SOWARAN SINGH Vs. MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE PATHANKOT
LAWS(P&H)-1963-4-2
HIGH COURT OF PUNJAB AND HARYANA
Decided on April 08,1963

SOWARAN SINGH Appellant
VERSUS
MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE, PATHANKOT Respondents

JUDGEMENT

- (1.) THIS is an appeal from the order of the Senior Subordinate Judge, Gurdaspur, granting a decree in accordance "with the award of the Arbitrator for Rs. 582. 75 np. out of the aggregate claim laid by the appellant for a sum of Rs. 14,732. 75 np. , against the respondent Committee.
(2.) THE claim of Swaran Singh appellant was made in pursuance of a contract made by him with the respondent Municipal Committee, Pathankot, for the construction at sewage works. The Superintending Engineer, II Public Health Circle Patiala, was appointed an Arbitrator under an agreement of the parties. The reference to arbitration was made on 24th of November, 1959, and the award, which was sought to be made a rule of the Court was made on 5th of July, 1960. The Arbitrator accepted the claim of the appellant only for a sum of Rs. 582. 75 np. Aggrieved by the order of the Senior Subordinate Judge, passing a decree in accordance with the award, the contractor has come to this Court in appeal. It is urged by Mr. Daulal Ram Manchanda, the [earned counsel for the appellant, that the arbitrator did not send a notice to the Municipal Committee itself. It appears that the Executive Engineer conducted proceedings before the arbitrator on behalf of the Municipal Committee which had authorised him so to act on its behalf. The Municipal Committee which might have had a valid objection never made a grievance of if and it appears that even the appellant did not think much of this matter till the stage of arguments. No such point was ever raised before the Senior Subordinate Judge and I have no hesitation at all in rejecting this ground of attack against the award.
(3.) IT is next contended by Mr. Manchanda that the Arbitrator in giving his findings with regard to the various items of the claim did not discuss in detail the reasons for his conclusion. When the parties choose a domestic tribunal for settlement of their disputes the Arbitrator is not bound to give reasons for the award. It is not denied that full opportunity was given by the Arbitrator to the parties to present their respective points of view and evidence was adduced before him. The award cannot be impugned on the ground that the Arbitrator did not give detailed reasons for his conclusion. The third ground of attack against the award is, however, substantial. The award which has been made a rule of the Court was made admittedly four months after the Arbitrator had entered into reference. Paragraph 3 of the First Schedule to the Arbitration Act, 1940, says that "the Arbitrators shall make their award within four months after entering on the reference or after having been called upon to act by notice in writing from any party to the arbitration agreement or within such extended time as the Court may allow. " Sub-section (1) of Section 28 of the Act is to this effect: "the Court may, if it thinks fit, whether time for making the award has expired or not and whether the award has been made or not, enlarge from time to time the time for making the award. " The submission of Mr. Manchanda is that the arbitrator must either submit his award within four months of his entering on the reference or the Court should be moved to allow extension of time. That this provision of law is mandatory admits of no doubt. Reference may be made to the supreme Court authority of Hari shankar Lal v. shambhu Nath, AIR 1962 SC 78. Mr. Justice Subba Rao, in delivering the majority judgment observed at p. 80 that "rule 3 of the First Schedule to the Act is couched in a mandatory form and it imposes a duty on the arbitrators to make their award within one or other of the three alternative periods mentioned therein. " What appears to have been done in this case is that the representatives of the municipal committee assented to the Arbitrator proceeding with the reference after the statutory period of four months had expired. This clearly does not fall within any of the three methods which it is obligatory for an Arbitrator to adopt. The language of paragraph 3 of the First Schedule and Section 28 of the Arbitration Act makes it clear that the Court alone has to be moved for enlarging the time for making the award. This conclusion stems from the mandatory provision of Rule 3 and the machinery provided in Section 28 for a motion to the Court. It may also be observed trial the marginal heading of Section 28 is "power to Court only to enlarge time for making award. " it is clearly envisaged in this section by the legislature that the parties cannot by consent conter jurisdiction on an Arbitrator to proceed with the reference after the expiry of four months and "court only" has the power to enlarge the time. I am not unmindful of the rule of construction that the headings pre-fixed to section or sets of sections in statutes cannot control the plain words of statutes but they can certainly explain an ambiguity in words if it exists. As stated in maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes (1962 edition) at page 49, "while the Court is entitled to look at the headings In an Act of parliament to resolve any doubt they may nave as to ambiguous words, the law is quite clear that you cannot use such headings to give a different effect to clear words in the section, where there cannot be any doubt as to their ordinary meaning. " now, the heading of Section 28 makes clear beyond doubt what is already expressed so plainly in the section itself. Thus, the heading is not In any way against the tenor and phraseology of Section 28, rather it clarified that the enlargement of time can be obtained only by a motion to Court.;


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