Full Text
Date ofdecision:05.12.2016
UNION OF INDIA Appellant
Through Mr J.K.Singh,Standing Counsel for UOI
Through Mr Raman Kapoor, Sr. Adv. with Mr Aviral Tiwari,Advs.
JUDGMENT
1. Challenge in this appeal is to the order dated 27'*^ February, 2016 passed by the learned Additional District Judge-I (Central) Tis Hazari Courts whereby the objections filed by the appellant u/s 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996(hereinafter referred to as 'the Act')for setting aside the arbitral award dated 9'^ June,2015 for Rs.l0,12,200/- in favour of the respondent was dismissed being barred by time.
2. The contract for the work at "Zone-Ill -All civil works like earthwork in filling/cutting with contractor/railway earth in embankmentto the required profile,const./extn.ofHume pipe bridges of 1x0.400 m span box bridges of0.61 m span,RCC slabs bridges of sizes varying from 0.915 m to 2.44 m including slab sub-structures of FAO470/2016 PageI 2016:DHC:8548 bridges ofspan 3.05 m and above and other allied works between Km. 126.300 to Km. 120.000 in connection with line work of Ghaziabad-Hapur BG doubling was awarded by the petitioner to M/s. Suresh Construction Co.-Respondent herein vide letter dated 4.3.1977 with stipulated date of completion of entire work by 3.12.1997 i.e., within 9 months. Accordingly the contract agreement No. 119- W/Dy.CE/C/PTNR dated 11.6.1997 was executed between the petitioner and the respondent and contract value was for Rs.61,66,444.50 as per the agreement. The work was awarded to the respondent subject to applicability of GCC and the terms and condition of GCC was also part of the contract which was binding upon both the parties.
3. Disputes arose between the parties. The respondent invoked arbitration clause and arbitral tribunal was formed. After completion ofproceedings before the arbitral tribunal,award dated 9^*^ June,2015 was given by the Tribunal. The petitioner filed a petition u/s 34 ofthe Act before the learned Additional District Judge, Delhi. Along with the petition,an application u/s 34(3)ofthe Act was also moved by the petitioner stating therein that impugned award dated 09.06.2015, was received on 26.6.2015, which was assigned to Railway Advocate Sh.Ashok Singh for filing the objection petition vide letter dated 09.10.2015 who has returned the file on 08.12.2015 on the ground that amount involved in the impugned award was less than mpees one crore and the same could be challenged before District Court and he was not on the panel of District Court. Accordingly, case file was FAO470/2016 Page[2] assigned to Sh.Neeraj Kumar, Panel Advocate vide letter dated 16.12.2015 for filing objection before the competent court of law. But said case file was returned vide letter dated 22.12.2015 by said Sh. Neeraj Kumar, Advocate as he was unable to do the same due to sudden demise of his grandmother. Finally, case was assigned to the present counsel on 12.01.2016 and case file was handed over to him on 15.01.2016, who requested concerned department to provide the other connected file. Since, the case was very old, as such, the concerned officials took ten days in tracing out all the concerned files and thereafter on 20.01.2016 the requisite file was traced out. Objection petition was filed on 03.02.2016. It has been averred that the certified copy of impugned award was received on 26.06.2015 through daak and inadvertently the same could not be put up before the concerned Deputy Chief Engineer by the dealing assistant, which was a bonafide mistake ofthe dealing assistant and due to this reason the step could not be taken within stipulated period ofthree months. The petitioner is a Central Covemment Organization, working for the interest ofpublic at large, hence,the petitioner sought condonation of delay submitting that petitioner would suffer irreparable loss and injury,ifpresent application is not allowed and party should not suffer for the fault oftheir counsel.
4. After hearing learned counsel for the petitioner,the application seeking condonation of delay in filing the petition was dismissed being hopelessly barred by the limitation. Resultantly,the petition u/s 34 ofthe Act was also dismissed. FAO470/2016 Page[3]
5. Aggrieved by the said order, present appeal has been filed by the petitioner, inter alia,on the ground that the petitioner is a Central Government Department and public money is involved. In case the delay in filing the objection is not condoned, then the petitioner will suffer an irreparable loss and injury. Non filing of the objection petition within stipulated period of limitation was neither intentional nor deliberate but occasioned due to circumstances as averred in the application. As such, it is submitted that the impugned order be set aside. The Award dated 9^^ June, 2015 passed by the Arbitrator be also set aside.
6. Opposing the appeal, learned counsel for the respondent submits that proviso to Section 34 of the Act provides for a period within which the Court can exercise its discretion for condonation of delay. Legislature itself prescribed a special limitation for the purpose of appeal and the period of limitation is 3 months from the date of receipt of arbitral award. The delay can be condoned for a period of 30 days on showing sufficient cause but not thereafter. In the instant case, the arbitral award was received by the petitioner on th 26 June,2015 whereas the petition u/s 34 ofthe Act accompanied by application u/s 34(3) of the Act seeking condonation of delay was filed only on 3"* February, 2016. That being so, the Court was not competent to condone the delay,therefore,the application was rightly dismissed by the Trial Court which does not warrant any interference. Reliance has been placed on Union of India vs. M/s. Popular Construction Co., AIR 2001 SC 4010.
7. It is undisputed case ofthe parties that the arbitral award was FAO470/2016 Page[4] passed by the arbitral tribunal on 9"^ June, 2015. The award was received by the petitioner on 26"^ June,2015. Challenging the award, petition u/s 34 ofthe Act wasfiled on 3'"'^ February,2016. Along with petition, an application u/s 34(3) of the Act was also filed seeking condonation ofdelay in filing the petition.
8. Section 34(3)ofthe Act reads as under:- "(3) An application for setting aside may not be made after three months have elapsed from the date on which the party making that application had received the arbitral award or, if a request had been made under section 33,from the date on which that request had been disposed ofby the arbitral tribunal: Provided that if the Court is satisfied that the applicant was prevented bysufficient causefrom making the application within the said period of three months it may entertain the application within afurther period ofthirty days, but not thereafter."
9. A bare perusal of the Sub-Section goes to show that an application for setting aside the award is to be filed within three months from the date on which the arbitral award is received by the party. Proviso appended to this Sub-Section, however,empowers the Court to extend the period of30 days on showing sufficient cause by the applicant which prevented him from making the application within the said period ofthree months. Undisputedly,the petition u/s 34 of the Act was filed much after the expiry of period of three months as stipulated under this Sub-Section and even after the expiry of30days asthe same has been filed only on 3'^''February,2016.
10. The question which arises for determination is whether the Trial Court was competent to extend the period oflimitation u/s 34 of FAO 470/2016 Page[5] the Act. In Union of/rtf//fl(supra), delay was sought to be condoned by the appellant by invoking the provisions of Section 5 of the Limitation Act, 1963. After referring to Section 34(3)ofthe Act, it was held by the Supreme Court that
12. Asfar as the language ofSection 34 ofthe 1996 Act is concerned, the crucial words are 'but not thereafter' used in the proviso to sub-section (3). In our opinion, this phrase would amount to an express exclusion within the meaning of Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act, and would therefore bar the application ofsection 5 of that Act. Parliament did not need to gofurther. To hold that the Court could entertain an application to set aside the Award beyond the extended period under the proviso, would render the phrase 'but not thereafter'wholly otiose. No principle of interpretation wouldjustify such a result.
13. Apart from the language, 'express exclusion' may follow from the scheme and object of the special or local law. Even in a case, where the special law does not exclude the provisions of Sections 4 to 24 of the Limitation Act by an express reference, it would nonetheless be open to the Court to examine whether and to what extent the nature of those provisions or the nature of the subject-matter and scheme of the special law exclude their operation. Here by history and scheme of the 1996 Act support the conclusion that the time limit prescribed under Section 34 to challenge an Award is absolute and unextendable by Court under Section 5 of the Limitation Act. The Arbitration and Conciliation Bill, 1995 which preceded the 1996 Act stated as one of its main objectives the need "to minimise the supervisory role ofcourts in the arbitral process". This objective hasfound expression in Section 5 of the Act which prescribes the extent ofjudicial intervention in no uncertain terms: "5. Extent ofJudicial intervention. Notwithstanding anything contained in any other lawfor the time being inforce, in matters governed by this FAO 470/2016 Page[6] Part, nojudicial authority shall intervene except where so provided in this Part."
14. The 'Part'referred to in Section 5 is Part I of the 1996Act which deals with domestic arbitrations. Section 34 is contained in Part I and is therefore subject to the sweep ofthe prohibition contained in Section 5of the 1996 Act.
15. Furthermore, section 34 (1) itself provides that recourse to a court against an arbitral award may be made only by an applicationforsetting aside such award "in accordance with"sub Section 2 and sub Section 3. Sub Section 2 relates to groundsfor setting aside an award and is not relevant for our purposes. But an application field beyond the period mentioned in Section 34, sub-section (3) would not be an application "in accordance with" that sub section. Consequently by virtue of Section 34(1), recourse to the court against an arbitral award cannot be made beyond the period prescribed. The importance of the periodfixed under Section 34 is emphasised by the provisions of Section 36 which provide that "where the timefor making an application to set aside the arbitral award underSection 34 has expired...the award shall be enforced and the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 in the same manner as ifit were a decree of a court". This is a significant departure from the provisions of the Arbitration Act, 1940. Under the 1940 Act, after the time to set aside the award expired, the court was required to "proceed to pronounce judgment according to the award and upon thejudgmentso pronounced a decree shallfollow". Now the consequence of the time expiring under Section 34 of the 1996 Act is that the award becomes immediateiy enforceable without any further act of the Court. If there were any residual doubt on the interpretation of the language used in Section 34, the scheme of the 1996 Act would resolve the issue in favour of curtailment of the Court's powers by the exclusion of the operation of Section 5ofthe Limitation Act."
11. Applying the ratio ofthisjudgmentto the factual matrix ofthe present case,the Court was not vested with any power to condone the delay in filing the petition u/s 34 ofthe Act.
12. Much emphasis has been laid by the learned counsel for the appellant for submitting that the petitioner is a Central Government department and it FAO 470/2016 Page 7 is not necessary for the Government department to explain each and every day's delay. Hence the petitioner seeks indulgence of the Court to take lenient view and to condone the delay in filing the objections as well as the appeal. There are catena ofdecisions to the effect viz. Union ofIndia v. N. Das R.Israni, 1993 AIR SCW 2573; State ofHaryana v. Chandra Mani and Ors., 2002(143)fLl 249(SC); Pundiik Jalant Patil(D) by LRs rv. Exe. Eng. Jalgaon Medium Project and Am(2008)17 SCC 448 that law makes no distinction between a private party and Government. State accorded the same treatment in an even-handed manner, and no separate standards to determine the cause laid down by the State vis-a-vis private litigant could be laid to prove strict standards of sufficient cause, however, the Apex Court observed that in view of the procedural red-tapisni in the process of making decisions and in order to see that ultimately the public interest does not suffer, certain amount of latitude to the appeal brought by the State is not impermissible. It was held that the expression "sufficient cause" should be considered with pragmatism in justice-oriented approach rather than the technical detection of"Sufficient cause" for explaining every day's delay. Nevertheless, in none of its decisions the Supreme Court has held that since a liberal approach is normally adopted while dealing with such applications filed by a public authority, the delay in filing appeal by them is to be condoned on a mere asking. Irrespective ofthe fact whether a litigant is the State or a private party,"sufficient cause" has to be shown for the delay in filing the appeal. The only difference would be some amount of latitude to the State on account of procedural red-tapism and the larger public interest. FAO 470/2016 Page[8]
13. Tested on the touchstone of the afore-noted broad principles to be kept in view while dealing with such applications, the Court is ofthe view that the appellant has miserably failed to show any cause, much less a sufficient cause for delay in filing the petition as well as the appeal. Undisputedly,the impugned award was received on 26"^ June,2015. After a lapse of approximately 3'A months, it was assigned to Sh. Ashok Singh, Advocate for filing the objection petition vide letter dated 9'^ October,2015. After merely two months,the Advocate returned the file vide letter dated 8'*^ December,2015 on the ground that the award being less than Rs.[1] crore has to be challenged before the District Court and he was not on the panel ofthe th District Court. Thereafter it was handed over to the panel advocate on 16 December, 2015 who returned the file on 22"'' December, 2015 due to th personal reasons. Thereafter the file was handed over to the counsel on 12 January, 2016 and thereafter objections were filed on J"'' February, 2016. No sufficient explanation except for a casual approach adopted by the dealing assistant for putting up the file before the Dy. Chief Engineer for taking necessary steps has been alleged by the petitioner. This is not the end of the matter. After the petition u/s 34 of the Act was dismissed on the ground of limitation even the present appeal has not been filed within the stipulated period and an application seeking condonation of87 days delay in filing the appeal has been moved. The grounds for delay in filing the appeal is narrated in para 2ofthe application to the following effect:
FAO 470/2016 Page 9 II department sent back to the signed on 19 th August, 2016. Thereafter the present appeal was filed on 22 nd August, 2016 before this Court. In the process, delay has occurred in filing the present appeal."
14. The ground so stated in the application shows that it is a simple case of inaction or negligence for which no indulgence can be given to the appellant. In any case, in view of the specific provisions incorporated uls 34 (3) of the Act, the delay could not have been condoned.
15. In this view of the matter, the impugned order does not suffer from any infirmity which warrants interference. Accordingly the appeal is dismissed. (1Im1- rt1-1 ~J....: S~ITA GUP A;J DECEMBER 05, 2016 rs