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Saturday, February 25, 2012
Civil Writ Petition No. 2416 of 2002 and R.A. No.134 of 2002 filed by the appellant seeking refund of Rs.10 lakhs deposited towards security pursuant to the order passed by the High Court has been dismissed. = the respondent-Corporation's right to forfeit the security amount or to recover the extra expenditure incurred in getting the work executed from alternative agency was not disputed by him. 12
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.8569-8570 of 2003
Krishan Lal ...Appellant
Versus
Food Corporation of India & Ors. ...Respondents
O R D E R
T.S. THAKUR, J.
1. These appeals by special leave arise out of an order
passed by the High Court of Punjab and Haryana whereby
Civil Writ Petition No. 2416 of 2002 and R.A. No.134 of
2002 filed by the appellant seeking refund of Rs.10 lakhs
deposited towards security pursuant to the order passed by
the High Court has been dismissed.
2. On 12th November, 1999 the Food Corporation of India
invited tenders for appointment of Handling and
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Transportation Contracts at various depots including the
depot at Dabwali in the State of Haryana. Several persons
appear to have submitted their tenders in response to the
said tender notice including M/s R.R.S. Chautala &
Company who eventually bagged the contract in question
having offered to undertake the contracted work in
consideration of payment at 186% above the schedule of
rates. The appellant questioned the said allotment in Writ
Petition No.1368 of 2000, inter alia, alleging that he had
been illegally prevented from submitting his tender by
being denied the requisite form for submission of the
tender. The appellant also asserted that he was ready to
undertake the Handling and Transportation work at a much
lower rate of 110% above the schedule of rates as against
186% offered by the successful tenderer mentioned above.
The appellant even offered to deposit a sum of Rs.10 lakhs
by way of security to show his bona fides. An affidavit to
that effect was also, it appears, filed by the appellant.
3. The Writ Petition filed by the appellant was eventually
allowed by the High Court by its order dated 5th April, 2001.
The High Court held that the decision taken by the Food
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Corporation of India was without consideration of relevant
facts and was not reasonable. The High Court therefore,
found a case justifying interruption of contract and setting
aside of the allotment of work in favour of the successful
tenderer. Having said that, the High Court issued the
following directions:
"It is directed that the fifth respondent shall cease to
operate immediately. The respondent-corporation shall
invite fresh tenders and proceed to allot the work in
accordance with law. The petitioner shall be bound by
his offer to work at 110% above the schedule of rates.
He would deposit an amount of Rs.10 lacs by way of
security within one week from today with the office of
the Senior Regional Manager, Food Corporation of
India, Chandigarh. This amount shall be adjusted
towards security, etc. if the work is allotted to the
petitioner. Otherwise, it would be refunded within one
week of the final decision regarding the allotment of
the work."
4. In obedience to the above directions the respondent-
Food Corporation of India (FCI) invited sealed tender for
handling and transport contact for its Dabwali depot for a
period of six months. The short term tender notice
required the intending tenderers to submit their tenders
along with complete documents and the earnest money
prescribed in the form of a Demand Draft.
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5. In response to the above tender notice, the appellant
also submitted a tender offering to undertake the work @
50% above the schedule of rates. This offer was accepted
by the respondent-Corporation with a direction to the
District Manager, FCI, Hissar that no amount towards
security be demanded from the appellant as the security
amount of Rs.3,09,500/- stood deposited in the Regional
Office. Shortly after the allotment of the contract to the
appellant, the appellant sent a fax message expressing his
inability to undertake the handling and transport contract
and withdrawing the offer made by him. By this time the
appellant had already executed a formal agreement with
the respondent-Corporation on 28th May, 2001. In
response, the respondent-Corporation informed the
appellant that any withdrawal after the execution of the
formal agreement was tantamount to a breach of the
terms and conditions of the contract and would attract
action under Clause X(b) of the agreement. The appellant
was requested to take up the handling and transport work
within one week positively, failing which the respondent-
Corporation proposed to take recourse to Clause X(b) of
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the agreement to get the work done at the risk and cost of
the appellant.
6. It is common ground that the appellant did not
undertake the work. He cited some security problems
which according to the appellant prevented him from
discharging his contractual obligations. Not only that the
appellant demanded the refund of Rs.10 lakhs which stood
deposited with the respondent-Corporation pursuant to the
direction issued by the High Court in the writ petition
referred to earlier. Upon refusal of the respondent-
Corporation to refund the amount in question the
appellant filed Writ Petition No.2416 of 2002 in the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana for a mandamus directing
the respondent-Corporation to refund the same. The High
Court dismissed the said petition holding that since the
parties had entered into a written contract their mutual
rights and obligations were governed by the terms and
conditions of the said contract. The High Court observed:
"It appears from the record of the case and in
particular Annexure-P-5 dated 20.6.2001 addressed to
the petitioner by the F.C.I. that the petitioner had
executed agreement in the office on 28.5.2001 and his
offer at 50% ASOR was accepted by the office vide
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telegram dated 25.5.2001, a copy whereof was sent to
the petitioner through registered post. It has been
clearly mentioned in Annexure-P-5 that the F.C.I had
accepted the offer of the petitioner and that being so,
in our view, a concluded contract had come into
existence. Withdrawal of offer would certainly attract
relevant condition of the contract. "The contract that
has been arrived at between the parties has not been
placed on records. The terms of contract in the event a
party, after its offer has been accepted, may back out,
are, thus, not known. There is, however, sufficient
indication forthcoming from Annexure-P-5 that Clause
10(b) would apply in the event of contractor may not
carry out the work allotted to him. This clause too has
not been shown to us nor made a part of pleadings. All
that we would, thus, like to observe at this stage is that
once the parties have arrived at concluded contract,
the terms thereof would alone determine the rights
inter se parties. Be that as it may, petitioner cannot
ask for refund of Rs.10 Lacs on the dint of orders
passed in his earlier petition bearing No.1368 of 2000
as it is only in the event work was not to be allotted to
him that, he could ask for refund of the money
deposited by him."
7. We have heard learned counsel for the parties at some
length. The material facts are not in dispute. It is not in
dispute that the amount of Rs.10 lakhs was deposited by
the appellant in terms of the order of the High Court in Writ
Petition No.1368 of 2000. The said amount had to be
refunded to the appellant if the work was not allotted to the
appellant upon the issue of the fresh tenders. In case the
appellant succeeded in bagging the contract the amount
was to be adjusted towards security. This clearly implied
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that the order passed by the High Court envisaged a
situation where the appellant would not succeed in securing
the contract pursuant to the fresh tender process, in which
event the amount deposited by the appellant had been
refundable in toto. In case, however, the appellant
succeeded in bagging the contract which obviously
depended upon whether he offered the lowest rate for
undertaking the work in question, the amount deposited by
him had to be adjusted towards security in relation to the
said contract. It is also not in dispute that a short-term
tender was issued pursuant to the direction of the High
Court and that the security amount required to be furnished
by the appellant was limited to a sum of Rs.3,09,500/-.
The High Court order did not provide for a situation where
the security amount required under the contract may be
Rs.3,09,500/- for other tenderers but Rs.10 lakhs in the
case of the appellant. That a formal agreement was
executed between the parties is also admitted before us as
indeed it was before the High Court. Withdrawal of the offer
tantamount to refusal to undertake the contract, hence a
breach of the terms of the contract, and shall attract the
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penal provisions contained in the same is also not in
question. Our attention was, in this regard, drawn by
learned counsel for the appellant to Clause X (b) and XI (f)
of the agreement which read as under:
"X(b) The Senior Regional Manager shall also have
without prejudice to other rights and remedies, the
right, in the even of breach by the contractors of any of
the terms and conditions of the contract to terminate
the contract forthwith and to get the work done for the
unexpired period of the contract at the risk and cost of
the contractors and/or forfeit the security deposit at
any part thereof for the sum of sums due for any
damages, losses, charges, expenses of costs that may
be suffered or incurred by the corporation due the
contractor's negligence or unworkment like
performance of any of the services under the contract.
XI (f) In the event of termination of the contract
envisaged in clause X, of the Senior Regional Manager
shall have the rights of forfeit the entire or part of the
amount of security deposit lodged by the contractors or
to appropriate the Security Deposit or any part thereof
in or towards the satisfaction of any sum due to be
claimed for any damages, losses, charged expenses or
cost that may be suffered or incurred by the
Corporation."
8. It was argued on behalf of the appellant that even the
widest and most favourable interpretation of the above
terms would not entitle the respondent-Corporation to
forfeit any amount besides the security deposit and recover
any damages, losses or cost that may be suffered or
incurred by the respondent-Corporation in getting the
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contracted work executed through some other agency.
Such being the position the respondent-Corporation could
at best forfeit the sum of Rs.3,09,500/- towards security
deposit and a sum of Rs.2,17,274/- which the respondent-
Corporation claimed to have incurred towards extra
expenditure in getting the work executed at the risk and
cost of the appellant. The extra expenditure incurred by the
respondent-Corporation after termination of the contract
allotted to the appellant, it is noteworthy, has been
quantified by the respondent-Corporation in para 5(i) & (ii)
of the counter-affidavit filed on its behalf. The respondent-
Corporation has inter alia said:
"I say that during the contract period of six months of
the petitioner, the Respondent Corporation had to incur
an extra expenditure of Rs.2,17,274/- and suffered
heavy losses. I say that security amount of Rs.10
lakhs was furnished by the petitioner as security for
fulfilment of contract in terms of High Court order.
Even after depositing Rs.10 lakhs as per the High Court
Orders, the petitioner did not resume the work and the
entire amount of Rs. 10 lakhs was rightly forfeited
against excess payment made towards alternative
arrangements made at the risk and cost of the
petitioner. I say that the amount of Rs.10lakhs was
stand forfeited under Clause X(b) read with Clause
XI(f) of the contract."
9. It was in the light of the above assertions, argued Mr.
Jha, learned counsel for the appellant, that the respondent-
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Corporation could not lay any claim against the amount in
question in excess of Rs.3,09,500/ plus Rs.2,17,274/- and
that the balance amount was liable to be refunded to the
appellant.
10. On behalf of the respondent-Corporation it was argued
that the appellant ought to have resorted to the arbitration
clause under the agreement instead of filing a writ petition
in the High Court. Alternatively, it was argued that the
security deposit having been made under the orders of the
High Court, the entire amount of Rs.10 lakhs was liable to
be forfeited on the failure of the appellant to work once the
same was allotted to him.
11. It is true that there was an arbitration clause in the
agreement executed between the parties. It is equally true
that, keeping in view the nature of the controversy, any
claim for refund of the amount deposited by the appellant
could be and ought to have been raised before the
Arbitrator under the said arbitration. The fact, however,
remains that the High Court had entertained the writ
petition as early as in the year 2002 and the present
appeals have been pending in this Court for the past ten
10
years or so. Relegating the parties to arbitration will not be
feasible at this stage especially when the proceedings
before the Arbitrator may also drag on for another decade.
Availability of an alternative remedy for adjudication of the
disputes is, therefore, not a ground that can be pressed
into service at this belated stage and is accordingly
rejected.
12. Equally untenable is the alternative argument that
since the amount of Rs.10 lakhs had been deposited
pursuant to the order passed by the High Court the same
was liable to be forfeited in toto in the event of any breach
of the agreement between the parties. The deposit was, no
doubt, made pursuant to the direction of the High Court but
the said direction did not go further to say that in case the
appellant committed a breach of the agreement executed
between the parties, any such breach would result in the
forfeiture of the entire amount of Rs.10 lakhs. A closer
reading of the order passed by the High Court leaves no
manner of doubt that the amount was deposited but was
refundable in case the contract was not allotted and was
adjustable towards security if the appellant succeeded in
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emerging as the successful tenderer. In the event of
adjustment of the amount towards security the breach of
the contract would have led to the forfeiture of the security
amount alone and not the entire amount deposited by the
appellant.
13. Even so, the terms of the contract provided for
execution of the contracted work through another agency
at the risk and cost of the appellant. It is not in dispute
that the respondent-Corporation had engaged an
alternative agency for getting the work executed. It is also
not in dispute that an extra amount was incurred by the
respondent-Corporation in that regard. If that be so, the
amount lying with the respondent-Corporation could be
utilised for recovery of the loss. The respondent-
Corporation could therefore make a claim for recovery of
the extra expenditure, incurred by it. We must mention, in
fairness to Mr. Jha, that the respondent-Corporation's right
to forfeit the security amount or to recover the extra
expenditure incurred in getting the work executed from
alternative agency was not disputed by him.
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14. That being the position, the respondent-Corporation
would be entitled to retain a sum of Rs.3,09,500/ plus
Rs.2,17,274/- = Rs.5,26,774/-. The balance amount of
Rs.4,73,226/- ought to have been refunded to the appellant
on the admitted factual and contractual premise.
15. In the result, we allow this appeal, set aside the order
passed by the High Court and direct the respondent-
Corporation to refund the balance amount of Rs.4,73,226/-
to the appellant within a period of three months from today
failing which the said amount shall start earning interest @
10% p.a. from the date of expiry of the stipulated period of
three months mentioned above. We are consciously
making no order for payment of interest on the amount
held refundable to the appellant, for we are of the opinion
that the appellant had without any real intention to perform
the work in question got the earlier contract terminated by
a judicial order and put the Corporation through the
unnecessary botheration and consequential prejudice of
calling for fresh tenders. The appellant, it appears to us,
was interested only in scoring a point over his rival for
whatever reasons he had in view. The conduct of the
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appellant has, therefore, dissuaded us from directing
payment of any interest to him on the amount that is held
refundable.
16. These appeals are, with above directions &
observations, allowed and disposed of leaving the parties to
bear their own costs.
...........................................
...J.
(T.S. THAKUR)
...........................................
...J.
(GYAN SUDHA MISRA)
New Delhi
February 24, 2012
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