Full Text
HIGH COURT OF DELHI
Date of Decision: 11th September, 2018
FOOD CORPORATION OF INDIA ..... Petitioner
Through: Mr. Sukumar Pattjoshi, Senior Advocate with Mr. Mohan Lal
Sharma, Advocate.
Through: None.
JUDGMENT
1. The Food Corporation of India (hereinafter ‘FCI’) has filed the present petition challenging the award dated 6th August, 2011 whereby all the claims of FCI had been rejected.
2. The chronology of facts and events are that an agreement was entered into on 10th October, 1994 between FCI and Guru Nanak Rice & General Mills, Jagraon – Respondent (hereinafter, ‘Respondent’). As per the said agreement, the Respondent was to store paddy in its mill, and mill the same. After undertaking the process of milling, the resultant rice was to be supplied to FCI. The terms and conditions as contained in the contract are as under: - “AGREEMENT FOR STORAGE-CUM-MILLING OF FCI PADDY STORED IN MILLERS PREMISES INTO CONVENTIONAL RATE/PERIODICAL RICE.” “1. The miller shall be supplied paddy available at Jagraon as per the arrangements agreed upon by the miller and accepted by the Corporation. 2018:DHC:5883
2. The miller may associate himself at the time of paddy purchases in the mandis and weigh bridges to cross check its quality and quantity respectively. Paddy shall be moved from mandis to mill premises to be stored in joint custody of FCI and the miller and the transportation and stacking operations in mills premises shall be arranged and cost against threes operations shall be borne by the Food Corporation of India. The miller shall undertake storage of paddy in his premises without claiming any storage and preservation charges.
3. The Miller shall undertake shelling of paddy at FCI applicable custom milling rate which will include all services as per details given below:- SERVICES: a) Lifting paddy from storage points in the mills, loading into trucks and carriage to the mills. b) Drying of paddy; c) Katal of paddy bags before dehusking; d) Dehusking of paddy; e) Filling of bags of rice prior to dara-making; f) Dara making of rice bags and filling / sewing of bags; g) Transportation of milled rice to railway stationed loading into wagons, inspection, weighment and sampling as per directions of the Corporation; or transportation of milled rice to the storage points to the Corporation including those of CWC/SWC hired godowns as per directions of the Corporation, unloading of trucks and delivery after inspection, weighment, sampling at scale point at the cost of miller. Name of Name of Variety of paddy Weight of the District the storage centre paddy in qtls. For which contract is to made for storage and milling. 1 2 3 4 Ludhiana Jagraon Fine 35000=22750-00 Out-turn ratio for conservatio n of paddy into rice Milling Rate Qty. of paddy out of which (col.4) rice will be manufactured 5 6 7 P 67% 9 Rs. 14937-65 22295 eligible ………………………
7. The miller shall be responsible for the safe custody milling of paddy issued to him for/delivery of rice, as per agreed and recovery of out-turn ratio. Miller shall also take good and losses that may be incurred in paddy/rice during transit/storage at 1.[5] times the economic cost of the variety of paddy/rice towards the shortfall. … 8(iii) In case there is shortfall in the recovery of rice the miller shall pay to the Corporation the cost of paddy equivalent to the shortfall at the rate of 1 & half times the economic cost of paddy. …. 9(iii) The miller shall complete delivery of rice within 10 days of issuance of paddy to him and rice due to the Corporation on the total quantity of paddy issued to him or in joint custody released at regular interval shall be delivered not later than the 28th February, 1995. The miller shall further ensure milling of paddy and delivery of rice in the following manner: - October / November 20% December 26% January 26% February 28% However, in case of process of milling is slowed down due to operational exigencies beyond the control of Miller/SRM may consider and extend the above mentioned milling schedule. … 16(c) The miller shall be responsible to make good all shortages in paddy, rice and gunny bags that might occur while in his custody till the entire stocks are returned. These shortages can with the consent of the corporation be made good in kind according to the specification and variety of paddy, rice and gunny bags involved. In case the miller fails to do so, recovery would be made from him for shortages of paddy and rice at 1 & half times the economic cost of equivalent paddy/rice according to the variety involved.”
3. A total of 21865.35 quintals in 33639 bags of paddy was stored in the Respondent’s mill for the purposes of milling. The total paddy milled was to the tune of 12320.0062 quintals in 19340 bags. The remaining paddy continued to be stored in the Respondent’s premises. It was neither milled nor returned to FCI. The contract was for a period of around 4 months i.e., from 10th October, 1994 to 28th February, 1995. The contract was to be completed by 28th February, 1995 which was extended till 31st May, 1995. However, since the Respondent did not complete the milling, the left-over paddy was considered to be sold and a sum of Rs.28,55,160.00/- was adjusted from the said sale. A huge loss was caused to the FCI because of which FCI invoked the arbitration clause in the agreement which is as under:
4. Thereafter, FCI issued notice dated 23rd January, 1998 to the Respondent and sought payment of a sum or Rs.53,26,241/-. The claims raised by FCI are as under: -
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ SL. NO. DETAILS FINE QUALITY │ │ BAGS QTY. │ ├────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ 1. Paddy stored in the 33639 21865-35 │ │ Mill premises of the │ │ respondent as per the │ │ agreement │ │ 2. Paddy milled upto 19340 12320.00.062 │ │ 31.05.95 (Raw & Par │ │ O.M.P. 155/2012 Page 5 of 8 │ │ 2018:DHC:5883 │ │ boiled) │ │ 3. Rice received upto 8750 8299.75.000 │ │ 31.05.95 (Raw & Par │ │ boiled) │ │ 4. Storage loss @ 2% 251.42.000 │ │ driage on paddy │ │ milled │ │ 5. Balance paddy as on 14299 9293.93.938 │ │ 01.06.95 │ │ 6. Cost of balance paddy Rs.77,80,598.86 │ │ @ 837.17 of fine │ │ quality │ │ 7. Sale of paddy after 8201Qtl. │ │ 01.06.95 and amount Rs.28,55,160.00 │ │ realized │ │ 8. Amount recoverable Rs. 49,23,438.86 │ │ from the respondent │ │ 9. Rice received after 466,60qtl │ │ 31.05.95 in terms of │ │ paddy │ │ 10. Value of paddy Rs. 25,719.25 │ │ 11. Amount recoverable Rs.2,13, 261.63 │ │ on account of quality │ │ cut/gunny bags │ │ retained/sales tax/ │ │ income tax etc. │ │ 12. Total amount Rs.51,36,700.49 │ │ recoverable │ │ 13. Amount payable to the Rs. 1,17,147.75 │ │ miller towards milling │ │ charges Stitching Rs. 11,562.50 │ │ charges │ │ 14. Cost of gunnies Rs. 2,00,000.00 │ │ 15. Security Amount Rs. 30,000.00 │ │ 16. Net amount Rs.45,27,279.99 │ │ recoverable as on │ │ 01.06.1995 │ │ 5. Vide the said letter, FCI called upon the miller i.e., the Respondent │ │ O.M.P. 155/2012 Page 6 of 8 │ │ 2018:DHC:5883 │ └────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
1. Paddy stored in the Mill premises of the respondent as per the agreement 33639 21865-35
2. Paddy milled upto 31.05.95 (Raw & Par 19340 12320.00.062 boiled)
3. Rice received upto 31.05.95 (Raw & Par boiled) 8750 8299.75.000
4. Storage loss @ 2% driage on paddy milled 251.42.000
5. Balance paddy as on 01.06.95 14299 9293.93.938
6. Cost of balance paddy @ 837.17 of fine quality Rs.77,80,598.86
7. Sale of paddy after 01.06.95 and amount realized 8201Qtl. Rs.28,55,160.00
8. Amount recoverable from the respondent Rs. 49,23,438.86
9. Rice received after 31.05.95 in terms of paddy 466,60qtl
10. Value of paddy Rs. 25,719.25
11. Amount recoverable on account of quality cut/gunny bags retained/sales tax/ income tax etc. Rs.2,13, 261.63
12. Total amount recoverable Rs.51,36,700.49
13. Amount payable to the miller towards milling charges Stitching charges Rs. 1,17,147.75 Rs. 11,562.50
14. Cost of gunnies Rs. 2,00,000.00
15. Security Amount Rs. 30,000.00
16. Net amount recoverable as on 01.06.1995 Rs.45,27,279.99
5. Vide the said letter, FCI called upon the miller i.e., the Respondent herein, after invoking clause 16(c) that the Respondent is liable to pay 1½ times the economic cost of the paddy/rice which comes to Rs.45,27,279.99/along with interest. Claim statement was filed by FCI before the Indian Council of Arbitration as per which it was acknowledged by FCI that the total sum recoverable from the miller for the unprocessed un-milled paddy was Rs. 45,27,279.99/- from which the expenses payable to the Respondent were to be deducted. Thus, FCI raised a claim before the Arbitrator to recover the amounts due.
6. A perusal of the award reveals that the only reasoning given by the arbitrator is that FCI had failed to prove the claim and the quantum by documents and that the Claimant had also not explained the avoidable delay in arbitration. The date of the contract is 10th October, 1994. The original date of completion of the contract was 28th February, 1995 but the unsold paddy was finally sold after 31st May, 1995. The FCI issued notice dated 19th /22nd July, 1997 and another notice on 6th November, 1997. The claim petition was filed before the Indian Council of Arbitration on 20th February, 1998 along with the registration fee. The Indian Council of Arbitration refused to proceed with the arbitration which finally resulted in the FCI taking the matter right till the Supreme Court. Vide order dated 10th February, 2000, the arbitration petition seeking appointment of arbitrator was dismissed by this Court. However, on 17th July, 2003, the Supreme Court allowed the appeals of the FCI and directed the Indian Council of Arbitration to appoint the arbitrator. The said order of the Supreme Court reads as under: “Keeping into consideration all these aspects, we consider it just and more appropriate, proper and reasonable â\200\223 both in law and in equity and interests of justice to direct ICA to forthwith and not later than sixty days from this date nominate the Arbitrator as sought for by the appellants and place the matters before such Arbitrator, leaving open to the parties to raise and pursue all objections and contentions and thereby seek for the decision of the Arbitrator as envisaged under Section 16 of the 1996 Act, besides getting adjudication of the respective disputes in these cases on merits and in accordance with law. Both parties will have leave and liberties to do so before the Arbitrator on being nominated/appointed by the ICA, pursuant to these orders. The appeals are allowed and accordingly disposed of as indicated above. The respective parties will bear their costs.”
7. Thus the arbitrator who was appointed was to decide the matter in accordance with law and not to simply refuse to take the claim into consideration. The award is completely unreasoned. It merely rejects the entire claim with one sentence “the burden to prove its case is very heavy on the claimant. In its affidavit & supporting documents the claimant has not been able to prove the clauses of agreement & quantum of claim by evidence, oral or documentary”. Such an award is wholly unreasoned and unsustainable in law. The award is accordingly set aside.
8. The OMP is allowed in the above terms.
PRATHIBA M. SINGH JUDGE SEPTEMBER 11, 2018 Rekha