14 October 1988
Supreme Court
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JAWAHARLAL WADHWA AND ANOTHER Vs HARIPADA CHAKROBERTY

Bench: KANIA,M.H.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2678 of 1985


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PETITIONER: JAWAHARLAL WADHWA AND ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: HARIPADA CHAKROBERTY

DATE OF JUDGMENT14/10/1988

BENCH: KANIA, M.H. BENCH: KANIA, M.H. MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) RANGNATHAN, S.

CITATION:  1989 AIR  606            1988 SCR  Supl. (3) 513  1989 SCC  (1)  76        JT 1988 (4)   138  1988 SCALE  (2)1033

ACT:     Arbitration  Act, 1940--Sections 30,33  and  34--Award-- Setting aside--Only an error of law and not mistake of  fact committed by Arbitrator justiciable before Court. %     Transfer   of   Property  Act,   1882--  Section   53-- Anticipatory  breach of contract--Option to claim  damages-- Otherwise  keep contract alive by performing us its part  of contract  and  show readiness and willingness  in  order  to claim  specific  performance--Transferee  in  possession  of premises  --Stopped  paying monthly  instalments--Could  not claim protection under section 53A.

HEADNOTE:     The  respondent had taken a loan of Rs.15,000  from  the Ministry  of Defence for construction of a house on  a  plot allotted  to him. As the amount of loan was insufficient  to complete  the construction, he took a loan of Rs.5,000  from Appellant No. 1 and on 6th September, 1973 he  entered  into an agreement to sell the house and the plot to Appellant No. 1. The aforesaid amount of Rs.5,000 was shown as advance  of sale  price. Clause 2(b) of the Agreement provided that  the appellant purchaser shall pay to the seller!respondent a sum of  Rs.105  every month against the sanctioned loan  of  Rs. 15,000   till  the  full  amount  is  recovered   from   the respondent.  I he payment of Rs. 105 per month was  made  by the  appellant  only up to .January 1976  and  this  payment covered  upto 23 instalments, and more than l00  instalments remained unpaid.     On January 29, 1974 another agreement, for construction. was entered into between Appellant No. 1 and the respondent. Under  this  agreement,  Appellant No.  1  was  to  complete construction  of the house and alter the completion  of  the house the respondent was to return the cost of  construction amounting  to  Ks.1,15,000 including appellant’s  profit  of Rs.20,000 and security amount of Rs. 15,000 deposited by the Appellant No. 1 with the respondent, within three years in a lump sum and on payment the Appellant No. I was to hand over the  possession  of  the  building  and  the  plot  to   the respondent.  Till that amount was paid. Appellant No  1  was

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entitled  to  possess  and occupy  and  enjoy  the  building                                                   PG NO 513                                                   PG NO 514 The  house  was  not completed but the  appellants  who  are husband and wife were occupying the same.     According  to the respondent this transaction  was  sham and  bogus   and  he repudiated  the  same.  Disputes  arose between the parties.     The  respondent filed a suit claiming for the return  of possession  of  the  said  plot  of  land  and  house.   The application ot’ the appellant under s. 34 of the Arbitration Act was dismissed.     In the appeals preferred by the appellant the Additional District Judge, appointed a sole arbitrator with the consent of the parties. The arbitrator made and published his  award which went against the appellants. The High Court  dismissed the appeal filed by the appellants against the order of  the District Judge dismissing their application challenging  The Award.     This  Court.  in  appeal, set aside  the  award  of  the Arbitrator  and  also  the judgment of the  High  Court  and appointed Shri A.C. Gupta, a  former Judge of this Court  as the sole arbitrator.     It  was  contended before the said Arbitrator  that  the agreement  for sale was not registered and might not  convey any  interest to appellant No. 1 in the  property,  but  the appellants, who had been put in possession of the said  land and  construction. were entitled to retain possession  under th4’  protection  affOrded  by S. 53A  of  the  Transfer  of Property  Act. The arbitrator made and published  his  award which went against the appellants. The arbitrator held  from the receipts filed, that the respondent paid only rent up to than 100 instalments remained to be paid, and that there was no  valid  reason why the respondent should have  failed  to carry out his obligation under The contract. The  arbitrator further held that the respondent could not, therefore, claim that  his  possession  was protected, under s.  53A  of  the Transfer of Property Act and was, therefore. not entitled to retain  possession of the disputed property  beyond  January 1976.     In the objection filed by the appellants challenging the award  before this Court it was contended that the award  is bad  in law and liable to be set aside as there is an  error of law disclosed on the face of the award as the  statements contained  in the award ran counter to the settled  position in  law that wrongful repudiation by the respondent  of  the contract by his letter dated 16 January, 1976, before mutual obligation under the contract were carried out, amounted  to                                                   PG NO 515 an  anticipatory breach of contract by him and therefore the Appellant No. 1 is absolved from carrying out his  remaining obligation  under  the contract, and  could  claim  specific performance  of the same even though he failed to carry  out his remaining obligations under the contract.     Dismissing  the objections and upholding the award,  the Court,     HELD:  l. It is settled in law that where a party  to  a contract commits an anticipatory breach of the contract, the other party to the contract may treat the breach as  putting an  end  to the contract and sue for damages,  but  in  that event  he  cannot  ask for  specific  performance. The  other option open to the other party, namely, the aggrieved party, is  that he may choose to keep the contract alive  till  the time for performance and claim specific performance but,  in that  event,  he cannot claim specific  performance  of  the

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contract  unless he shows his readiness and  willingness  to perform the contract. [521B-C]     International  Contractors Ltd. v. Prasanta  Kumar  Sur, [1961]3 SCR 579, distinguished.     2.  It  is  an error of law and not a  mistake  of  fact committed  by  the Arbitrator which is  justiciable  in  the application before the Court. [521A]     If there is no legal proposition either in the award  or in any document annexed to the award which is erroneous  and constitutes the basis of the award and the alleged  mistakes or  alleged errors  are only mistakes of fact the  award  is not amenable to correction  by the Court. [522A-B]     Coimbatore    District   Podu   Thozillar   Sangam    v. Balasubramania   Faundary  and  Others, [1987]  3  SCC  723; Champsey Bhara and Co. v. Jivraj Balloo Spinning Weaving Co. Ltd.,  [1922-23]  LR 50 IA 324, 1923  AC 480;  Kanpur  Nagar Mahapalika v. M/s Narain Das Haribansh, [1970] 2 SCR 28,1969 2  SCC 620 and State of Orissa & Ors.v.M/s Lall    Brothers, [1988] Judgment Today S.C. 552, referred to.     In this case, what the arbitrator has done is to set out in his award  the relevant portion of s. 53A of the Transfer of Property Act, in terms of the said section. There can  be no  dispute  that these provisions have been  correctly  set out.  There is thus no error in the proposition of  law  set out by the learned Arbitrator in the award. It  may be  that there is an  error, although that is by no means certain, in                                                   PG NO 516 the  application  of  these  principles  in  coming  to  the conclusion that, notwithstanding the repudiation of the said contract by the respondent, Appellant No. 1 was not absolved in  the  facts  and  circumstances  of  the  case  from  his obligation  to pay the remaining instalments of  Rs.105  per month as provided under the contract. [521F-G]

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2678  of 1985.     From the Judgment and order dated 30.4.1985 of the Delhi High Court in F.A.O. No. 270 of 1982.     M.C.  Bhandare, Sandeep Narain and Shri Narain  for  the Appellants.     Dr. Shankar Ghosh and N.R. Choudhary for the Respondent.     The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     KANIA,J.  The hearing before us now relates  to  certain objections  filed  to the Award made by Shri  A.C.  Gupta  a former  Judge  of  this Court who  was  appointed  the  sole arbitrator  to  adjudicate  upon  the  dispute  between  the parties  pursuant  to  the Order of this  Court  dated  18th November, 1987 in the circumstances as set out  hereinafter. In  order to appreciate the objections, it is  necessary  to refer to certain facts.     The   Settlement  Commissioner,  Government   of   India allotted   Plot  No.  631  at  Chitranjan  Park,  New  Delhi measuring   160  sq.  yds  to   the  Respondent  under   the Settlement Scheme for the refugees from Pakistan for a total price of Rs.4,800. This allotment was made by the Settlement Commissioner  on behalf of the Rehabilitation Department  of the  Government of India. The Respondent applied for a  loan from  the Ministry of Defence for construction of the  house on  the said plot and a loan of Rs.15,000 was sanctioned  in his  favour.  Under  the House  Construction  Rules  of  the Government,  the  plans and estimates had  to  be  submitted along with the application and a sanctioned amount was  paid

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in four instalments at different stages of construction. The Respondent  started  the construction of a building  on  the said   land.  By  the  end  of  1973,  the  Respondent   had constructed a house on the said plot upto the roof level. By that time he had obtained and used up a sum of Rs.12,000 out of the loan sanctioned to him and only a balance of Rs.3,000                                                   PG NO 517 remained to be paid to him under the said loan. According to the Respondent, this amount was not sufficient for the final completion  of the house and he, therefore, sought the  help of Appellant No. I who advanced a sum of Rs.5,000 to him. In September,  1973  the Respondent entered into  an  agreement dated September 6, 1973 to sell the house and the said  plot to  the  Appellant No. 1. The aforesaid amount  of  Rs.5,000 given  by  way  of loan was shown in that  agreement  as  an advance  paid  towards the sale price. The  Respondent  also executed a General Power of Attorney in favour of  Appellant No. 1 inter alia enabling him to carry on construction  work on  the said land on behalf of the Respondent. According  to the   Respondent,  the  house  was  not  complete  but   the Appellants who are husband and wife were occupying the same. Under  circumstances, we need not discuss here,  on  January 29,   1974  another  agreement  was  entered  into   between Appellant No. 1 and the Respondent which has been  described as  an  agreement for construction.  Under  that  agreement, Rs.80,000  was to be paid by the Respondent as the price  of the construction to be put up by Appellant No. I on the said plot  and  he  was to charge Rs.20,000 as  the  profits  and labour  charges.  He  was  to  deposit  Rs.15,000  with  the Respondent,  this transaction was sham and  bogus.  Disputes arose  Respondent  was to return the amount  of  Rs.1,15,000 within  three  years  in a lump sum  and  on  such  payment, Appellant  No.  I  was to hand over the  possession  of  the building  and the plot to the Respondent. Till  that  amount was paid, Appellant No. 1 was entitled to possess and occupy and  enjoy the same and to receive rents thereof.  According to  the  Respondent, this transaction was  sham  and  bogus. Disputes arose between the parties and the Respondent  filed a  suit  in   August 1977 claiming for  the  return  of  the possession  of  the  said plot and the house.  A  notice  of motion under section 34 of the Arbitration Act 1940 for stay taken  out  by the Appellants was dismissed. An  appeal  was preferred  against the said decision. In the  appeal,  which came  up for hearing before the Additional  District  Judge, Delhi.  with  the consent of the parties,  Shri  Bakshi  Man Singh  was  appointed as the sole arbitrator  to  adjudicate upon  the  disputes in the suit. The said  Shri  Bakshi  Man Singh  died  in July 1979 without making any  award.  On  an application  by  the  Respondent,  the  learned   Additional District Judge filled up the vacancy by appointing Shri Hari Shanker, Advocate, as the sole rbitrator. Shri Hari  Shanker made  and  published  his  award  which  went  against   the Appellants. According to the Appellants, the said award  was made ex parte. The appellants challenged the award by filing objections  under sections 30 and 33 of the Arbitration  Act before the learned Additional District Judge and applied for setting aside the said award. This application was dismissed by  the  learned Additional District Judge.  The  Appellants                                                   PG NO 518 filed  an  appeal against this decision on  October  14,1982 before  the  Delhi  High  Court  but  the  said  appeal  was dismissed by the learned Single Judge of that High Court  on April  30, 1985. This decision of the learned  Single  Judge was  challenged  before this Court by way of  Special  Leave Petition  under Article 136 of the Constitution.  Leave  was

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granted  and  the  present Appeal came  to  be  numbered  as aforesaid.  This  Appeal  came  up  for  hearing  before   a Division   Bench  of this Court on November  18,1987.  After hearing   Counsel  for  the  parties.  in  order  to  ensure fairplay  in the action, this Court set aside the  award  of the Arbitrator and also the judgment of the Delhi High Court and appointed Shri A.C. Gupta, a former Judge of this Court, as  the  sole  arbitrator to adjudicate  upon  the  disputes between the parties. The arbitrator was directed to make his award with short reasons within four months from the receipt of  the the order. Certain other conditions like payment  of compensation  and  additional expense were  imposed  on  the Appellants.  Pursuant to the said order of this  Court,  the said Shri A.C. Gupta entered upon the reference and made and made  and  published his award on March 18,1988.  Under  the said award, it was held that the Respondent was entitled  to a  sum of Rs.58,498.60p and interest on this amount  at  the rate  of 18 per annum from the date of the reference to  the date  of the  award which worked out to a sum  of  Rs.3,510. Taking  into  account  the amount  paid  by  the  Respondent initially  towards the arbitrator’s remuneration and  others costs  and after setting off the dues of Appellants  against the Respondent, it was held that the Respondent-claimant was entitled to recover possession of the disputed building from the  Appellants and that a sum of Rs.57,753 was  payable  by the Appellants to the Respondent. It is this award which  is challenged before us now.     The  sole  submission  made  by  Mr.  Bhandare,  learned Counsel  for the Appellants is that the award is bad in  law and  liable  to  be set aside as there is an  error  of  law disclosed on the face of the award. In this connection,  Mr. Bhandare drew our attention to clause 2(b) of the  agreement to  sell  dated September 6, 1973 referred to  earlier.  Ten earlier  part  of the agreement set out that  the  purchaser (Appellant No. 1) had paid to the seller (Respondent) a  sum of  Rs.5,000, the receipt  of which was acknowledged by  the Respondent and the balance amount payable was to be paid  in the  manner  set out in the said clause 2(b) which  runs  as follows:     "The purchaser shall pay to the seller Rs.105 each month against  the .sanctioned loan of Rs.15,000 by the fifth  day of  every  English Calendar month till such  time  the  full                                                   PG NO 519 amount  of  loan  is  recovered  from  the  seller  by   the Government  of  lndia. The first instalment  shall  commence with  effect  from 5th October, 1973 The  purchaser,  if  he desires,  can  also  deposit  the  actual  remaining  amount towards this loan at any time in lump sum to the  Government of India on behalf of the seller."     It is a common ground that the sum of Rs. 105 per  month referred  to clause 2(b) of the said agreement was  paid  by the Respondent only  upto January 1976 and that this payment covered  upto 23 instalments more than 100 instalments  were remaining  unpaid.  Mr.  Bhandare pointed out  that  it  was contended  by  the Appellants before  the  arbitrator  that, although the agreement for sale between the parties was  not registered  and might not convey and interest  to  Appellant No.  1  in  the property, the Appellants  had  been  put  in possession of the said land and construction pursuant to the said  agreement   since September 1973, as appears from  the agreement  of  sale. and, in view of this,  Appellants  were entitled to retain possession under the protection  afforded by  Section  53A of the Transfer of Act. 1882. He  drew  our attention to the following statements contained in the award of the learned Arbitrator:

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   "The  Respondent  who  has been  in  possession  of  the property  since  September  1973 as would  appear  from  the agreement   for  sale,  claimed  that  his  possession   was protected  Under  Section 53A of the  Transfer  of  Property Act ......     Section  53A  affords  protection  to  a  transferee  on certain condition, One of which is that ‘the transferee  has performed  or is willing to perform his part  of  contract’. Under the agreement for sale, the respondent was required to pay     the claimant a monthly sum of Rs. 105 to enable  the latter  to  pay the instalments in discharge  of  the  house building  loan. From the receipts filed it appears that  the respondent   paid  only upto January 1976 which  covered  23 instalments  only and more than 100 instalments remained  to be paid. There is no valid reason why he should have  failed t  to carry out his obligation under the contract.  Thus  it cannot  be  said that the respondent had  performed  or  was willing to perform his part of the contract. Therefore,  the respondent   was  not entitled to retain possession  of  the disputed property beyond January 1976."                                                   PG NO 520     It  was submitted by Mr. Bhandare that these  statements clearly disclose close an error apparent on the face of  the award.  It  is pointed out by him that,  prior  to  February 1976,   the  Respondent  by  his  Advocate’s  notice   dated 16.1.1976  had  repudiated the said agreement  for  sale  by contending in his notice that it had been procured by fraud, undue  influence and coercion practised by Appellant  No.  I and it was submitted that the said repudiation was  wrongful and  in view thereof Appellant No. 1 was absolved  from  his obligation  to make any further payment of Rs.105 per  month or  to  continue  to be ready and  willing  to  perform  the agreement.  It  was submitted by him  that  the  aforestated statements contained in the award ran counter to the settled position  in law and disclosed a clear error of law  on  the face of the award. He drew our attention to the decision  of this  Court  in International Contractors Ltd.  v.  Prasanta Kumar  Sur, [1961] 3 S.C.R. 579. In that case the  appellant had  purchased the property in dispute from  the  respondent but soon thereafter there was an agreement for  reconveyance of  the  property to the respondent within a period  of  two years  for  almost  the same value for which  it  was  sold. Before the expiry of the  stipulated period, the  respondent entered  into correspondence with the appellant, asking  for the  completion  of the agreed reconveyance  and  intimating that the purchase money was ready to be paid, but after some further  correspondence, the appellant’s solicitors, on  his behalf,  repudiated  the  agreement  for  reconveyance.  The respondent  then did not tender the price agreed to be  paid and  filed  a suit for specific  performance. The  suit  was dismissed  by  the  trial  court  on  the  ground  that  the respondent  had not paid the money. The High Court  reversed the  decision  and decreed the suit. On an  appeal  to  this Court,  it  was  held  that as  the  appellant  had  totally repudiated the contract for reconveyance  and had tailed  lo perform  his  part  of  the contract, it  was  open  to  the respondent to sue for its enforcement and the High Court was right  in holding that respondent was entitled to  a  decree for  specific performance. In our view, Mr. Bhandare may  be right in contending that this decision does show that it has been held by this Court that in certain circumstances once a party  to a contract has repudiated a contract,  it  is  not necessary  for the other party to tender the amount  payable under the contract in the manner provided in the contract in order to successfully claim the specific performance of  the

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contract.  The  decision, however, nowhere  lays  down  that where  one party to a contract repudiates the contract,  the other party to the contract who claims specific  performance of  the  contract is absolved from his obligation   to  show that  he was ready and willing to perform the contract.  Mr. Bhandare’s  argument  really  is  to  the  effect  that  the Respondent   wrongly  repudiated the contract  by  his  said letter  dated  16th  January, 1976, before  all  the  mutual                                                   PG NO 521 obligations under the contract had been carried out, that is to say, he committed an anticipatory breach of the  contract and  in  view  of this, Appellant No. 1  was  absolved  from carrying  out his remaining obligations under  the  contract and could claim specific performance of the same even though he  failed to carry out his remaining obligations under  the contract  and  might have failed to show his  readiness  and willingness  to  perform  the contract. In  our  view,  this argument cannot be accepted. It is settled in law that where a party to a contract commits an anticipatory breach of  the contract,  the  other party to the contract  may  treat  the breach  as  putting  an  end to the  contract  and  sue  for damages,  but  in  that event he  cannot  ask  for  specific performance.  The  other  option open to  the  other  party, namely,  the aggrieved party, is that he may choose to  keep the  contract alive till the time for performance and  claim specific  performance  but, in that event. he  cannot  claim specific  performance  of the contract unless he  shows  his readiness  and  willingness  to perform  the  contract.  The decision of this Court in International Contractors  Limited v. Prasanta Kumar Sur, (supra), properly analysed, only lays down  that in certain circumstances it is not necessary  for the party complaining of an anticipatory breach of  contract by  the  other  party  to offer  to  perform  his  remaining obligations  under  the  contract  in  order  to  show   his readiness and willingness to perform the contract and  claim specific performance of the said contract. Mr. Bhandare also referred to the decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Makineni  Nagayya and Others v Makineni Bapamma.,  AIR  (45) 1958 A.P. 504. We do not consider it necessary to refer this decision as it does not carry the case of the Appellants any further.  The  ratio of the said decision in  no   way  runs counter to the said position in law set out above.     In the case before us, what the arbitrator has  done  is to set out in his award the relevant portion of Section  53A of  the  Transfer  of  Property Act in  terms  of  the  said section. There can be no dispute that these provisions  have been  correctly  set  out. There is thus  no  error  in  the proposition of law set out by the learned Arbitrator in  the award. It may be that there is an error, although that is by no means certain. in the application of these principles  in coming   to   the  conclusion  that,   notwithstanding   the repudiation   of  the  said  contract  by  the   respondent, Appellant No. I was not absolved from his obligation to  pay the  remaining instalments of Rs.105 per month  as  provided under the contract.     In   Coimbatore  District  Podu  Thozillar   Samgam   v. Balasubramania Foundary and others, [1987] 3 S.C.C. 723  it has  been held by this Court that it is an error of law  and                                                   PG NO 522 not  a mistake of fact committed by the Arbitrator which  is justiciable in the application before the Court. If there is no legal proposition either in the award or in any  document annexed to the award which is erroneous and constitutes  the basis  of  the  award and the alleged  mistakes  or  alleged errors, are only mistakes of fact the award is not  amenable

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to  corrections  by the Court. In its  judgment,  the  Court referred to the decision of this Court in Union of India  v. A. L. Rallia Ram, [1964] 3 S.C.R. 164; AIR 1963 SC 1685 and, after  referring to certain factors pertaining to awards  in arbitration  proceedings  and the machinery devised  by  the Arbitration  Act  1940, pointed out that the award  was  the decision  of a domestic tribunal chosen by the  parties  and the  civil  courts which were entrusted with  the  power  to facilitate  arbitration and to effectuate the awards,  could not exercise appellate powers over the decisions. This Court reiterated that it was now firmly established that an  award was bad on the ground of error of law on the face of it only when  in  the  award  itself  or  in  a  document   actually incorporated  in it, there was found some legal  proposition which  was the basis of the award and which  was  erroneous. This  view  was  enunciated by  the  Judicial  Committee  in Champsey Bhara and Co. v. Jivraj Balloo Spinning and Weaving Co. Ltd., [1922-23] LR 5O IA 324; 1923 AC 480. This view was again  reiterated  and emphasised by this  Court  in  Kanpur Nagar Mahapalika v M/s Narain Das Haribansh, 11970] 2 S.C.R. 28;  (1969)  2 SCC 620 where Ray, J., as the  learned  Chief Justice then was, observed at page  30 of the Report relying on Champsey Bhara case:     "An error of law on the face of the award meant that one could  find  in  the  award,  or  in  a  document   actually incorporated  thereto, as, for instance. a note appended  by the  arbitrator stating the reasons for his  judgment,  some legal proposition which was the basis of the award and which one can say is erroneous."     In  State  of Orissa & Ors v M/s Lall  Brothers,  [1988] Judgment   Today  S.C. 552 it was held by a  Bench  of  this Court  that it is not open to the Court to speculate,  where no reasons are given by the arbitrator, as to what  impelled him  to  arrive at his conclusions. Reference  was  made  in this connection (see paragraph 8) to the observations of the Judicial Committee in Champsey Bhara & Co. v. Jivraj  Balloo Spinning & Weaving Co. ltd. and of this Court in Jivarajbhai Ujamshi Sheth & Ors. v. Chintamanrao Balaji and Ors,  [1964] 5 S.C.R. 480.                                                   PG NO 523     It  was  next contended by Mr. Bhandare that  the  award disclosed  an  error in law as certain  important  documents relied  on  by  the  Appellants  were  not  referred  to  or discussed in the award at all. In support of this contention Mr.  Bhandare  referred to the decision in K.P.  Poulose  v. State  of Kerala and Another, [1975] 2 S.c.c. 236.  In  that case  the  arbitrator failed to take into  account  material documents, which were necessary to arrive at for a just  and fair decision to resolve the controversy between the parties and  it was held that this amounted to legal  misconduct  on the  part of the arbitrator and his award liable to  be  set aside.  This decision is not of much assistance in the  case before  us as it is not the contention of Mr. Bhandare  that the  award  is bad on the ground of any  misconduct  of  the arbitrator  but on the ground that it discloses an error  of law  on the face of the record. Moreover, our attention  has not  been  drawn  to  any  particular  document  which   was essential to resolve the controversy between the parties nor has  it  been demonstrated that any such  document  was  not taken into account by the arbitrator. In view of this, there is no basis to support the contention of Mr. Bhandare  which must  be rejected. It cannot be even said in this case  that the  arbitrator  was  guilty  of  any  legal  misconduct  or otherwise .     The  objections  to  the  Award  of  Shri  A.C.   Gupta,

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therefore, fail and are dismissed. There will be a  judgment in  terms  of  the  Award.  Let  the  decree  be  drawn   up accordingly.  In  the facts and circumstances of  the  case, there will be no order as to costs to the hearing before us. N.V.K.