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Friday, October 31, 2008
the matter in respect of which the respondent sought reference to arbitration was "excepted matter" in terms of
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
REQUIREMENT OF rule 4 order 37 cpc
may be granted by the Court all such reliefs must be claimed in one application. It
is not permissible to claim such reliefs in successive petitions as it would be
contrary to the letter and spirit of the provision. That is why where an application
under Rule 4 of Order 37 is filed to set aside a decree either because the defendant
did not appear in response to summons and limitation expired, or having appeared,
did not apply for leave to defend the suit in the prescribed period, the Court is
empowered to grant leave to defendant to appear to the summons and to defend the
suit in the same application. It is, therefore, not enough for the defendant to show
special circumstances which prevented him from appearing or applying for leave
to defend, he has also to show by affidavit or otherwise, facts which would entitle
him leave to defend the suit. In this respect, Rule 4 of Order 37 is different from
Rule 13 of Order 9.”
Indeed, an application under Order 37 Rule 4 CPC differs vis-a- vis an
application under Order 9 Rule 13 CPC for the reason an application under Order
37 Rule 4 CPC is a composite application determination whereof, if in favour of
the applicant, results in not only the ex-parte decree being set aside but leave to
defend being granted to the party concerned. It is for this reason law requires that
the defendant, in addition to show special circumstances which prevented him/her
from appearing, must additionally disclose facts entitling him/her to obtain leave to
defend.
Service of notice/summons U/O 37 CPC
ORDER 37 RULE 3 (4 & 5) of C P C.
it is now well established as a principle of law that even if a wrong order is passed by a Court having jurisdiction to pass an order in such cases, the revisional Court will not interfere with such an order unless a jurisdictional error is pointed out and established by the person who questions such order.
In the instant case, the High Court did not lack jurisdiction to pass an order with regard to the subject matter of dispute, though the order itself may be incorrect. There is, therefore, little scope for this Court to interfere with.
Whether quashing of FIR/criminal proceedings/complaint be allowed
We, accordingly, allow the appeal and set aside the order of the High Court and quash the criminal proceedings pending before Court.
Saturday, October 18, 2008
MODE OF SERVICE
Thursday, October 16, 2008
arbitration clause
It was held by the learned Addl. District Judge, that since the photocopy of the proposed agreement bears the signature of only the appellant and not that of the PGI, it could not be held that an arbitration agreement was executed between the parties and since there was no signature of the PGI on the said agreement, which was sent after signature of the appellant, remained only as an offer.
We may reiterate that in this case admittedly the documents which are on record apparently show supply of the material by the appellant to the PGI and acceptance thereof by the PGI in pursuance of the tender enquiry by them wherein tender of the appellant containing the arbitration clause was admittedly accepted by the PGI. Accordingly, we hold that arbitration agreement did exist and, therefore, dispute between the parties would be referred to an
Arbitrator for decision.
Therefore, considering the above aspects of the matter in this case, we must come to this conclusion that although no formal agreement was executed, the ender documents indicating certain conditions of contract contained an arbitration clause. It is also an admitted position that the appellant gave his tender offer which was accepted and the appellant acted upon it.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Insurance — whether a dispute raised by an insured, after giving a full and final discharge voucher to the insurer, can be referred to arbitration
When a contract contains an arbitration clause and any dispute in respect of the said contract is referred to arbitration without the intervention of the court, the Arbitral Tribunal can decide the following questions affecting its jurisdiction: (a) whether there is an arbitration agreement; (b) whether the arbitration agreement is valid; (c) whether the contract in which the arbitration clause is found is null and void and if so whether the invalidity extends to the Arbitration clause also.
It follows therefore that if the respondent before the Arbitral Tribunal contends that the contract has been discharged by reason of the claimant accepting payment made by the respondent in full and final settlement, and if the claimant counters it by contending that the discharge voucher was extracted from him by practicing fraud, undue influence, or coercion, the arbitral tribunal will have to decide whether the discharge of contract was vitiated by any circumstance which rendered the discharge voidable at the instance of the claimant. If the arbitral tribunal comes to the conclusion that there was a valid discharge by voluntary execution of a discharge voucher, it will refuse to examine the claim on merits, and reject the claim as not maintainable.
In what circumstances, a court will refuse to refer a dispute relating toquantum to arbitration, when the contract specifically provides forreference of disputes and differences relating to the quantum toarbitration?
a three Judge Bench of this Court culled out the following general principles as to when arbitration agreements operate and when they do not operate: