Magma Leasing V Potluri
Magma Leasing V Potluri
Magma Leasing V Potluri
Equivalent Citation: AIR2010SC488, 2010 (2) AWC 1315 (SC), (2010)1CompLJ684(SC), JT2009(12)
SC385, (2009)8MLJ441(SC), 2009(4)RCR(Civil)900, 2009(12)SCALE668, (2009)10SCC103, [2009]
14SCR815, 2009(9)UJ4335
Civil Appeal No. 6399 of 2009 (Arising out of SLP (C) No. 21323 of 2007)
Appellants: The Branch Manager, Magma Leasing and Finance Limited and Anr.
Vs.
Respondent: Potluri Madhavilata and Anr.
Hon'ble Judges/Coram:
Tarun Chatterjee and R.M. Lodha, JJ.
Counsels:
For Appellant/Petitioner/Plaintiff: Rana Mukherjee, Manoj, Aparna Sinha, Abhijat P.
Medh and P. Sinha, Advs
Case Note:
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 - Section 8 -- Arbitration--Reference--
Contract coming to end by its termination due to breach--Arbitration clause
does not get perished nor rendered inoperative--Rather it survives for
resolution of disputes--Pre-requisite conditions of Section 8 fully satisfied--
Parties to be referred to arbitration--Order of High Court affirming order of
trial court set aside--Court of first instance to pass appropriate order.
Section 8 is in the form of legislative command to the Court and once the pre-
requisite conditions as aforestated are satisfied, the Court must refer the
parties to arbitration. As a matter of fact, on fulfilment of conditions of Section
8, no option is left to the Court and the Court has to refer the parties to
arbitration.
JUDGMENT
R.M. Lodha, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. The core question that falls to be determined in this appeal by special leave is : does
the arbitration agreement survive for the purpose of resolution of disputes arising under
or in connection with the contract even if its performance has come to an end on
account of termination due to breach ?
3. MAGMA Leasing Limited Public United Company (for short, `MAGMA') is a financial
institution engaged in the business of providing funds for purchase of plant and
machinery and other assets by way of hire purchase. Smt. Potluri Madhavilata-
respondent No. 1 (hereinafter referred to as `hirer) entered into an agreement of hire
purchase with MAGMA for purchase of a motor vehicle (Bolero Camper-AP 16 TV 1263)
on January 31, 2005. As per the terms of hire purchase agreement, the hirer was
required to pay hire purchase price in 46 installments. It appears that the hirer
committed default in payment of few installments and as a result thereof, MAGMA
seized the said vehicle from the hirer on August 6, 2005. MEGMA also sent a notice to
the hirer intimating her that hire purchase agreement has been terminated. Thereafter
some correspondence seems to have ensued between the parties.
4. The hirer then filed a suit against MAGMA in the Court of Senior Civil Judge,
Vijayawada seeking recovery of possession of the aforesaid vehicle and for restraining
MAGMA from transferring the said vehicle.
6. The hirer contested the aforesaid application on the ground that the hire purchase
agreement having been terminated, the arbitration agreement does not survive and the
matter need not be referred to the arbitration.
7. The First Additional Senior Civil Judge, Vijayawada vide order dated December 4,
2006 dismissed the application made by MAGMA under Section 8 of the Act, 1996.
8. Not satisfied with the order of the trial court, MAGMA filed a civil revision petition
before the High Court of Andhra Pradesh.
9. The Division Bench dismissed the revision petition on April 30, 2007 holding that
upon termination of the hire purchase agreement, the arbitration agreement does not
survive. The present appeal by special leave arises from this order.
10. Despite service, hirer has not chosen to appear before this Court.
12. The House of Lords in Heyman and Anr. v. Darwins Ltd. (1942) 1 ALL ER 337 had
discussed elaborately on the scope of arbitration clause in the context of a dispute
arising on the question of repudiation of a contract. That was a case where the contract
was repudiated by one party and accepted as such by another. The contract between
the parties contained an arbitration clause providing for that any dispute between the
parties in respect of the agreement or any of the provisions contained therein or
anything arising there out should be referred to arbitration. Viscount Simon, L.C.,
summarised the legal position with regard to scope of an arbitration clause in a contract
as follows:
If, however, the parties are at one in asserting that they entered into a
binding contract, but a difference has arisen between them as to whether
there has been a breach by one side or the other, or as to whether
circumstances have arisen which have discharged one or both parties from
further performance, such differences should be regarded as differences
which have arisen "in respect of," or "with regard to'" or "under" the
contract, and an arbitration clause which uses these, or similar, expressions,
should be construed accordingly. By the law of England (though not, as I
understand, by the law of Scotland), such an arbitration clause would also
Viscount Simon, L.C. concurred with the view expressed by Lord Dunedin in
Scott & Sons v. Del Sel (1923) S.C.(H.L.) 37 and observed:
13. Lord Macmillan, Lord Wright and Lord Porter though expressed their views
separately but all of them agreed with the statement of law summarised by Viscount
Simon, L.C..
14. In Union of India v. Kishorilal Gupta and Bros. MANU/SC/0180/1959 : (1960) 1 SCR
493, Subba Rao, J. (as His Lordship then was) while dealing with the question whether
the arbitration clause of the original contract survived after the execution of settlement
of the contract referred to the judgment of House of Lords in Heyman exhaustively and
held:
In "Russel on Arbitration", 16th Edn., p. 63, the following test is laid down to
ascertain whether an arbitration clause survives after the contract is
determined:
The test in such cases has been said to be whether the contract is
determined by something outside itself, in which case the
arbitration clause is determined with it, or by something arising
out of the contract, in which case the arbitration clause remains
effective and can be enforced.
If, however, the parties are at one in asserting that they entered
The learned Law Lord commented on the view expressed by Lord Dunedin at
p. 344 thus:
Lord Wright, after explaining the scope of the word "repudiation" and the
different meanings it bears, proceeded to state at p. 350:
This decision is not directly in point; but the principles laid down therein are
of wider application than the actual decision involved. If an arbitration clause
is couched in widest terms as in the present case, the dispute, whether there
is frustration or repudiation of the contract, will be covered by it. It is not
because the arbitration clause survives, but because, though such
repudiation ends the liability of the parties to perform the contract, it does
not put an end to their liability to pay damages for any breach of the
contract. The contract is still in existence for certain purposes. But where the
dispute is whether the said contract is void ab initio, the arbitration clause
cannot operate on those disputes, for its operative force depends upon the
existence of the contract and its validity. So too, if the dispute is whether the
contract is wholly superseded or not by a new contract between the parties,
such a dispute must fall outside the arbitration clause, for, if it is superseded,
the arbitration clause falls with it.
15. In his separate but concurring judgment, A.K. Sarkar, J. (as His Lordship then was)
exposited the legal position thus:
The position is no different if the matter is looked at from the point of view of
Section 62 of the Contract Act. That section is in these terms:
The settlement cannot be said to have altered the original contract or even
to have rescinded it. It only settled the dispute as to the breach of the
contract and its consequences. For the same reason it cannot be said to
substitute a new contract for the old one. As I have earlier stated it
postulates the existence of the contract and only decides the incidence of its
breach.
16. In the case of National Agricultural Coop. Marketing Federation India Ltd. v. Gains
Trading Ltd. MANU/SC/2675/2007 : (2007) 5 SCC 692 this Court held thus:
17. Recently, in the case of P. Manohar Reddy & Bros. v. Maharashtra Krishna Valley
Development Corporation and Ors. MANU/SC/8480/2008 : (2009) 2 SCC 494 while
dealing with the argument of the respondent therein that in terms of the contract the
claim for extra work or additional work should have been raised during the pendency of
the contract itself and not after it came to an end, this Court considered the concept of
separability of the arbitration clause from the contract and made the following
observations:
(emphasis supplied)
But this must be distinguished from the situation where the claim itself was
to be raised during the subsistence of a contract so as to invoke the
arbitration agreement would not apply.
18. The statement of law expounded by Viscount Simon, L.C. in the case of Heyman as
noticed above, in our view, equally applies to situation where the contract is terminated
by one party on account of the breach committed by the other particularly in a case
where the clause is framed in wide and general terms. Merely because the contract has
come to an end by its termination due to breach, the arbitration clause does not get
perished nor rendered inoperative; rather it survives for resolution of disputes arising
"in respect of" or "with regard to" or "under" the contract. This is in line with the earlier
decisions of this Court, particularly as laid down in Kishori Lal Gupta & Bros.
19. In the instant case, Clause 22 of the hire purchase agreement that provides for
arbitration has been couched in widest possible terms as can well be imagined. It
embraces all disputes, differences, claims and questions between the parties arising out
of the said agreement or in any way relating thereto. The hire purchase agreement
having been admittedly entered into between the parties and the disputes and
20. The next question, an incidental one, that arises for consideration is whether the
trial court must refer the parties to arbitration under Section 8 of the Act, 1996.
22. An analysis of Section 8 would show that for its applicability, the following
conditions must be satisfied: (a) that there exists an arbitration agreement; (b) that
action has been brought to the court by one party to the arbitration agreement against
the other party; (c) that the subject matter of the suit is same as the subject matter of
the arbitration agreement; (d) that the other party before he submits his first
statement of the substance of the dispute, moves the court for referring the parties to
arbitration; and (e) that along with the application the other party tenders the original
arbitration agreement or duly certified copy thereof.
23. Section 8 is in the form of legislative command to the court and once the pre-
requisite conditions as aforestated are satisfied, the court must refer the parties to
arbitration. As a matter of fact, on fulfillment of conditions of Section 8, no option is left
to the court and the court has to refer the parties to arbitration.
24. There is nothing on record that the pre-requisite conditions of Section 8 are not
fully satisfied in the present case. The trial court, in the circumstances, ought to have
referred the parties to arbitration as per arbitration Clause 22.
25. In the result, appeal must succeed and is allowed. The impugned order dated April
30, 2007 passed by the High Court affirming the order dated December 4, 2006 passed
by the First Additional Senior Civil Judge, Vijayawada is set aside. I.A. No. 490/2006 in
O.S. No. 19/2006 is restored to the file of the First Additional Senior Civil Judge,
Vijayawada for passing an appropriate order in the light of the observations made
hereinabove. Since the respondent has not chosen to appear, no order as to costs.