(1.) , J. : The respondent Pothan Joseph who was working as the Editor of the Deccan Herald owned and published by the appellant. The Printers (Mysore) Private Ltd., in Bangalore has filed a suit against the appellant on two contracts excluded between the parties on 1/04/1948 and 20/02/1953, respectively, and has claimed accounts of the working of the Deccan Herald newspaper from April 1, 194 8/03/1958, as well as payment of the amount that may be found due to him from the appellant under the provisions of Cls. 2 (d) and 1(d) of the said contracts. The services of the respondent were terminated by the appellant by its letter dated 28/09/1957, in which the respondent was told that the termination would take effect from 31/03/1958. However, by a subsequent letter written by the appellant to the respondent on 17/03/1958, the respondent was told that his services had been terminated with immediate effect and he was asked to hand over charge to his successor Mr. T. S. Ramachandra Rao. Thereafter on 14/07/1958, the respondent filed the present suit against the appellant.
(2.) THE appellant contended that the two contracts on which the respondents claim was based were subject to an arbitration agreement, and so it was not open to the respondent to file the present suit against the appellant. THE appellant, therefore, requested the Court under S. 34 of the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940 (hereinafter called the Act) to stay the proceedings initiated by the respondent and refer the dispute to arbitration in accordance with the arbitration agreement between the parties.
(3.) BEFORE we deal with the merits of the contentions raised by the parties in this appeal it is necessary to set out briefly the relevant facts leading to the present litigation. The appellant is a printing company and it owns and publishes the Deccan Herald in English and Prajavani in Kannada at Bangalore. By a contract dated 1/04/1948, the appellant engaged the respondent as Editor of the Deccan Herald for a period of five years on terms and conditions specified in the said contract. As provided by Cl. (5) of the said contract the period of the respondents employment was extended by another five years by a subsequent contract entered into between the parties on 20/02/1953. As we have already mentioned the services of the respondent came to be terminated abruptly on 17/03/1958. It appears that by his letter dated 16/10/1957, the respondent made certain claims against the appellant under the provisions of the Working Journalists Act. Besides, he demanded 1/10th of the profits made by the Deccan Herald from 1948 up to the date of the termination of his service under the two respective contracts. This claim was denied by the appellant. Correspondence then ensued between the parties but since no common ground was discovered between then the respondent filed the present suit. His case is that the two contracts entitled him to claim 1/10th of the profits made by the Deccan Herald during the period of his employment, and so he claims an account of the said profits and his due share in them.