Judgment:
(Arising out of SLP (C) No.3692 of 2006)
R V Raveendran, J.
- Leave granted.
This appeal by special leave is
filed against the order dated 27.10.2005 passed by the Delhi High Court
under section 11 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 ('Act'
for short) in Arbitration Application No.200 of 2005 and the order dated
9.12.2005 rejecting the application for review.
2. The appellant and respondents 3
and 4, carrying on business in partnership under the name and style of
'Matchless Industries of India' (5th respondent herein), entered into a
partnership with Respondents 1 and 2, as per deed of partnership dated
1.3.1995 to carry on the business under the name and style of M/s.
Controls and Matchless Industries. Appellant, Respondent No. 3 and
Respondent No. 4 as partners of 'Matchless Industries of India' were
together shown as the first party to the partnership and Respondents 1
and 2 together were shown as the second party to the partnership. Clause
(14) thereof provided for settlement of disputes among the partners by
arbitration and the same is reproduced herein below :
"Any dispute or difference which may
arise between the partners or their representatives with regard to the
construction, meaning and effect to this deed or any part thereof or
respecting the accounts, profit or losses of the business or the rights
and liabilities of the partners under this deed or the dissolution or
winding up of the business of the partnership or any other matter
relating to the firm shall be referred to arbitration of sole arbitrator
in accordance with the provisions of the Indian Arbitration Act."
3. The said firm was dissolved as
per deed dated 24.12.2001. It is stated that certain disputes arose
between the parties in connection with certain claims by Respondents 1
and 2 on dissolution of the said firm of M/s Controls and Matchless
Industries. Respondents 1 and 2 sent a communicated dated 22.8.2003 to
the appellant and respondents 3 to 5 seeking 'accounts'. The fourth
respondent sent a letter dated 17.12.2003 on the letterhead of
'Matchless Industries of India' stating that he would ensure that a sum
of Rs.53,81,585/- is paid to respondents 1 and 2. Thereafter,
respondents 1 and 2 sent a notice dated 27.6.2005 to appellant and
respondents 3 to 5, claiming that the amounts mentioned therein were due
to them and sought concurrence for the appointment of Mr. Abhinav
Vasisht, Advocate, as sole arbitrator, to decide the dispute. The
appellant sent a reply dated 21.7.2005 contending that there cannot be
any arbitration as the Dissolution Deed did not contain any arbitration
clause.
4. Respondents 1 and 2, therefore,
filed Arbitration Application No.200/2005 in the Delhi High Court under
Section 11 of the Act for appointing the person suggested by them or any
other person as the sole arbitrator for adjudicating the disputes
between them and the respondents therein. The Appellant and Respondents
3 to 5 herein were arrayed as respondents 1 to 4 in the said Arbitration
Application.
5. The said application was resisted
on the ground that the firm of Matchless Industries of India (4th
Respondent in the arbitration application) was not a party to the
agreement for arbitration and therefore the application was not
maintainable. The existence of arbitration clause in so far as
Respondents 1 to 3 before the High Court and receipt of notices were not
disputed. The said objection was raised only during arguments and no
formal objections were filed. The High Court by order dated 27.10.2005
allowed the said application and appointed Justice C L Choudhary (Retd.)
and sole Arbitrator, with an observation that the question whether the
disputes were arbitrable or not could be raised before the arbitrator
and can be decided under Section 16 of the Act.
6. Thereafter the appellant herein
filed a review petition dated 7.12.2005 contending that having regard to
the decision of this Court in S B P & Co. v. M/s. Patel Engineering Ltd.
[2005 (9) SCALE 1], the High Court should decide the question whether
any dispute involving 'Matchless industries of India' could be referred
to arbitration. The High Court rejected the review application on
9.12.2005.
7. The only contention urged by the
Appellant in this appeal is that the High Court ought to have decided
the contention relating to non-arbitrability of disputes with reference
to 'Matchless Industries of India', instead of leaving it to the
Arbitrator for decision under section 16. It is submitted that section
16 will not apply where the Arbitrator is appointed by the court under
section 11.
8. It is no necessary to examine the
scope of section 16 of the Act. We find that the observation by the High
Court that Arbitrator can decide whether the disputes arbitrable or not
under section 16 of the Act was really redundant, as it had in fact
considered the objection and decided the question as follows :
"It may be noticed that the
agreement dated 1st March, 1995 entered into between the parties in
various clauses of the agreement makes reference to the partnership
concern. The name of M/s Matchless Industries of India has also been
referred to in the recital of the agreement. Respondent No. 4 in fact,
was a partnership concern constituting of the three persons who are
signatories to this agreement. Clauses no. 10 to 13 do make a reference
to his partnership.
In these circumstances, at this
stage and at least prima facie, the objection raised on behalf of the
respondents cannot hold the ground.
The arbitration clause is not
disputed between respondents no. 1 to 3 who are partners of respondent
no. 4 and the transaction related to the affairs of the said partnership
concern."
The use of the words 'prima facie'
in the order dated 27.10.2005 and the observation that Arbitrator can
decide about arbitrability of the dispute in the order dated 9.12.2005
while rejecting the review application, have led to this appeal.
9. The appellant and respondents 3
and 4 as partners of 'Matchless Industries of India' entered into a
partnership with respondents 1 and 2 to carry on the business under the
name and style of 'Control & Matchless Industries' as per the Deed dated
1.3.1995 and the said Deed admittedly contains a provision for
settlement of disputes by a sole arbitrator. The only grievance of the
appellant before the High Court and this Court is that 'Matchless
Industries of India' - 4th respondent before the High Court and fifth
Respondent before this Court - not being a party to the said partnership
deed dated 1.3.1995 containing the arbitration agreement, there could
not be a reference to arbitration with reference to 'Matchless
Industries of India'.
10 The Partnership Deed dated
1.3.1995 is entered between 'Mangat Rai Gadhok, Suman Kumar Gadhok and
Vipin Kumar Gadhok, carrying on business in partnership under the name
and style of Matchless Industries of India' as the first party and 'R.
N. Khanna and Ashok Khanna' together as the second party. It is seen
that even in the Dissolution Deed dated 24.12.2001, the first party is
described as 'Mangat Rai Gadhok, Suman Kumar Gadhok, Vipin Kumar Gadhok,
carrying on business in partnership under the name and style of
Matchless Industries of India'. The firm of Matchless Industries of
India was impleaded as fourth respondent in the arbitration application,
as the first party under the deed dated 1.3.1995, was the three partners
of Matchless Industries of India carrying on business under the name and
style of Matchless Industries of India. Therefore when a disputes arose
between the partners of 'M/s Controls and Matchless Industries', that is
between 'R. N. Khanna and Ashok Khanna' who were the second party under
the deed of partnership, with 'Mangat Rai Gadhok, Suman Kumar Gadhok,
Vipin Kumar Gadhok carrying on business in partnership under the name
and style of Matchless Industries of India', who were the first party
under the said deed dated 1.3.1995, there is nothing wrong in arraying
Mangat Rai Gadhok, Suman Kumar Gadhok, Vipin Kumar Gadhok and Matchless
Industries of India as Respondents 1 to 4 in the arbitration
application. The High Court has rightly allowed the application for
appointment of sole Arbitrator, to decide the disputes between
Applicants 1 and 2, and Respondents 1 to 4, before it.
11. There is, therefore, no question
of Arbitrator examining whether the disputes are arbitrable or not with
reference to Matchless Industries of India. With the said clarification,
the appeal is dismissed.
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