LAWS(PVC)-1915-4-98

CHAITRAM RAMBILAS Vs. BRIDHICHAND KESRICHAND

Decided On April 29, 1915
CHAITRAM RAMBILAS Appellant
V/S
BRIDHICHAND KESRICHAND Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This is an appeal From an order of Mr. Justice Imam made apparently under Section 14 of the Indian Arbitration Act. There was an arbitration followed by an award. But it is alleged that there was misconduct on the part, of the arbitrators; and it is on the ground of this misconduct that the application was made to the Court and succeeded before the learned Judge. The misconduct, suggested was the failure to hear evidence. Whether there was that failure or not is a matter in dispute.

(2.) But the way in which the case was presented to the Learned Judge and in which he understood it appears from this passage in the judgment; "The petitioners complaint is that the arbitrators refused to allow them to adduce evidence to establish their contentions and proceeded with the arbitration according to the Rules of the Tribunal of Arbitration established by the Bengal Chamber of Commerce and not according to the law under the Indian Arbitration Act. The petitioners contention is that the arbitration clause in the contract is merely an agreement to abide by the decision of the Chamber without accepting to be governed by the wide powers of that body as expressed in their rules." It is apparent therefore from this that it was admitted that the misconduct depended upon the alleged non- applicability of the rules governing an arbitration by the Bengal Chamber of Commerce. I cannot attribute any other meaning to the words of the judgment which J have just quoted.

(3.) The first question, therefore, which we have to consider is whether these rules were imported into the contract. Even without the assistance of any authority it appears to me that these rules were imported into the contract and that without such importation the contract would be insensible so far as it related to arbitration. For, it would involve the ridiculous position that every member of the Chamber of Commerce would have to sit on the arbitration. So that on the contract itself I should have Celt no doubt. But apart from that there is a very careful judgment of Mr. Justice Harington in Ganges Manufacturing Co., Ld., v. Indra Chand, delivered as far back as the 5th June 1906, where the contract was in the same terms as that, with which we are now Concerned.