Sayyaparaju Surayya Vs. Nekkanti Anandayya and ors. - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citationsooperkanoon.com/786160
SubjectArbitration
CourtChennai
Decided OnSep-06-1949
Case NumberSecond Appeal No. 1741 of 1946
JudgeRaghava Rao, J.
Reported inAIR1951Mad525; (1950)IIMLJ313
ActsHindu Law; Arbitration Act, 1940 - Sections 14, 31, 32 and 33; Code of Civil Procedure (CPC), 1908 - Sections 11
AppellantSayyaparaju Surayya
RespondentNekkanti Anandayya and ors.
Appellant AdvocateV. Parthasarathy, Adv.
Respondent AdvocateP. Suryanarayana, Adv. for ;P. Somasundaram, Adv.
DispositionAppeal dismissed
Cases ReferredMathukutty v. Vareekutty
Excerpt:
Notice (8): Undefined variable: kword [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 120]
Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 120]
(i) arbitration - alienation - hindu law, sections 14, 31, 32 and 33 of arbitration act, 1940 and section 11 of code of civil procedure, 1908 - alienation by a widow is voidable at instance of reversioner - in case one of two reversioner chosen to attack alienation and succeeded in establishing ground for attack then it is only to extent of his share of property that he can succeed - rights of two reversioners are rights of tenants-in-common - no decree can be passed in favour of one of reversioner who has not chosen to challenge alienation because of challenge that has been made to it at instance of other reversioner alienation. (ii) competency of party - so long as award stands unchallengeable it must be taken to debar plaintiff from maintaining his suit - unless party aggrieved by.....
Notice (8): Undefined variable: kword [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 123]
Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 123]
raghava rao, j.1. this second appeal arises out of a suit for recovery of possession, which has been dismissed by both the courts below. the suit was laid on the basis that there was an alienation by a limited estate holder, in favour of the plaintiff which was quite valid and binding upon the defendant, who happened to be reversioner to the estate. there was, in fact, a small cause suit on a prior occasion by this very plaintiff against this very defendant, who at the time occupied the position of a lessee, for recovery of rent. during the time the small cause suit was pending there was a reference to arbitration, not through court but outside. the award that resulted from the arbitration declared that the present defendant was a reversioner to the estate of the last male-holder and that.....
Judgment:
Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

Raghava Rao, J.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

1. This second appeal arises out of a suit for recovery of possession, which has been dismissed by both the Courts below. The suit was laid on the basis that there was an alienation by a limited estate holder, in favour of the plaintiff which was quite valid and binding upon the defendant, who happened to be reversioner to the estate. There was, in fact, a small cause suit on a prior occasion by this very plaintiff against this very defendant, who at the time occupied the position of a lessee, for recovery of rent. During the time the small cause suit was pending there was a reference to arbitration, not through Court but outside. The award that resulted from the arbitration declared that the present defendant was a reversioner to the estate of the last male-holder and that the plaintiff had no title to the property, which had been the subject-matter of the alienation by the widow of the last male holder. After the award, curiously enough there was still a decree passed in the small cause suit, apparently because the award was not sought to be relied upon by the defendant in answer to the claim for rent made in that suit. In this suit, which thereafter came to be instituted, questions were raised with reference to the binding character of the alienation in question and also with reference to the maintainability of the suit so far as it craved the relief of injunction against any interference by the defendant with the plaintiff's possession. The latter of the questions depended for its decision upon the fact of the plaintiff's possession on the date of the suit or upon the contrary of it. These questions are questions of fact on which there are concurrent findings, which I do not find myself able to touch in spite of the very able argument of Mr. Partha-sarathy for the appellant.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

2. Two interesting questions have been further raised, in the course of the hearing one at the instance of Mr. Parathasarathi for the appellant and the other at the instance of Mr. Surya-narayana for the respondents on both of which questions I must say I have listened to very able and interesting arguments. I have, after a careful consideration of what has been said by counsel on both sides in regard to both these points come to the conclusion that while the appellant's counsel is right in his submission that an injunction should have issued, at any rate, with reference to a half of the property in his client's possession, the learned counsel for the respondent is also right in his contention that it is not open to the present plaintiff to question the validity of the award that was made during the pendency of the small cause suit as above referred to.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

3. The point taken for the appellant with reference to the question of injunction which I have indicated just now is this: that since it has been found by both the Courts below that, the present defendant is only one of two rever-sioners entitled to the estate of the last male holder, there is no reason why the plaintiff should be denied any injunction in restraint of any interference by the defendants, at any rate, with reference to a half of the suit property, which must undoubtedly be regarded as hers by title, defeasible only at the instance of the other reversioner, who has not chosen to-impeach it so far and quite valid so long as such an attack by that reversioner has not taken place. It is well settled law that an alienation by a widow is voidable at the instance of the reversioners, and if one of two reversioners has chosen to attack the alienation and succeeded in establishing the ground for an attack, then it is only to the extent of his share of the property that he can succeed, because the rights of the two reversioners are the rights of tenants-in-common and no decree can be passed in favour of one reversioner, who has not chosen to challenge the alienation because of the challenge that has been made to it at the instance of the other reversioner.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

4. While this is the position that I am prepared to accept in favour of the appellant on the argument advanced by his learned counsel with reference to the question of injunction, I feel greater difficulty, I must say, in accept-ing the argument advanced by him by way of answer to the point which has been taken by Mr. Suryanarayana for the respondent, that so long as the award stands, unchallengeable by the other side, although unfiled, it must betaken to debar the present plaintiff from maintaining his suit. The soundness of the argument of the respondents, or of the reply of the appellant to it really depend upon the effect of Sections 31 to 33, Arbitration Act of 1940. Section 31 provides inter alia that an award may be filed in any Court having jurisdiction in the matter to which the reference relates and also that all questions regarding the validity, effect or existence of an award shall be decided by the Court in which the award has been or may be filed and by no other Court. Section 32 which like Section 33 is even more material to the present discussion, acts as a bar to suits contesting the existence, effect or validity of an award. In the full terms in which it is couched it runs as follows :

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

'Notwithstanding any law for the time being in force, no suit shall lie on any ground whatever for a decision upon the existence, effect or validity of an arbitration agreement or award, nor shall any arbitration agreement or award be set aside, amended, modified or in any way affected otherwise than as provided in this Act.'

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

Section 33 provides that:

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

'Any party to an arbitration agreement or any person claiming under him desiring to challenge the existence or validity of an arbitration agreement or an award or to have the effect of either determined shall apply to the Court and the Court shall decide the question on affidavits.'

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

The proviso to Section 33 is not material and I, therefore, do not reproduce it. On these sections there is a recent decision of this Court in Surya-narayana Reddi v. Venkatareddi, I. L. R. (1949) Mad. 111 : A. I. R.1948 Mad. 436 in which Happell and Govindarajachari JJ. held that neither these sections nor any other provision of the Indian Arbitration Act precludes a defendant from putting forward an award which has been fully performed by him, but which was not filed under Section 14 and according to which judgment was not pronounced or a decree given under Section 17 of the Act, in answer to the plaintiff's claim which was the subject-matter of the reference and the award. This decision ia undoubtedly in favour of the respondents, who is entitled to say on the basis of it that in the present case the unfiled award operates as a bar to the present action. But, says Mr. Par-thasarathy for the appellant, the decision in that case presupposed the existence of a valid award, an award of a finished character, ag he calls it, which was subjected before it became finished to the procedure provided for by the Act for testing its validity and passing a judgment or decree in accordance with it. He contends that in the present case there was no award of that finished character, as he calls it, which can operate to render the present suit unmaintainable.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

5. The other contention of Mr. Parthasarathi in answer to the decision is that there was the small cause suit, the result of which happened to go in favour of the present plaintiff, because the defendants did not put forward the award in question in answer to that suit. The learned counsel accordingly contends that it is not open to the defendants in the present case to rely upon the award in question. He also points out that the attitude taken up by the defendants in relation to the award in the small cause suit by not seeking to rely upon it was in fact responsible for his own client not taking any steps so far for getting the award set aside.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

6. To take up first the first answer attempted by the learned counsel for the appellant, I am of opinion that it was competent to the plaintiff after the award had been passed to take proceedings for getting it filed in Court and afterwards for getting it set aside on any such valid ground as he might have. The appellant did not avail himself of the procedure created by the Act for getting the award set aside and it is not open to him now to dispute the validity of that award in this proceeding. In my opinion, the Indian Arbitration Act, which is a consolidating enactment must be understood, with reference to the sections now under consideration, as requiring that unless a party aggrieved by an award coming within the purview of the Act takes the necessary steps provided by the Act to have the award set aside, it is not competent to him to dispute it in any later proceeding. I am not satisfied that the decision in Suryanarayana Reddi v. Venkatareddi, I. L. R. (1949) Mad. 111 : A. I. R. 1948 Mad. 436 is inapplicable to the present case on the ground that there no question of the invalidity of the award was raised for consideration, whereas in the present case such a case has been actually raised. As I read Section 32, the object of the Legislature in enacting it is that no suit should be allowed to be instituted for a decision upon the existence, effect or validity of an award and no party to an award should be allowed to have it set aside, amended, modified or in any way affected otherwise than as provided in that Act. Mr. Parthasarathi contends that here the suit which his client has instituted is not really a suit for a decision upon the validity of the award and therefore ia outside the mischief of the first part of Section 32. Likewise he contends that the suit of his client cannot be regarded as a suit for setting aside, amending or modifying or in any other way affecting the award. It is rather a suit, as he says, by his client for recovering possession by seeking to get away from an award, which he attacks as invalid on its own face, because it proceeded on the basis that there was only one reversioner to the estate, whereas in fact, the record, if examined, would show that there were two persons entitled to the estate as reversioners of whom one no doubt is the present defendant 1. This ground of attack against the award is, in my opinion, not certainly such as could be raised in the present suit, not having, been made the subject-matter of any application for challenging its validity as is contemplated by Section 33, That section provides, as I read it, that the validity of the award can only be contested by an application to the Court and not, as is attempted to be done here, by means of an independent suit of the kind with which we are concerned in the present case. That section is obviously mandatory because it says that any party desiring to challenge the validity of an award shall apply to the Court and the Court shall decide the question on affidavits, subject of course to the provision in the proviso for other evidence for the taking of which the Court may pass appropriate orders. The clear implication of the section is that that is the procedure, which must be adopted by any party seeking to question the validity of the award and that it is not competent to any party to the award to question it otherwise.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

7. It is said in this connexion by Mr. Partha-sarathi that there is a recent decision of this Court in Mathukutty v. Varee Kutti, : AIR1950Mad64 , which assists him to get over the trouble created in his way by the decision in Suryanarayana Reddi v. Venkatareddi, I.L.R. (1949) Mad. 111: A. I. R. 1948 Mad. 436. The decision in Mathukutty v. Vareekutty, : AIR1950Mad64 , however, on examination is found to deal with the question whether a Court called upon to deal with an application under Section 34, Arbitration Act, can avoid the necessity of going into the objections on the basis of which the arbitration agreement is attacked by saying that the only procedure for attacking such an arbitration agreement as provided by the Act is the procedure enacted under Section 33. The learned Judge who decided the M.L.J. case observes that the very foundation of the jurisdiction of the Court on the application under Section 34 to order stay or not to order stay necessarily depends upon a finding that the Court ought to make with reference to the ground of invalidity that is urged against the arbitration agreement. The learned Judge, therefore, holds that although the procedure enacted in Section 33 may not have been adopted by a party to the agreement, it will be open to him to make out, by evidence that he is entitled to adduce in connexion with the application under Section 34, that the arbitration agreement is either unreal or invalid on account of fraud, misrepresentation or undue influence or the like. The learned Judge holds relying upon a Bombay case decided by Kania J. (as he then was) in Bhagwandas v. Atmasing : AIR1945Bom494 that the proper view to be taken of Section 34 is that the matter of objections to the arbitration agreement made in answer to the application for stay must be gone into on the application it-self. The learned Judge also observes that, if necessary, he would be prepared to treat the memo. of objections filed by the party opposing the application for stay as an application of the kind contemplated by Section 33, Arbitration Act.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

8. From these remarks that I have made on the decision in the M. L. J. case it is apparent that that decision has no application to the case on hand. It is true that in the head-note, as it is to be found in the M. L. J. report as also in one sentence of the judgment itself, it is stated that Section 33 of the Act gives an independent right to a person, who wishes to challenge the existence or validity of an arbitration agreement or award and to anticipate the other side and to initiate proceedings to have those questions determined before hand. It does not prohibit the Court acting under Section 34 of the Act from deciding a question, which is raised before it for its decision and the decision on which alone would de-pend the exercise of its jurisdiction. The word 1 award? which I have underlined (here italicised) in the sentence I have quoted from the head-note, and from the body of the judgment may seem to lend some support to the contention of the learned counsel for the appellant that, if in the case of an arbitration agreement, the right under Section 34 is a right altogether independent of Section 33, there is no reason why in the case of an award alao it should not partake of the character of a right independent of Section 33. The substance of the decision of the learned Judge who decided the Mathukutty v, Vareekutty, : AIR1950Mad64 is, however, to be understood as being no more and no less than this : that if a party applying for stay under s, 34 is opposed by the other side on the ground that the arbitration agreement itself is invalid, the jurisdiction under Section 34 cannot properly be exercised at all by the Court in which the application for stay is made unless it investigates the grounds of objection taken by the party opposing the application for stay. That being the true state of facts in connexion with which the decision in Mathukutty v. Vareekutty, : AIR1950Mad64 has to be understood, I have no hesitation in holding that that case cannot be of any assistance to tbe learned counsel for the appellant for meeting the point taken for the respondents.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

9. The second line of argument adopted by Mr. Parthasarathi for meeting the argument of the learned counsel for the respondents is that on account of the conduct of the defendant in the small cause suit, wherein he did not put forward the award at all as an answer to the claim for rent, it would not be open to the defendants to make a point of the fact that the award, although unfiled, is outstanding and is a bar to the present action of the plaintiff. The learned counsel also urges that an unfiled award is more or less in the nature of a judgment of Court and where there are two decisions of mutual repugnancy, one earlier and the other later, the law of res judicata has it that the two decisions must be treated as canceling each other and that the matter must be treated as set at large. I am not satisfied that this line of argument can be reasonably accepted, because the decision of the arbitrators, which was ren-dered outside Court during the pendency of the small cause suit, cannot be strictly likened to a decision of Court, nor am I satisfied that there is any constructive res judicata arising in the way of respondent 1 on account of his failure to rely upon the award in the former litigation. The small cause suit was concerned purely with a claim for recovery of rent and it was not decreed with reference to any adjudication on any question of title whether arising on the award, or unconnected with it. No argument of actual or constructive res judicata can, in any opinion, be built upon what happened in the small cause suit.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

10. In this view of the matter I am clearly of opinion that notwithstanding the argument of the learned counsel for the appellant on the question whether an injunction may not well issue with reference to the half share of the reversioner other than defendant 1--an argument which I am prepared to accept--the appellant is bound to fail on the point with reference to the bar arising from the award, which has been urged by the learned counsel for the respondents in the course of his argument before me.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]

11. In the result the second appeal fails and as dismissed with costs. No leave.

Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144]