Union of India Vs. Raman Iron Foundry
[1974] INSC 52 (12 March 1974)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
CITATION: 1974 AIR 1265 1974 SCR (3) 556 1974
SCC (2) 231
CITATOR INFO :
O 1984 SC 29 (9,13,20,25) RF 1992 SC 847 (53)
ACT:
Indian Arbitration Act (10 of 1940 s. 41
(b)-Court when can issue interim in function. Indian Contract Act (9 of 1872),
s. 74-Stipulation of amount of damages in contract-Claim for damages for
branch--If claim for liquidated or unliquidated damages.
'Sums due,' meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
A dispute arose regarding the performance of
a contract between the appellant and respondent, each party contending that the
other had committed a breach of the contract and claiming large sums of money
by way of damages. The appellant's claim was for damages stipulated under cl.
14 of the contract. The respondent was called upon to pay the amount claimed
and was also informed that on failure to make the payment the appropriate
officer would be authorised to recover the amount from the pending bills of the
respondent in respect of other contracts under cl. 18 of the Contract.
The respondent thereupon moved the High Court
under s. 20 of the Arbitration Act, 1940, and the claim and counter claim were
referred to arbitration. During the pendency of the arbitration some amounts
became due and payable by the appellant to the respondent in respect of other
contracts between them. The respondent applied to the High Court for an
injunction restraining the appellant from recovering its claim for damages from
the amounts which had fallen due and the High Court granted the injunction
holding that cl. 18 did not authorise the appellant to appropriate the amounts
of any pending bills of the respondent towards satisfaction of its claim for
damages against the respondent unless such claim was either admitted by the
respondent or adjudicated upon by the arbitrator or the Court.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD: (1) The order of interim injunction
cannot be said to be outside the scope of the High Court's power under s. 41
(b) of the Arbitration Act. [563D-E] (a) Section 41 (b) says that the Court
shall have, for the purpose of and in relation to arbitration proceedings, the same
power of making orders in respect of any of the matters set out in the second
schedule as it has for the purpose of and in relation to any proceedings before
the Court and one of the matters set out in the second Schedule is 'interim
injunction.' The, Court has therefore power to issue interim injunction. But
such interim injunction can only be for the purpose of and in relation to
arbitration proceedings. The Court could not therefore make an interim order
which, though ostensibly in form an order of interim injunction, in substance
amounted to a direction to the appellant to pay the amounts due to the
respondent under other contracts.
[562F-563A] (b) However, in the present case,
the order of interim injunction' does not expressly or by necessary implication
direct the appellant to pay amounts due to the respondent under other
contracts. The a appellant can still refuse to pay such amounts if it thinks it
has a valid defence and the only remedy open to the respondent then would be to
take measures in an appropriate forum. No breach of the interim injunction as
such would be involved in non-payment of such amounts by the appellant to the
respondent. The only thing which the appellant is interdicted from doing is to
satisfy its claim for damages by appropriating such amounts. Such an order would
be within the power of the court under s. 41 (b), because the claim for damages
forms the subject matter of arbitration proceedings. [563A-D] (2) The appellant
had no right or authority under cl. 18 to appropriate the amounts of other
pending bills of the respondent, 'in or towards satisfaction of its claim for
damages against the respondent, and so, the High Court has justified in issuing
the interim injunction-. [569G] 557 (a) Though the words "where any claim
for the payment of a sum of money arises" occurring in the opening part of
cl. 18 are words of great amplitude, covering even a claim for damages, it is a
well settled rule of interpretation, applicable alike to instruments as to
statutes that the meaning of ordinary words is to be found not so much in
strict etymological propriety of language nor even in popular use as in the
subject or occasion on which they are used and the object which is intended to
be attained. The context and collection of a particular expression may show
that it was not intended to be used in the sense which it ordinarily bears. The
words must therefore be read not in isolation but in the context of the whole
clause. [564G565B] (b) The heading of the clause reads "Recovery of sums
due".
The heading cannot control the interpretation
of a clause if its meaning is otherwise plain and unambiguous, but it can be
referred to as indicating the general drift of the clause and affording a key
to a better understanding of the meaning. When there is an obligation to pay a
sum of money at a future date it is a debt owing, but when the obligation is to
pay a sum of money in present, it is a debt due. A sum due would therefore mean
a sum for which there is an existing obligation to pay in present or in other
words which is presently payable. [565 C-D, G-H] (c) The language used in the
body of the clause also supports the view that it is with recovery of sums
presently due and payable by the respondent that this clause deals.
The clause is merely intended to provide a
mode of a claim for payment of a sum of money arising out of or under the
contract.' It therefore postulates a claim for a sum which is due and payable,
that is, presently recoverable and it may be recovered by the mode therein
provided. It is difficult to believe that the contracting parties could have
intended that even though a, sum is not due and payable by the respondent, the
appellant should be entitled to recover it by adopting the mode set out in the
clause. Such an interpretation would mean that as soon as a claim is made by
the appellant, it would immediately become recoverable and the appellant, under
the clause, would be entitled to sell of the securities of the respondent and
appropriate the sale proceeds in or towards satisfaction of such claim, and in
case that is insufficient, to recover the balance by appropriating other sums
due to the respondent, and if there is even then a shortfall, to recover it
personally from the respondent. And this consequence would ensue even if the
claim is for a sum which the respondent is under no existing obligation to pay
or which is not presently payable or, is disputed as regards liability or
quantum. It would be more consonant with reason and good sense to take the
view, which is supported by the language of the clause that it does no more
than merely provide an additional mode of recovery. to the appellant and that
the appellant is entitled to exercise the right conferred under it only where
there is a claim for a sum which is presently due and payable by the
respondent.
The last words of the clause namely,
"the contractor shall on demand pay to the purchaser the balance remaining
due", clearly postulate that the reference in the clause is to a sum
presently due and payable by the respondent to the appellant. [566B-567B] (d)
It is not legitimate to construe the clause by reference to a corresponding
clause which prevailed in the earlier standard form of contract where the words
were whenever under the contract any sum of money is recoverable'. This is not
a statute enacted by the legislature where it can be said that if the
legislature has departed from the language used by it in an earlier enactment,
it would be a fair presumption to make that the alteration in ,the language was
deliberate and was intended to convey a different meaning' This is a clause in
a contract and in construing it any reference to a similar or dissimilar clause
in another contract would be irrelevant.
Moreover, on a question of construction of
the clause the mere use of word 'claim' cannot be a decisive factor. The clause
has to be read as a whole, and so read, it applies only where the appellant has
a claim for a sum presently due and payable by the respondent. [567B-G] (e) In
the present case, the claim is for damages for breach of the contract. The
damages claimed are liquidated damages under cl. 14 of the Contract; but under
Indian law there is no difference in the nature of the claim whether it be for
liquidated damages or for unliquidated damages. Even if there is a stipulation
for liquidated damages a party complaining of breach of contract can recover
558 only reasonable compensation for the injury sustained by him, the
stipulated amount being merely the outside limit.
The claim in the present case therefore stands
on the same footing as a claim for unliquidated damages. A claim for
unliquidated damages does not give rise to a debt until the liability is
adjudicated upon and damages assessed by an adjudicatory authority. When there
is a breach of contract, the party who commits the breach does not eo instanti
incur any pecuniary obligation nor does the party complaining of the breach
become entitled to a debt due from the other party. The only right which the
party aggrieved by the breach has is the right to sue for damages and this is
not an actionable claim. A claim for damages for breach of contract is
therefore not a claim for a sum presently due and payable and the appellant is
not entitled, in exercise of the right conferred upon it under cl. 18, to
recover the amount of such claim by appropriating other sums due to the
respondent. [567H-569G] Kesoram Industries v. Commissioner of Wealth Tax [1966]
2 S.C.R. 688 followed.
Jones v. Thompson (1858) 27 L. J. , Q. B.
234, Jabed Sheikh v. Taher Malik 45 Cal. Weekly Notes, 519 and S. Malkha Singh
v. M/s. N. K. Gopala, Krishna Mudaliar 1956 A.I.R.
Pun. 174, referred to.
Iron & Hardware (India) Co. v. Firm
Shamlal & Bros. 1954 A.I.R. Bom. 423 approved.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 1330 of 1973 Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and Order dated the
22nd January, 1973 of the Delhi High Court in I. A. No.
1854 of 1972 in Suit No. 485 (A) of 1972 and
Civil Appeals Nos. 1224 & 1225 of 1973.
Appeals by special leave from the Judgment
and Order dated the 15th November, 1972 of the Delhi High Court in I. A. Nos.
846 and 119 of 1972 in Suit No. 158 of 1971.
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India
Shyamala pappu & S. P. Nayar for the appellant (in all the appeals) D. G.
Singhania, M. K. Garg and Shiv Khurana for respondent (in C. A. 1330) D. D.
Sharma for respondent (in C.A.s. 1224-1225) The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by BHAGWATI, J.-These appeals, raise an interesting question relating
to the interpretation of cl. 18 of the General Conditions of Contract contained
in the Standard Form of Contract No. D.G.S. & D. 68. That is the standard
form in which contracts are entered into by the Central Purchase Organisation
of the Government of India for purchase of stores from third parties described as
'contractors and the question of interpretation which arises for determination
is, therefore, one of some importance, affecting as it does a large number of
people who enter into such contracts with the Government of India. The facts
giving rise to these appeals follow a common pattern and it would, therefore,
be sufficient if we set out the 559 facts relating to civil appeals Nos. 1221
and 1225 of 1973.
They bring out clearly the point which arises
for consideration in all the three appeals.
The respondent tendered for supply of certain
quantity of foam compound to the appellant and its tender was accepted by the
appellant by acceptance of Tender dated 16th July, 1968. The Acceptance of
Tender was subject to the General Conditions of Contract contained in the
Standard Form of Contract No. D.G.S. & D. 68. The only clauses of the
General Conditions of Contract which are material for our purpose are cls. 18
and 24 and they read as follows:
"18. RECOVERY OF SUMS DUE Whenever any
claim for the payment of a sum of money arises out of or under the contrat
against the contractor, the purchaser shall be entitled to recover such sum by
appropriating in whole or in part, the security, if any, deposited by the
contractor, and for the purpose aforesaid, shall be entitled to sell and/or
realise securities forming the whole or part of any such security deposit. In
the event of the security being insufficient, the balance and if no security
has been taken from the contractor, the entire sum recoverable shall be recovered
by appropriating any sum then due or which at any time thereafter may become
due to the contractor under the contract or any other contract with the
purchaser or the Government or any person contracting through the Secretary, if
such sum even be not sufficient to cover the full amount recoverable, the
contractor shall on demand pay to the purchaser the balance remaining due.
"24. ARBITRATION In the event of any
question, dispute, or difference arising under these conditions or any special
conditions of contract, or in connection with this contract, (except as to any
matters the decision of which is specialty provided for by these or the special
conditions) the same shall be referred to the sole arbitration of an Officer in
the Ministry of Law, appointed to be the arbitrator by the Director General of
Supplies & Disposals. It will be no objection that the arbitrator is a
Government Servant, that he had to deal with the matters to which the contract
relates or that in the course of his duties as a Government servant he has
expressed views on all or any of the matters in dispute or difference. The
award of the arbitrator shall be final and binding on the parties to this
contract.
Work under the contract shag, if reasonably
possible, continue' during the arbitration proceedings and no payment due to or
payable by the purchaser shall-be withheld on account of such proceedings.
560 The performance of this contract ran into
difficulties and a dispute arose between the parties giving rise to claims by
either party against the other. The respondent contended that the appellant had
committed a breach of the contract and was, therefore, liable to pay to the
respondent a sum of Rs. 2,35,800/by way of damages. suffered by the respondent
by reason of the breach of the contract. The appellant, on the other hand, said
that it was the respondent who had committed the breach, of the contract and
was liable to pay to the appellant by way of damages a sum of Rs. 2.28,900/under
clause 14 of the General Conditions of Contract. The Assistant Director of
Supplies by his letter dated 30th March, 1971 called upon the respondent to
make payment of the amount of Rs. 2,28,900/and intimated that if the respondent
failed to do so on or before 30th April, 1971, the Pay and Accounts Officer,
New Delhi/Madras would be authorised to recover the, same from the pending
bills of the respondent in respect of other contracts. This dispute between the
parties being a dispute arising out of the contract was liable to be settled by
arbitration under cl.
24 of the General Conditions of Contract and
the respondent, therefore, filed an application. in the Delhi High Court under
s. 20 of the Indian Arbitration Act for filing the Arbitration Agreement
contained in that clause. The respondent also, at the same time, made an
application to the Delhi High Court for an interim injunction restraining the
appellant from recovering the amount of damages claimed by it from the pending
bills of the respondent. This application was, however, rejected by the Delhi
High Court on the ground that it was not shown that there were any pending
bills of the respondent at that time out of which the threatened recovery could
be made by the appellant. The application under s. 20 of the Indian Arbitration
Act was thereafter heard by the Delhi High Court and by an order dated 5th May,
1972 the Delhi High Court allowed that application and ordered the arbitration
agreement contained in cl. 24 to be filed and made an order of reference to
arbitration in accordance with the arbitration agreement.
The claim of the respondent against the
appellant for Rs. 2,35,800/and the counter-claim of the appellant against the
respondent for Rs. 2,28,900/thus became the subject matter of reference to
arbitration. During the pendency of the arbitration some amounts became due and
payable by the appellant to the respondent in respect of other contracts
entered into between the parties. In view of the letter dated 30th March, 1971
the respondent apprehended that the appellant would appropriate these amounts
towards recovery of the amounts of damages claimed by it even though the claim
for damages was disputed by the respondent and was pending adjudication before
the arbitrator. The respondent, therefore, made interim Application No. 119 of
1972 to the Delhi High Court on 17th January, 1972 under s. 41 read with the
Second Schedule to the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940 praying that the status quo
should be maintained and the appellant should be restrained from recovering its
claim for damages from the amounts due and payable by the appellant to the respondent
in respect of the pending bills. How it appears that this Interim Application
No. 119 of 1972 was made in the Original Application under s. 20 of the Indian Arbitration
Act, 561 1940 and the appellant, therefore, raised a technical objection that
the Original Application under s. 20 having been disposed of, Interim
Application No. 119 of 1972, as filed, could not be maintained. The respondent,
in view of this technical objection raised on behalf of the appellant, filed
another Interim Application No. 746 of 1972 as an independent application under
s. 41 read with the Second Schedule to the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940 on 16th
May, 1972 praying for the same interim relief as was claimed in the earlier
Interim Application No. 119 of 1972. Both these interim applications were
resisted by the appellant relying on cl. 18 of the General Conditions of
Contract but Mr. Justice Avadh Bihari of the Delhi High Court, who heard these
interim application, took the view that cl. 18 did not authorise the appellant
to appropriate. the amounts of any pending bills of the respondent towards
satisfaction of its claim for damages against the respondent, unless such claim
for damages was either admitted by the respondent or adjudicated upon by
arbitration or suit in civil court. The learned Judge accordingly by an order
dated 15th November, 1972 allowed both the interim applications and issued an
interim injunction restraining the appellant "from effecting recovery of
the amounts claimed to be due from the other pending bills" of the
respondent. The appellant thereupon, with certificates obtained from the Delhi
High Court, preferred Civil Appeals Nos. 1224 and 1225 of 1973 in this Court.
One appeal was directed against' the impugned order in so far it related to
Interim Application No. 119 of 1972 and the other in so far as it related to
Interim Application No. 846 of 1972. The appellant also preferred Civil Appeal
No. 1330 of 1973 against a similar order passed by the learned Judge in Interim
Application No. 854 of 1972 in the other case.
There are in the main two grounds on which
the learned Solicitor General, appearing on behalf of the appellant, challenged
the order of Interim injunction made by Mr. Justice Avadh Bihari A. The
impugned order amounted in effect and substance to an order directing the
appellant to pay the amounts of the pending bills of the respondent: in respect
of the other contracts and since the question of payment of the amounts of such
pending bills did not form the subject matter of the reference which was
pending before the arbitrator., the learned Judge had no jurisdiction under s.
41 read with the Second Schedule to make such an order and the impugned order
was, therefore, outside the scope of his power and hence invalid., B Clause 18
comes into play when there is a claim for payment of a sum of money arising out
of or under the contract. It is not necessary that the sum of money must be due
and payable to the purchaser. It is enough if there is a claim even for
damages. Whenever, there is such claim, the purchaser is given a right under
cl. 18 to recover it by appropriating "any sum then due or which at any time
thereafter 562 may become due to the contractor under the contract" or
under any other contract. The appellant was, therefore, entitled to recover the
amount of its claim for damages against the respondent by appropriating the
sums which subsequently became due to the respondent under other contracts,
even though the claim for damages was contested by the respondent and was
pending adjudication before the arbitrator. No interim injunction could be
granted to prevent the exercise of such right. If interim injunction were to be
granted in a case of this kind as of course merely on the ground, without
anything more, that the claim for damages is pending adjudication and until it
is determined in favour of the purchaser,' it should not be allowed to be recovered
by the purchaser out of other sums due to the contractor, it would render cl.
18 meaningless and ineffectual and the tight to the purchaser under that clause
would become illusory. of course, it would be open to the court even in such a
case to grant interim injunction, if it is satisfied that the claim for damages
is prima facie not well founded and the balance of convenience requires that,
Pending adjudication, the purchaser should be restrained from effecting
recovery of the claim for damages from out of other sums due to the contractor.
But here admittedly neither of these two factors was taken into consideration
by the learned Judges and the order of interim injunction made by' him cannot,
therefore, be sustained.
We shall proceed to examine these grounds in
the order in which we have set them out.
Re: Ground A.
It was common ground between the parties that
the order of.
interim injunction was made by the learned
Judge under s. 41 (b) read with the Second Schedule to the Indian Arbitration Act,
1940. Now s. 41(b) says that the court shall have, for the purpose of and in
relation to arbitration proceedings, the same , power of making orders in
respect of any of the matters set out in the Second Schedule as it has for the
purpose of and in relation to any proceedings before the Court and one of the
matters set out in the Second Schedule is "interim injunction". The
Court has, therefore, power under s.41 (b) read with the Second Schedule to
issue interim injunction, but such interim injunction can only be "for the
purpose of and in relation to arbitration proceedings". , The arbitration
proceedings in the present case were for determination of the mutual claims of
the appellant and the respondent arising out of the contract contained in the
acceptance of Tender dated 16th July, 1968.
The question whether any amounts were payable
by the appellant to the respondent under other contracts was not the subject
matter of the arbitration proceedings. The Court obviously could not, therefore,
make an interim order which, though ostensibly in form an order of interim
injunction, in substance amounted to a direction to the appellant to pay the
amounts due to' the respondent under other contracts. Such an interim order
would clearly not be for the purpose of or in relation to the arbitration
proceedings as required by 563 s. 41 (b). But here the order of interim
injunction made by the learned judge does not, expressly or by necessary
implication, carry any direction to the appellant to pay the amounts due to the
respondent under other contracts. It is not only in form but also in substance
a negative injunction. It has no positive content. What it does is merely to
injunct the appellant from recovering, suo moto, the damages claimed by it from
out of other amounts due to the respondent. It does not direct that the
appellant shall pay such amounts to the respondents. The appellant can still
refuse to pay such amounts if it thinks it has a valid defence and if the
appellant. does so, the only remedy open to the respondent would be to take
measures in an appropriate forum for recovery of such amounts where it would be
decided whether the appellant is liable to pay such amounts to the respondent
or not. No breach of the order of interim injunction as such would be involved
in non-payment of such amounts by the appellant to the respondent. The only
thing which the appellant is interdicted from doing is to make recovery of its
claim for damages by appropriating such amounts in satisfaction of the claim.
'That is clearly Within the power of the Court under s. 41 (b) because the
claim for damages forms the subject matter of the arbitration proceedings and
the Court can always say that until such claim, is adjudicated upon, the
appellant shall be restrained from recovering it by appropriating other amounts
due to the respondent. The order of interim injunction made by the learned
Judge cannot, therefore, be said to be outside the scope of his power under s.
41 (b) read with the Second Schedule Re: Ground B.
That takes us to the second ground of
challenge against the order of interim injunction. This ground of challenge is
based on the proper interpretation of cl. 18. The argument of the appellant was
that what is required for attracting the applicability of cl. 18 is a mere
claim for payment of a sum of money arising out of or under the contract
against the contractor and it is not necessary that a sum of money must be
actually due and payable from the contractor to the purchaser. If the purchaser
has a claim for payment of a sum of money against the contractor, he would be
entitled to exercise the right given under cl. 18, even though such claim may
not be for a sum due and payable but pay be for damages and it may be disputed
by the contractor and may not have been adjudicated upon in a court of law or
by arbitration. The purchaser can in such a case recover the amount of his
claim, without resort to a court of law or arbitration, by appropriating sums
due to the contractor under the same contract or under other contracts, if the
claim of the purchaser is not well founded and the appropriation made by him
is, therefore, unjustified, the contractor can always institute a suit or
arbitration for recovering the sums due to him which have been wrongly
appropriated by the purchaser and in such suit or arbitration, the court or the
arbitrator, as the case may be, would examine the claim against which appropriation
has been made by purchaser and if the claim is found to be unsustainable, set
at naught the appropriation and pass a decree or award for the sums due to the
contractor. But the court cannot and should not restrain the purchaser from
exercising 564 his right of appropriation merely because the claim against
which appropriation is sought to be made by the purchaser is disputed by the
contractor and is pending adjudication before a court of law or arbitrator. The
court should not prevent the normal operation of cl. 18 by interfering with it,
unless it appears to the court prima facie that the claim which is sought to be
recovered by appropriation is not well founded and the balance of convenience
lies in favour of restraining the purchaser from recovering it by
appropriation. The respondent, however, disputed the validity of this
construction placed on cl. 18 by the appellant and contended that though the
words used in the opening part of cl. 18 are "any claim for the payment of
a sum of money", which are general words of apparently wide amplitude
sufficient to cover even a claim for damages arising out the contract, a proper
construction of the clause read as a whole clearly suggests that these words
are intended to refer only to a claim for a sum due and payable and do not take
in a claim for damages which is disputed by the contractor. It is only when a
claim for damages is adjudicated upon by a civil court or an arbitrator and the
breach of the contract is established and the amount of damages ascertained and
decreed that a debt due and payable comes into existence; till then it is
nothing more than a mere right to sue for damages and it does not fall within
the words of cl. 18. Moreover, cl. 18 merely provides a mode of recovery and it
can have no application where a claim, even though it be for a sum due and
payable, is disputed by the contractor and has to be established in a court of
law or by arbitration: cl. 18 applies only where a claim is either admitted, or
in case of dispute, substantiated by resort to the judicial process. Therefore,
when the purchaser has a claim for damages which is disputed by the contractor,
the purchaser is not entitled under cl. 18 to recover the amount of its claim
for damages by appropriating other sums due to the contractor until the claim
for damages is adjudicated upon and culminates in a decree. The appellant in
the present case had consequently no right under cl. 18 to appropriate sums due
to the respondent under other contracts in satisfaction of its claim for damages
against the respondent, when the claim for damages was pending adjudication
before the arbitrator and the learned Judge was right in restraining the
appellant from doing so by issuing an interim injunction. These were broadly
the contentions of the parties under this head of challenge and the question is
which of these rival contentions is correct.
It is true that the Words "any claim for
the payment of a sum of money" occurring in the opening part of, cl. 18
are words of great amplitude, wide enough to cover even a claim for damages,
but it is a well settled rule of interpretation applicable alike to instruments
as to statutes that the meaning of ordinary words is to be found not. so much
in strict etymological propriety of language nor even in popular use as in the
subject or occasion on which they are used and the object which is intended to
be attained. The context and collocation of a particular expression may show
that it was not intended to be used in the sense which it ordinarily bears.
Language is at best an imperfect medium of expression and a variety of meanings
may often 565 lie in a word or expression. The exact colour and shape of the
meaning of any word or expression should not be ascertained by reading it in
isolation, but it should be read structurally and in its context, for its
meaning may vary with its contextual setting. We must, therefore, read the
words 'any claim for the payment of a sum of money' occurring in the opening
part of cl. 18 not in isolation but in the context of the whole clause, for the
intention of the parties is to be gathered not from one part of the clause or
the other but from the clause taken as a whole. It is in the light of this
principle of interpretation that we must determine whether the words 'any claim
for the payment of a sum of money' refer only to a claim for a sum due and
payable which is admitted or in case of disputes, established in a court of law
or by arbitration or they also include a claim for damages which is disputed by
the contractor.
The first thing that strikes one on looking
at cl. 18 is its heading which reads: "Recovery of Sums Due". It is
true that a heading cannot control the interpretation of a clause if its
meaning is otherwise plain and unambiguous, but it can certainly be referred to
as indicating the general drift of the clauses and affording a key to a better
understanding of its meaning. The heading of cl. 18 clearly suggests that this
clause is intended to deal with the subject of recovery of sum due. Now a sum
would be due to the purchaser when there is an existing obligation to pay it in
present. It would be profitable in, this connection to refer to the concept of
a 'debt', for a sum due is the same thing as a debt due. The classical
definition of 'debt' is to be found in Webb v. Stenton (1) where Lindley, L.
J., said : "a debt is a sum of money which is now payable or will become
payable in the future by reason of a present obligation". There must be
debitum in praesenti; solvendum maybe in praesenti or in future that is immaterial.
There must be an existing obligation to pay a sum, of money now or in future.
The following passage from the judgment of the Supreme Court of California in
People v. Arguello. (2) which, was approved by this Court in Kesoram Industries
v. Commissions of Wealth Tax (3) clearly brings out the essential
characteristics of a debt "Standing alone, the word 'debt,' is as
applicable to a sum of money which has been promised at a future day as to a
sum now due and payable. If we wish to distinguish between the two, we say of
the former that it is. a debt 'owing, and of the latter that it is debt
due." This passage indicates, that when there is an obligation to pay a
sum of money at a future date, it is a debt owing but when the obligation, is
to pay a sum of money in praesenti, it is a debt due. A sum due would,
therefore, mean a sum for which there is an existing obligation to pay in
praesenti or in other words, which is presently payable..
(2) [1869] 37 Calif. 524 (1) [1883] 11 Q.B.D.
518.
(3) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 688.
566 Recovery-of such sums is the subject
matter of cl. 18 according to the heading. That is the dominant idea running
through the entire cl.18.
The language used in the body of cl. 18 also
supports the view that it is with recovery of sums presently due and payable by
the, contractor to the purchaser that this clause deals. It may be noted that
cl. 18 does not lay down the substantive rights and obligations of the parties
under the contract. It is merely intended to provide a mode of recovery of ' a
claim for payment of a sum of money arising out of or under the contract".
It, therefore, postulates a claim for a sum which is due and payable, that is.
presently recoverable and may be recovered by
the mode therein provided. it is difficult to believe that the contracting
parties could have intended that even though a sum is not due and payable by
the contractor to the purchaser under the contract, the purchaser should be
entitled to recover it by adopting ,the mode set out in cl. 18. It is important
to note that cl. 18 does not -create a lien on other sums due to the contractor
or give to the purchaser a right to retain such sums until his claim against
the contractor is satisfied. If merely a right of lien or retention were given
to secure payment of a claim, then even if the claim were for a sum not
presently due and payable, the provision perhaps would not have been so
startling ,or unusual. But here the right given to the purchaser under. cl. 18
is a right to recover the amount of his claim by appropriating other sums due
to the contractor and, on the, interpretation of the appellant, this can be
done even if the claim is for a sum which is not due or payable in praesenti
and the purchaser is otherwise not entitled to recover it. That would indeed be
a highly extra-ordinary result which we would be loathe to reach in the absence
of clear and compelling language. This interpretation, if accepted, would mean
that as soon as a claim is made by the purchaser, it would immediately become
recoverable and the purchaser would be entitled to sell off the securities of
the contractor and appropriate the sale proceeds in or towards satisfaction of
such claim and in case that is insufficient, recover the balance by
appropriating other sums due to the contractor and if there is even then a
shortfall, recover it personally from the contractor, for the last words of cl.
18 provide that "the contractor shall on demand pay to the purchaser the
balance remaining due". And this consequence would ensue even if the claim
is for a sum which the -contractor is under no existing obligation to pay or
which is not presently payable or is disputed as regards the existence of
liability or its quantum. A mere making of a claim by the purchaser would
impose a liability on the contractor to pay it. That surely could -not have
been the intention of the contracting parties. It would be more consonant with
reason and good sense to take the view, which, as pointed out above, is plainly
and indubitably supported by the language used by the contracting parties, that
cl. Is does no more than merely provide an additional mode of recovery to the
purchaser, and the purchaser is entitled to exercise the right conferred, under
that clause only where there is a claim for a sum which is presently due and
payable by the contractor. This view, indeed, becomes irresistible 567 when we
consider the last words of cl. 18, namely, "the contractor shall on demand
pa to the purchaser the balance remaining due", which clearly postulate
that the reference in the clause is to a sum presently due and payable by the
contractor to the purchaser, so that, if any balance remains unrecovered after
adopting the special mode of recovery provided in the clause, such balance must
be paid by the contractor to the purchaser on demand. The appellant laid great
emphasis on the use of the word 'claim' in the opening part of cl. 18 and
contended that the Standard Form of Contract which was in use prior to the
adoption of the present Standard Form of Contract, cl. 14, and which
corresponded to the present cl. 18, opened with the words " whenever under
this contract any sum of money is recoverable from and payable by the
contractor", but this formula was deliberately and advisedly altered when
the present Standard Form was introduced and instead, the words "whenever
any claim for the payment of sum of money arises...." were substituted and
this change in phraseology indicated that in order to attract the applicability
of the present cl. 18 it was not necessary that there should be a sum due and
payable by the contractor to the purchaser but it was enough if there was a
mere claim on the part of the purchaser for payment of a sum of money by the
contractor, irrespective of whether such sum of money was presently due and
payable or not. This contention is, in our opinion,.
wholly untenable. We do not think it is
legitimate to construe cl. 18 of the contract between the parties by reference
to a corresponding clause which prevailed in an earlier Standard Form of
Contract. This is not a statute enacted by the Legislature where it can be said
that if the Legislature has departed from the language used by it in an earlier
enactment, it would be a fair presumption to make that the alteration in the
language was deliberate and it was intended to convey a different meaning. It
is a clause in a contract which we are construing and there, any reference to a
similar or dissimilar clause in another contract would be irrelevant. The only
question before us is, what does cl. 18 mean and that depends on the plain
interpretation of its language in the context in which it occurs. Moreover, on
a question of construction of cl. 18, mere use of the word "claim"
cannot be a decisive factor.
Cl. 18 has to be read as a whole, each part
throwing light on the other, without any undue emphasis on one word or the
other. We cannot allow our interpretation of cl. 18 to be hijacked from its
true course by the use of a solitary word such as "claim", but we
must arrive at the true meaning of the clause by construing it in all its parts
and in its proper contextual setting. So viewed, it is clear that cl.
18 applies only where the purchaser has a
claim for a sum presently due and payable by the contractor.
Having discussed the proper interpretation of
cl. 18, we may now turn to consider what is the real nature of the claim for
recovery of which the appellant is seeking to appropriate the sums due to the
respondent under other contracts: The claim is admittedly one for damages for
breach of the contract between the parties. Now, it is true that the damages
which are claimed are liquidated damages under cl. 14, 568 but so far as the
law in India is concerned, there is no qualitative difference in the nature of
the claim whether it be for liquidated damages or for unliquidated damages.
Sec.
74 of the Indian Contract Act eliminates the
some-what elaborate refinements made under the English common law in
distinguishing between stipulations providing for payment of liquidated damages
'and stipulations in the nature of penalty. Under the common law a genuine
preestimate of damages by mutual agreement is regarded as a stipulation naming
liquidated damages and binding between the parties a stipulation in a contract
in terrors is a penalty and the Court refuses to enforce it, awarding to
aggrieved party only reasonable compensation. The Indian Legislature has sought
to cut across the web of rules and presumptions under the English common law,
by enacting a uniform principle applicable to all stipulations naming amounts
to be paid in case of breach, and stipulations by way of penalty, and according
to this principle, even if there is a stipulation by way of liquidated damages,
a party complaining of breach of contract can recover only reasonable
compensation for the injury sustained by him, the stipulated amount being
merely the outside limit. It, therefore makes no difference in the present case
that the claim of the appellant is for liquidated damages. It stands on the
same footing as a claim for unliquidated damages. Now the law is well settled
that a claim for unliquidated damages does not give rise to a debt until the
liability is adjudicated and damages assessed by a decree or order of a Court
or other adjudicatory authority. When there is a breach of contract, the party
who commits the breach does not eo instanti incur any pecuniary obligation, nor
does the party complaining of the breach becomes entitled to a debt due from
the other party. The only right which the party aggrieved by the breach of the
contract has is the right to sue for damages.
That is not in actionable claim and this
position is made amply clear by the amendment in s. 6(e) of the Transfer of
Property Act, which provides that a mere right to sue for damages cannot be
transferred. This has always been the law in England and as far back as 1858
we, find it stated by Wightman, J., in Jones v. Thompson (1) "Exparte
Charles and several other cases decide that the amount of a verdict in an
action for unliquidated damages is not a debt till judgment has. been signed"..
It was held in this case that a claim for damages dots not become a debt even
after the jury has returned a verdict in favour of the plaintiff till the
judgment is actually delivered. So also in O' Driscoll v. Manchester Insurance
Committee,(2) Swinfen Eady, L. J., said in reference to cases where the claim
was for unliquidated damages "in such cases there is no debt at all until
the verdict of the jury is pronounced assessing the damages and judgment is
given. The same view has also been taken consistently by different High Courts
in India. We may mention only a few of the decisions, namely, Jabed Sheikh v. Taher
Mallik,(3) S. Malkha Singh v. M/s N. K. Gopala Krishna Mudaliar(4) and Iron
& Hardware (India) Co. v. Firm Shamlal & Bros.(5) (1) [1858] 27 L. J.
Q.B. 234.
(3) 45 Cal. Weekly Notes, 519.
(2) [1915] 3 K. D. 499.
(4) 1956 A.I.R. Pun. 174.
(5) 1954 A.I.R. Bom. 423.
569 Chagla, C. J. in the last mentioned case,
stated the law in these terms:
" In my opinion it would not be true to
say that a person who commits a breach of the contract incurs any pecuniary
liability, nor would it be true to say that the other party to the contract who
complains of the breach has any amount due to him from the other party.
As already stated, the only right which he
has is the right to go to a Court of law and recover damages. Now, damages are
the compensation which a Court of law gives to a party for the injury which he
has sustained.
But, and this is most important to note, he
does not get damages or compensation by reason of any existing obligation on
the part of the person who has committed the breach. He gets compensation as a
result of the fiat of the Court. Therefore, no pecuniary liability arises till
the Court has determined that the party complaining of the breach is entitled
to damages. Therefore, when damages are assessed, it would not be true to say
that what the Court is doing is ascertaining a pecuniary liability which
already existed. The Court in the first place must decide that the defendant is
liable and then it proceeds to assess what that liability is.
But till that determination there is no
liability at all upon the defendant." This statement in our view
represents the correct legal position and has our full concurrence. A claim for
damages for breach of contract is, therefore, not a claim for a sum presently
due and payable and the purchaser is not entitled, in exercise of the right
conferred upon it under cl. 18, to recover the amount of such claim by
appropriating other sums due to the contractor. On this view, it is not
necessary for us to consider the other contention raised on behalf of the
respondent, namely, that on a proper construction of cl.
18, the purchaser is entitled to exercise the
right conferred under that clause only where the claim for payment of a sum of
money is either admitted by the contractor, or in case of dispute, adjudicated
upon by a court or other adjudicatory authority. We must, therefore, hold that
the appellant had no right or authority under cl. 18 to appropriate the amounts
of other pending bills of the respondent in or towards satisfaction of its
claim for damages against the respondent and the learned Judge was justified in
issuing an interim Injunction restraining the appellant from doing so.
We accordingly dismiss the appeals. The
appellant in each appeal will pay the costs of the respondent all throughout,
V.P.S.
Appeals dismissed.
Back