M/S RAM BARAI SINGH & CO. Vs. STATE OF BIHAR & ORS.
Supreme Court of India (Division Bench (DB)- Two Judge)
Appeal (Civil), 11465 of 2014, Judgment Date: Dec 17, 2014
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 11465 OF 2014
[Arising out of S.L.P.(C)No.8101 of 2011]
M/s. Ram Barai Singh & Co. .....Appellant
Versus
State of Bihar & Ors. .....Respondents
J U D G M E N T
SHIVA KIRTI SINGH, J.
Heard the parties. Leave granted.
This appeal is directed against final judgment and order dated 12.01.2011
passed by the Division Bench of Patna High Court in L.P.A. No.762 of 2009
whereby the Letters Patent Appeal preferred by the respondents herein was
allowed and order of the learned Single Judge dated 18.02.2009 in Writ
Petition bearing C.W.J.C. No.10173 of 2008 was set aside on the sole ground
that there was an arbitration clause in an agreement between the parties
and since such alternative remedy was not availed by the appellant, the
writ petition itself was not maintainable.
Learned counsel for the appellant has assailed the aforesaid order of the
Division Bench on facts as well as on law. On law, it was contended that
the writ petition could not have been held not maintainable, more so when
no such objection was taken by the other side. On facts, it was submitted
that the agreement noticed by the Division Bench no doubt contained an
arbitration clause entitling either of the parties to invoke arbitration by
the concerned Superintending Engineer in case of any dispute arising out of
the agreement but the Division Bench failed to notice that the agreement
itself was no longer in existence because the work was completed long back
and payments including payment on account of labour escalation costs
amounting to Rs.9.53 lacs was paid in February 1992. Thus, according to
the appellant, the agreement dated 06.02.1989 had worked itself out and it
was much later that a dispute arose when the respondent authorities
withheld the security amount of the appellant of Rs.30 lacs for a long
period. On persistent demand, Rs.20 lacs out of the security amount, was
returned after 10 years in December 2002 and that too without any interest.
At that stage appellant came to know that Engineer-in-Chief vide an order
dated 09.06.2001 had ordered for making a recovery of Rs.9.53 lacs from the
appellant which had been paid long back on account of labour escalation
cost.
The appellant preferred a writ petition bearing C.W.J.C.No.3686 of 2005 to
claim the interest on undue delay in refunding the security deposit and
against the direction for recovery of labour escalation cost. The
respondents did not raise plea of arbitration clause and that writ petition
was disposed of on 20.09.2006 allowing 12% interest on account of delay in
payment of security amount. The issue of labour escalation cost was
remanded back to the concerned Engineer-in-Chief who was directed to pass a
reasoned order after hearing the appellant or his representative, within a
fixed period. The appellant was granted liberty to seek his remedy if he
was aggrieved by the order that may be passed by the Engineer-in-Chief.
The respondents preferred a Letters Patent Appeal bearing No.877 of 2006 in
which also they did not raise the issue of alternative remedy by way of
arbitration clause. The LPA was disposed of on 11.12.2007 with the
following direction :
".... .... Since the matter is going on remand, the State has to apply its
mind afresh to the facts and circumstances of the case and, therefore, the
direction, as quoted above would be juxtaposition to the order of remand.
The question of payment of interest by either side, however, will abide by
the ultimate determination of the question by the State of Bihar.
It goes without saying that the matter would be examined and re-
determined by the State expeditiously."
The Engineer-in-Chief passed a fresh order on 21.05.2008 against the
appellant over-ruling the various grounds and objections raised by the
appellant in his representation relating to merits of the matter as well as
jurisdiction of the Engineer-in-Chief who, according to appellant, had no
role in the issue which was to be finalized at the stage of Executive
Engineer and the Superintending Engineer. The appellant challenged the
order of Engineer-in-Chief through writ petition bearing C.W.J.C. No.10173
of 2008 which was allowed by the learned Single Judge on 18.02.2009 by a
reasoned order. There is no dispute that respondents filed a counter
affidavit but did not raise any objection of alternative remedy by way of
an arbitration clause in the agreement dated 06.02.1989.
The learned Single Judge allowed the writ petition preferred by the
appellant by setting aside the order of the Engineer-in-Chief dated
21.05.2008. The Court found that the Engineer-in-Chief had raised demand
of interest in the year 2008 along with refund of labour escalation cost
only to offset the State's liability to pay interest on refund of security
deposit after a delay of about 10 years. Thus the action of the
respondents was held to be for ulterior reasons and objection to labour
escalation cost after a long gap from its actual payment was held to be
arbitrary and unreasonable.
The aforesaid order of the learned Single Judge dated 18.02.2009 was set
aside by the Division Bench by the order under appeal on the ground already
noticed earlier.
We find ourselves in agreement with case of the appellant that the Division
Bench failed to notice the relevant facts including the history of earlier
litigation. It also failed to notice that the agreement itself had worked
out long back and in the earlier round of litigation as well as in the
present round the respondents never raised any objection on the basis of
arbitration clause.
The Division Bench noticed the judgment of this Court in the case of State
of U.P. & Ors. v. Bridge & Roof Company (India) Ltd. (1996) 6 SCC 22 as
well as in the case of ABL International Ltd. & Anr. v. Export Credit
Guarantee Corporation of India Ltd. & Ors. (2004) 3 SCC 553 for coming to
the conclusion that where the contract itself provides an effective
alternative remedy by way of reference to arbitration, it is good ground
for declining to exercise extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 226 of
the Constitution of India and that the Court will not permit recourse to
other remedy without invoking the remedy by way of arbitration, "unless, of
course, both the parties to the dispute agree on another mode of dispute
resolution."
In our considered view, the aforesaid two decisions did not warrant setting
aside of the judgment of learned Single Judge without going into merits and
dismissing the writ petition at appellate stage on ground of alternative
remedy when no such objection was taken by the respondents either before
the writ court or even in the Memorandum of Letters Patent Appeal.
In our view, a constitutional remedy by way of writ petition is always
available to an aggrieved party and an arbitration clause in an agreement
between the parties cannot ipso facto render a writ petition "not
maintainable" as wrongly held by the Division Bench. Availability of
alternative remedy is definitely a permissible ground for refusal by a writ
court to exercise its jurisdiction in appropriate cases. But once the
respondents had not objected to entertainment of the writ petition on
ground of availability of alternative remedy, the final judgment rendered
on merits cannot be faulted and set aside only on noticing by the Division
Bench that an alternative remedy by way of arbitration clause could have
been resorted to.
In our view, learned counsel for the appellant has made out a case for
setting aside the order under appeal both on the facts noticed above which
show that there was no existing agreement because the work had been
completed and payment had already been made long back and also on the
question of law raised in this appeal that a constitutional remedy through
a writ petition cannot be held to be not available and not maintainable on
account of an alternative remedy. It is for the writ court to consider
whether in an appropriate case, writ petitioner should be relegated to
avail alternative remedy or not. But once writ petition is heard at length
and decided against one or the other party on merits, such a decision/order
cannot be held to be bad in law only on the ground that writ petition was
not maintainable due to availability of alternative remedy.
Having considered the matter on merits as reflected by the order of the
learned Single Judge, we find sufficient merit in this appeal and hence it
is allowed. The order under appeal is set aside and the judgment and order
of the learned Single Judge is restored along with a cost of Rs.25,000/-
(Rupees twenty five thousand) to be paid by the respondents to the
appellant within two months.
...........................................J.
[M.Y. EQBAL]
............................................J.
[SHIVA KIRTI SINGH]
New Delhi.
December 17, 2014.
ITEM NO.1A COURT NO.10 SECTION XVI
S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
Civil Appeal No. 11465 of 2014 in Petition(s) for Special Leave to Appeal
(C) No(s). 8101/2011
M/S RAM BARAI SINGH & CO. Appellant(s)
VERSUS
STATE OF BIHAR & ORS. Respondent(s)
Date : 17/12/2014 This appeal was called on for judgment today.
For Petitioner(s)
Mr. Gaurav Agrawal,Adv.
For Respondent(s)
Mr. Gopal Singh,Adv.
Hon'ble Mr. Justice Shiva Kirti Singh pronounced the judgment
of the Bench comprising of Hon'ble Mr. Justice M.Y. Eqbal and His Lordship.
Leave granted.
The appeal is allowed in terms of the signed judgment.
(Sukhbir Paul Kaur) (Indu Pokhriyal)
Court Master Court Master
(Signed reportable judgment is placed on the file)
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