  the  statements, affidavits etc. being filed. The Division Bench will  direct that  the matter is posted for hearing at the  earliest  and will  hear  the  matter from day to day and  dispose  it  of expeditiously,  preferably within six months (excluding  the time  granted at the joint request of the parties or at  the instance  of  the  Respondent) of the  commencement  of  the arguments. VIII There will be no order regarding costs. IX     Parties  will be at liberty to apply to this  Court  for further directions from time to time in case of necessity. N.P.V.                                                Appeal Allowed. 1054