Full Text
HIGH COURT OF DELHI
Date of Decision: 18th September, 2023
DR. SHRADHA MALIK ..... Petitioner
Through: Mr. M. Qayam Ud Din & Ms Smerity Rani, Advocates (M- 9811030056)
& ORS. ..... Respondents
Through: Mr. Ashish Verma, Advocate for R-4.
(M- 9717944394)
13(SB)
TONMOY SHARMA ..... Petitioner Rani, Advocates.
Mr. Ashish Verma, Advocate for R-4.
14(SB)
SMT. MAYA DEVI ..... Petitioner
SMT. REENA SHARMA ..... Petitioner
JUDGMENT
1. This hearing has been done though hybrid mode.
2. The present petitions have been filed by: Writ Petition Petitioner W.P.(C) 14733/2022 Dr. Shradha Malik W.P.(C) 17766/2022 Mr. Tonmoy Sharma W.P.(C) 17767/2022 Smt. Maya Devi W.P.(C) 17789/2022 Ms. Reena Sharma
3. The present petitions have been filed seeking setting aside of the notice of hearing for start of conciliation proceeding dated 6th April, 2022.
4. The said notice has been issued by the Delhi Arbitration Centre (DAC) pursuant to the references made by the Micro & Small Enterprises Facilitation Council (MSEFC) in CASE/Reference ID: DL/10/M/SWC 00723 of 2022 titled IQ Consultancy v. Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd & Ors.
5. The brief background of these cases is that the said Petitioners are directors of the company - Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd. The said company entered into a contract of service dated 1st June, 2018 with Respondent No.4 - I.Q. Consultancy. Certain disputes arose between the parties regarding payments to the Respondent No.4. Thereafter, Respondent No.4 being registered as a ‘Supplier’ under the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006 (hereinafter, ‘MSMED Act, 2006’) filed a complaint before the MSEFC. Pursuant thereto, settlement agreement dated 17th August, 2020 was entered into between the parties on the condition that the Respondent No.4 shall withdraw its complaints before the MSEFC.
6. As per the terms of the settlement agreement, Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd. was to pay monthly instalments of Rs 46,000/- each starting w.e.f 18th September, 2020 up to 18th February, 2022 Rs. 46,000/- in 18 instalments and clear the dues amounting to Rs. 8,28,000/- of Respondent No.4. The relevant terms of the said settlement are extracted below:
7. The first instalment as per the settlement was paid and the Respondent no.4 did not press the complaint before MSEFC. However, no payment was made thereafter. Due to alleged non-compliance of this settlement agreement, the MSEFC then passed orders referring the matter to arbitration. Pursuant thereto, arbitration proceedings were initiated in the DAC before the ld. Sole Arbitrator.
8. The DAC issued the impugned notice of hearing dated 6th April 2022, which is challenged in these petitions.
9. In W.P.(C) 14733/2022, vide order dated 18th October, 2022, this Court had stayed further proceedings before the DAC on the ground that the Petitioners could not be sued in personal capacity. The relevant part of the said order is as under: “Prima facie, the Court finds merit in the challenge raised to the reference made by the Council invoking powers conferred by Section 18 of Micro Small & Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006 in light of the submission that the invoice as well the contract between the parties for supply of services was between the I.Q. Consultancy and Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd. In that view of the matter, learned counsel would contend that there existed no justification for the petitioner being sued in a personal capacity. Matter requires consideration. Till the next date of listing, there shall be stay of further proceedings pending before the Delhi Arbitration Centre pursuant to the order of reference dated 06 April 2022.”
10. Relying upon the aforementioned order, this Court in W.P.(C) 17767/2022 and W.P.(C) 17766/2022 vide orders dated 28th December, 2022, stayed the arbitration proceedings before the DAC in CASE/Reference ID: DL/10/M/SWC/00723 of 2022.
11. Today, ld. Counsel for the Respondent No.4 submits that one instalment has been paid and the remaining have not been paid which led Respondent No.4 to approach the MSEFC. Thereafter the MSEFC passed the impugned reference orders.
12. On the other hand, Mr. M. Qayam Ud Din, ld. Counsel for the Petitioners again seeks an adjournment on the ground that the electronic record is not available with him.
13. It is noticed from a perusal of the record that the settlement agreements dated 17th August, 2020 has admittedly been entered into between Respondent No.4 and Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd. The agreement on record is quite clear and is not disputed. Respondent No.4 admittedly was to be paid a sum of Rs. 8,28,000/- which has, admittedly, not been paid. Thus, the Petitioners as also the company Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd. are clearly in default.
14. All the Directors of the company approached this Court individually and the company did not file any writ petition challenging the arbitral proceedings. This was clearly a clever tactic of getting the arbitral proceedings stayed without putting the company in the forefront. This ruse appears to have been adopted only to not honour the settlement agreement.
15. Further, the challenge by the Petitioner is that initially the MSEFC proceedings were only against the individual Petitioners and not the company and later on the company was added. A perusal of the claim petition dated 25th June 2022 filed by Respondent No.4 before the MSEFC by would also show that the said proceeding are between Respondent No.4, Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd., Ms. Maya Devi Thappa, Ms. Reena Sharma, Ms. Shradha Malik, Mr. Tonmoy Sharma and Ms. Siddhanta Mangla Kashyap. Thus, the mere fact that, initially, notice may have been issued only to Ms. Shradha Malik would not have an impact on the proceedings before the MSEFC.
16. This is the second round of litigation between the Respondent No. 4, Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd., and their Directors. The Petitioners are misleading the Court by relying upon a notice of appearance issued by the DAC.
17. Clearly, on the date when this Court had granted interim orders dated 18th October, 2022 and 28th December, 2022, the claim petition dated 25th June, 2022 which had Sovereign Health India Pvt. Ltd. as a party was not brought to the notice of the Court
18. In view thereof, the interim orders granted on 18th October, 2022 and 28th December, 2022 do not deserve to be continued. The settlement being not in dispute and the default thereof also not being in dispute, the reference to arbitration by the MSEFC cannot be faulted.
19. Moreover, today the ld. Counsel for the Petitioners repeatedly submitted that he does not have the claim petition with him. It was discovered during the course of the hearing that the claim petition dated 25th June 2022, was very much a part of the record and was also with the ld. Counsel for the Petitioners.
20. In each of these petitions, the Petitioners shall pay a sum of Rs.10,000/- to the Respondent No.4. The arbitration before the DAC shall continue in accordance with law.
21. The costs shall be paid prior to the next hearing before the ld. Arbitrator which is now fixed on 2nd November, 2023 before the DAC.
22. These petitions, along with all pending applications, are disposed of in the above terms.
PRATHIBA M. SINGH JUDGE SEPTEMBER 18, 2023 dj/kt (corrected & released on 25th September, 2023)