THE ARBITRATION ACT, 1940
(X
OF 1940)
[11
March, 1940]
WHERE it is expedient to consolidate and amend. the law relating
to arbitration in Pakistan.
It is hereby enacted as follows:‑
CHAPTER
I
INTRODUCTORY
1. Short title, extent and commencement. (1) This Act may be called the Arbitration Act, 1940.
(2)
It extends to the whole of Pakistan.
(3)
It shall come into force on the Ist day of July, 1940.
2. Definitions.
In this Act, unless there is any thing repugnant in the subject or contex‑‑
(a) "arbitration agreement" means a written
agreement to submit present or future differences to arbitration, whether an
arbitrator is named therein or not;
(b) "award" means an
arbitration award;
(c) "Court" means a Civil Court having
jurisdiction to decide the question forming the subject‑matter of reference if
the same had been the subject‑matter of a suit, but does not, except for the
purpose of arbitration proceedings under Section 21, include a Small Cause
Court
(d) "legal representative" means a person
who in law represents the estate of a deceased person, and includes any person
who intermeddles with the estate of the deceased, and, where a party acts in
representative character, the person on whom the estate devolves on the death
of the party so acting;
"reference"
means reference to arbitration.
CHAPTER
II
ARBITRATION
WITHOUT INTERVENTION OF A COURT
3. Provisions implied in arbitration agreement. An arbitration agreement, unless a different intention is
expressed therein, shall be deemed to include the provisions set out in the
First Schedule in so far as they are applicable to the reference.
4. Agreement that arbitrators be
appointed by third party. The
parties to an arbitration agreement may agree that any reference thereunder
shall be to an arbitrator or arbitrators to be appointed by a person designated
in the agreement either by name or as the holder for the time being of any
office or appointment.
5. Authority of appointed arbitrator or umpire irrevocable
except by leave of Court. The
authority of an appointed arbitrator or umpire shall not a revocable except
with the leave of the Court, unless a contrary intention is expressed in the
arbitration agreement.
6. Arbitration agreement not to be discharged by death of
party thereto. (1) An arbitration agreement shall
not be discharged by the death of any party thereto, either as respects the
deceased or any other party, but shall in such event be enforceable by or
against the legal representative of the deceased.
(2) The authority of an arbitrator shall not be revoked by
the death of any party by whom he was appointed.
(3) Nothing in this section shall affect the operation of
any law by virtue of which any right of action is extinguished by the death of
a person.
7. Provisions in case of insolvency. (1) Where
it is provided by a term in a contract to which an insolvent is a party that
any difference arising there out or in connection therewith shall be referred
to arbitration, the said term shall if the receiver a8opts the contract, be
enforceable by or against him so far as it relates to any such differences.
(2) Where a person who has been adjudged an insolvent had,
before the commencement of the insolvency proceedings, become a party to an
arbitration agreement and any matter to which the agreement applies is required
to be determined in connection with, or for the purposes of the insolvency
proceedings, the, if the case is one to which sub‑section (1) does not apply,
any other party to the agreement or the receiver may apply to the Court having
jurisdiction in the insolvency proceedings for an order directing that the
matter in question shall be referred to arbitration in accordance with the
agreement and the Court may, if it is of opinion that, having regard to all the
circumstances of the case, the matter ought to be determined by arbitration,
make an order accordingly.
(3) In this section the expression "receiver" includes an official
Assignee.
8. Power of Court to appoint arbitrator or umpire. (1) In any of the following cases:‑‑
(a) Where an arbitration agreement provides that the
reference shall be to one or more arbitrators to be appointed by consent of the
parties, and all the parties do not, after difference have arisen, concur, in the
appointment or appointments; or
(b) If any appointed arbitrator or umpire neglects or
refuses to act, or is incapable of acting, or dies, and the arbitration
agreement does not show that it was intended that the vacancy should not be
supplied; and the parties or the arbitrators, as the case may be, do not supply
the vacancy; or
(c) where the parties or the arbitrators are required
to appoint an umpire and do not appoint him;
any
party may serve the other parties or the arbitrators, as the case may be, with
a written notice to concur in the appointment or appointments or in supplying
the vacancy.
(2) If the appointment is not made within fifteen clear days
after the service of the said notice, the Court may, on the application of the
party who gave notice and after giving the other parties an opportunity of
being heard, appoint an arbitrator or arbitrators or umpire, as the case may
be, who shall have like power to act in the reference and to made an award as
if he or they had been appointed by consent of all parties.
9. Power to party to appoint new arbitrator or, in
certain cases, a sole arbitrator. Where an arbitrations agreement provides
that a reference shall be to two arbitrators, one to be appointed each party,
then, unless a different intention is expressed in the agreement.
(a) If either of the appointed arbitrator, neglects or
refuses to act, or is incapable of acting or dies, the party who appointed him
may appoint a new arbitrator in his place;
(b) If one party fails to appoint an arbitrator, either
originally or by way of substitution as aforesaid, for fifteen clear days,
after the service by the other party of a notice in writing to make the
appointment, such other party having appointed his arbitrator before giving the
notice,
the party who has appointed an arbitrator may appoint that
arbitrator to act as sole arbitrator in the reference, and his award shall be
binding on both parties as if he had been appointed by consent.
Provided that the Court may set aside any appointment as
sole arbitrators made under clause:
(b) and either, on sufficient cause
being shown, allow further time to the defaulting party to
appoint an arbitrator or pas such
other order as it thinks fit.
Explanation. The fact that an arbitrator or umpire, after
request by either party to enter on and proceed with the reference, does not
within one month comply with the request may constitute a neglect or refusal to
act within the meaning of Section 8 and this section.
10. Provisions as to appointment of three or more arbitrators.
(1) Where an arbitration agreement provides that a reference shall be to three
arbitrators, one to be appointed by each party and the third by the two
appointed arbitrators, the agreement shall have effect as if it provided for
the appointment, of an umpire, and not for the appointment of a third
arbitrator, by the two arbitrators appointed by the parties.
(2) Where an arbitration agreement provides that a reference
shall be to three arbitrators to be appointed otherwise than as mentioned in subsection
(1), the award of the majority shall, unless the arbitration agreement
otherwise provides, prevail.
(3) Where an arbitration agreement provides for the
appointment of more arbitrators than three, the award of the majority, or if
the arbitrators are equally divided in their opinions, the award of the umpire
shall, unless the arbitration agreement otherwise provides, prevail.
11. Power of Court to remove arbitrators or umpire in
certain circumstances. (1) The
Court may, on the application of any party to reference, remove an arbitrator
or umpire who fails to use all reasonable dispatch in entering on and
proceeding with the reference and making an award.
(2) The Court may remove an arbitrator or umpire who has
misconducted himself or the proceedings.
(3) Where an arbitrator or umpire is removed under the
section, he shall not be entitled to receive any remuneration in respect of his
services.
(4) For the purposes of this section the expression
"proceeding with the reference" includes, in a case where reference
to the umpire become necessary, giving notice of that fact to the parties and
to the umpire.
12. Power of Court where arbitrator is removed or his
authority revoked. (1) Where the Court removes an
umpire who has not entered on the reference or one or more arbitrators (not
being all the arbitrators), the Court may, on the application of any party to
the arbitration agreement, appoint persons to fill the vacancies.
(2) Where the authority of an arbitrator or arbitrators or
an umpire is revoked by leave of the Court, or where the Court removes an
umpire who has entered on the reference or a sole arbitrator or all the
arbitrators, the
Court
may, on the application of any party to the arbitration agreement, either‑‑
(a) appoint a person to act as sole arbitrator in the
place of the person or persons displaced, or
(b) order that the arbitration agreement shall cease to have
effect with respect to the difference referred.
(3) A person appointed under this section as an arbitrator
or umpire shall have the like power to act in the reference and to make an
award as if he had been appointed in accordance with the arbitration agreement.
14. Award to be signed and filed. (1) When the arbitrators ‑or umpire have made their award,
they shall sign it and shall give notice in writing to the parties of the
making and signing thereof, and of the amount of fees and charges payable in
respect of the arbitration and award.
(2) The arbitrators or umpire shall, at the request of any
party to the arbitration agreement or any person claiming under such party or
if so directed by the Court and upon payment of the fees and charges due in
respect of the arbitration and award and of the costs and charges of filing the
award, cause the award or signed copy of it, together with any depositions and
documents which may have been taken and proved before them, to be filed in
Court, and the Court shall thereupon give notice to the parties of the filing
of the award.
(3) Where the arbitrators or umpire state a special case
under clause (b) of Section 13, the Court, after giving notice to the parties
and hearing them, shall pronounce its opinion thereon and such opinion shall be
added to, and shall form part of the award.
15. Power of Court to modify award. The Court may by order modify or correct an award‑‑
(a) Where it appears that a
part of the award is upon a matter not referred to arbitration and such part
can be separated from the other part and does not affect the decision on the
matter referred; or
(b) Where the award is imperfect in form, or contains
any obvious error which can be amended without effecting such decision; or
(c) Where the award contains clerical mistake or an
error arising from an accidental slip or omission.
16. Power to remit award.
(1) The Court may from time to time remit the award or any matter referred to
arbitration to the arbitrators or umpire for reconsideration upon such terms as
it thinks fit‑‑
(a) where the award has left undetermined any of the
matters referred to arbitration, or where it determines any matter not referred
to arbitration and such matter cannot be separated without affecting the
determination of the matters referred; or
(b) where the award is so indefinite
as to be incapable of execution ; or
(c) where an objection to the legality of the award is
apparent upon the face of it.
(2) Where an award is remitted. under sub‑section (1) the
Court shall fix the time within which the arbitrator or umpire shall submit his
decision to the Court;
Provided that any time so fixed may be extended by subsequent
order of the Court.'
(3) An award remitted under sub‑section (1) shall become
void on the failure of the arbitrator or umpire to reconsider it and submit his
decision within the time fixed.
17.
Judgement in terms of award. Where the Court sees no cause to remit
the award or any of the matters referred to arbitration for consideration or to
set aside the award, the Court shall, after the time for making an application
to set aside the award has expired, or such application having been made, after
refusing it, proceed to pronounce judgment according to the award, and upon the
judgment so pronounced a decree shall follow, and ito appeal shall lie from
such decree except on the ground that it is in excess of, or not otherwise in
accordance with, the award.
CHAPTER III
18. Power of Court to pass interim order. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in Section 17, at
anytime after the filing of the award, whether notice of the filing has been
served or not, upon being satisfied by affidavit or otherwise that a party has
taken or is about to take steps to defeat, delay or obstruct the execution of
any decree that may be passed upon the award, or that speedy execution of the
award is just and necessary, the Court may pass such interim orders as it deems
necessary.
Any person against whom such interim orders have been passed
may show cause against such orders, and the Court, after hearing the parties,
may pass such further orders as it deems necessary and just.
CHAPTER 1V
19. Power to supersede arbitration where award
becomes void or is set aside. Where an award has become void under sub‑section
(3) of Section 16 or has been set aside, the Court may by order supersede the
reference and shall there upon order that the arbitration agreement shall cease
to have effect with respect to the difference referred.
20. Application to file in Court arbitration agreement. (1) Where any person have entered into an arbitration
agreement before the institution of any suit with respect to the subject‑matter
of the agreement or any part of it, and where a difference has arisen to which
the agreement applies, they or any of them, instead of proceeding under Chapter
II, may apply to a Court having jurisdiction in the matter to which the
agreement relates, that the agreement be filed in the Court.
(2) The application shall be in writing and shall be
numbered and registered as a suit between one or more of the parties interested
or claiming to be interested as plaintiff or plaintiffs and the remainder as
defendant or defendants, if the application has been presented by all the
parties, or, if otherwise, between the applicant as plaintiff and the other
parties as defendants.
(3) On such application being made the Court shall direct
notice thereof, to be given to all parties to the agreement other than the
applicants, requiring them to show cause within the time specified in the
notice why the agreement should not be filed.
(4) Where no sufficient cause is shown, the Court shall
order the agreement to be filed, and shall make an order of reference to the
arbitrator
appointed
by the parties, whether in the agreement or otherwise, or, where the parties
cannot agree upon an arbitrator, to an arbitrator appointed by the Court.
(5) Thereafter the arbitration shall
proceed in accordance with, and shall be governed by, the other provisions of
this Act so far as they can be made applicable.
21.
Parties to suit may apply for order or reference. Where in any suit all the parties interested agree that any
matter in difference between them in the suit shall be referred to arbitration,
they may at any time before judgment is pronounced apply in writing to the
Court for an order or reference.
22. Appointment of
arbitrator. The arbitrator shall be appointed in such manner as may be
agreed upon between the parties.
23. Order of reference.
(1) The Court shall, by order, refer to the arbitrator the matter in difference
which he is required to determine, and shall in the order specify such time as
it thinks reasonable for the making of the award.
(2) Where a matter is referred to arbitration the Court
shall not, save in the manner and to the extent provided in this Act, deal with
such matter in the suit.
24.
Reference to arbitration by some of the parties. Where some only
of the parties to a suit apply to have the matters in difference between them
referred to arbitration in accordance with, and in the manner provided by
Section 21 the Court may, if it thinks fit so, refer such matters to
arbitration (provided that the same can be separated from the rest of the subject‑matter
of the suit) in the manner provided in that section, but the suits shall
continue so far as it relates to the parties who have not joined in the said
application and to matters not contained in the said reference as if no such
application had been made, and an award made in pursuance of such a reference
shall be binding only on the parties who have joined in the application.
25. Provisions applicable to arbitrations under this
Chapter. The provisions of the other
Chapters shall, so far as they can be made applicable, apply to arbitrations
under this Chapter.
Provided that the Court may, in any of the circumstances
mentioned in Section 8, 10, 11 and 12, instead of filing up the vacancies or
making the appointment, make an order superseding the arbitration and proceed
with the suit, and where the Court makes an order superseding the arbitration
under Section 19, it shall proceed with the suit.
CHAPTER
V
GENERAL
26. Application of Chapter. Save as otherwise provided in this Act, the provision of this
Chapter shall apply to all arbitrations.
27. Power of arbitrators to make an interim award. (1) Unless a different intention appears in the arbitration
agreement, the arbitrators or umpire may, if they think fit, make an interim
award.
(2) All references in this Act to an award shall include
references to an interim award made under sub‑section (1).
28. Power to Court only to enlarge time for making award. (1) The Court may, if it thinks fit, whether the 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.
(2) Any provisions in an arbitration agreement whereby the
arbitrators or umpire may, except with the consent of all the parties to the
agreement, enlarge the time for making the award, shall be void and of no
effect.
29.
Interest on awards.
Where and in so far as an award is for the payment of money the Court may in
the decree order interest from the date of the decree at such rate as the Court
deems reasonable, to be paid on the principal sum as adjusted by the award and
confirmed by the decree.
30. Grounds for setting aside award. An award shall not be set aside except on one or more of the
following grounds, namely:‑
(a) that an arbitrator or umpire has misconducted
himself or the proceedings;
(b) that an award has been made after the issue of an order
by the Court superseding the arbitration or after arbitration proceedings have
become invalid under Section 35.
(c) that an award has been
improperly procured or is otherwise invalid.
31. Jurisdiction.
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, an award may be filed in any Court
having jurisdiction in the matter to which the reference relates.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for
the time being in force and save as otherwise provided in this Act, all
questions regarding the validity, effect or existence of an award or an
arbitration agreement between the parties to the agreement or persons claiming
under them shall be decided by the Court in which the award under the agreement
has been, or may be, filed, and by no other Court.
(3) All application regarding the conduct of arbitration
proceedings or otherwise arising out of such proceedings shall be made to the
Court where award has been, or may be, filed, and to no other Court.
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained elsewhere in this Act
or in any other law for the time being in force, where in any reference any
application under this Act has been made in a Court competent to entertain it,
that Court alone shall have jurisdiction over the arbitration proceedings and
all subsequent application arising out of that reference and the arbitration
proceedings shall be made in that Court in no other Court.
32.
Bar to suit contesting arbitration agreement or award. Notwithstanding
any law for the time being in force, no suit shall lie on any ground
whatsoever, for a decision upon the existence, effect or validity of an
arbitration agreement or award, nor shall any arbitration agreement or award be
set aside, amended, modified or in any way affected otherwise than as provided
in this Act.
33. Arbitration agreement or award to be contested by
application. Any party to an arbitration
agreement or any person claiming under him desiring to challenge the existence
or validity of an arbitration agreement or an award or to have the effect of
either determined shall apply to the Court and the Court shall decide the
question on affidavits:
Provided that where the Court deems it just and expedient,
it may set down the application for hearing on other evidence also and it may
pass such orders for the discovery and particulars as it may do in a suit.
34.
Power to stay legal proceedings where there is an arbitration agreement. Where any party
to an arbitration agreement or any person claiming under him commences any
legal proceedings against any other party to the agreement or any person
claiming under him in respect of any matter agreed to be referred, any party to
such legal proceedings may, apply to the judicial authority before which the
proceedings are pending to stay the proceedings, and if satisfied that there in
no sufficient reason why the matter should not be referred in accordance with
the arbitration agreement and that the applicant was, at the time when the proceedings
were commenced, and still remains, ready and willing to do all things
necessary, to the proper conduct of the arbitration such authority may make an
order staying the proceedings.
35. Effect of legal proceedings on arbitration. (1) No reference nor award shall be rendered invalid by
reasons only of the commencement of legal proceedings upon the subject‑matter
of the reference, but when legal proceedings upon the whole of the subject‑matter
of the reference have been commenced between all the parties to the reference
and a notice thereof has been given to the arbitrators or umpire, all further
proceedings in a pending reference shall, unless a stay of proceedings is
granted under Section 34, by invalid.
(2) In this Section the expression "parties to the
reference" includes any person claiming under any of the parties and
litigating under the same title.
36.
Power of Court, where arbitration agreement is ordered not to apply to a
particular difference, to order that a provision making an award a condition
precedent to an action shall not apply to such difference. Where it is
provided (whether in the arbitration agreement or otherwise) that an
arbitration agreement shall be a condition precedent to the bringing of an
action with respect to any matter to which the agreement applies, the Court, if
it orders (whether under this Act or any other law) that the agreement shall
cease to have effect as regards any particular difference may further order
that the said provision shall also cease to have effect as regards that
difference.
37. Limitations.
(1) All the provisions of the Limitation Act, 1908, shall apply to arbitrators
as they apply to proceedings in Court;
(2) Notwithstanding any term in an arbitration agreement to
the effect that no cause of action shall accrue in respect of any matter
required by the agreement to be referred until an award is made under the
agreement, a cause of action shall, for the purpose of limitation, be deemed to
have accrued in respect of any such matter, at the time when it would have
accrued but for that term in the agreement.
(3) For the purposes of this Section and of the Limitation
Act, 1908, an arbitration shall be deemed to be commenced when one party to the
arbitration agreement serves on the other parties thereto a notice requiring
the appointment of an arbitrator, or where the arbitration agreement provides
that the reference shall be to a person named or designated in the agreement,
requiring that the difference be submitted to the person so named or
designated.
(4) When the terms of an agreement to refer future
differences to arbitration provide that any claims to which the agreement
applies shall be barred unless notice to appoint arbitrator is taken within a
trine fixed by the agreement, and a difference arises to which the agreement
applies, the Court, if it is of opinion that in the circumstances of the case
undue hardship would otherwise be caused, and notwithstanding that the time so
fixed has expired, may on such terms, if any, as the justice of the case may require,
extend the time for such period a sit thinks proper.
(5) Where the Court orders than an award be set aside or
orders, after the commencement of an arbitration, that the arbitration
agreement shall cease to have effect with respect to the difference referred,
the period between the commencement of the arbitration and the date of the
order of the Court shall be excluded in computing the time prescribed by the
Limitation Act, 1908, for the commencement of the proceeding (including
arbitration) with respect to the difference referred.
38. Disputes as to arbitrator's remuneration or costs. If in any case an arbitrator or umpire refuses to deliver
his award except on payment of the fees demanded by him, the Court may, on an
application in this behalf, order that the arbitrator or umpire shall deliver
the award to the applicant on payment into Court by the applicant of the fees
demanded, and shall, after such inquiry, if any, as it thinks fit, further
order that out of the money so paid into Court there shall be paid to the
arbitrator or umpire by way of fees sum as the Court may consider reasonable
and that the balance of the money, if any, shall be refunded to the applicant.
(2) An application under sub‑section (1) may be made by any
party to the reference unless the fees demanded have been fixed by written
agreement between him and the arbitrator or umpire and the arbitrator or umpire
shall be entitled to appear and be heard on any such application.
CHAPTER VI
APPEALS
39. Appeasable orders. (1)
An appeal shall lie from the following orders passed under this Act (and from
no others) to the Court authorized by law to hear appeals from original decrees
of the Court passing the order;
(i) superseding an arbitration;
(ii) on an award stated in the form
of a special cases; (iii) modifying or correcting award;
(iv) filing or refusing to file an
arbitration agreement;
(v) staying or refusing to stay legal proceedings
where there is an arbitration agreement;
(vi) setting aside or refusing to
set aside an award:
Provided that the provisions of this Section shall not apply
to any order passed by a Small Cause Court.
(2) No second appeal shall lie from an order passed in
appeal under this Section, but nothing in this Section shall affect or take
away any right to appeal to the Supreme Court.
40. Small Cause
Court not to have jurisdiction over arbitration save arbitration in suits
before it. A
Small Cause Court shall have no jurisdiction over any arbitration proceedings
or over any application arising there out save on application made under
Section 21.
CHAPTER VII
MISCELLANEOUS
41. Procedure and powers of Court. Subject to the provisions of this Act and of rules made
thereunder‑‑
(a) the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908, shall apply to all proceedings, before the Court, to all appeals, under
this Act, and
(b) the Court shall have, fox the purpose of, and in
relation, 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:
Provided that nothing in clause (b) shall be taken to
prejudice any power which may be vested in an arbitrator or umpire for making
orders with respect to any of such matters.
42. Service of notice by party or arbitrator. Any notice required by this Act to be served otherwise than
through the Court by a party to an arbitration agreement or by an arbitrator or
umpire shall be served in the manner provided in the arbitration agreement, or
if there is no such provision, either‑‑
(a) by delivering it to the
person on whom it is to be served, or
(b) by sending it by the post in a letter addressed to that
person at his usual or last known place of abode or business in Pakistan and
registered under Chapter VI of the Post Officer Act, 1898,
43. Power of Courts issue processes for appearance before
arbitrator. (1) The Court shall issue the same
processes to the parties and witnesses whom the arbitrator or umpire desires to
examine as the Court may issue in suits tried before it.
(2) Persons failing to attend, in accordance with such
process, or making any other default, or refusing to give their evidence, of
guilty or any contempt to the arbitration or umpire during the investigation of
the reference, shall be subject to the like disadvantages, penalties and
punishments by order of the court on the representation of the arbitrator or
umpire as they would incur for the like offices in suits tried before the
Court.
(3) In this Section the expression "process" includes summonses and
commissions for the examination of witnesses and summonses to produce
documents.
44. Power of High Court to make rules. The High Court may make rules consistent with this Act as
to‑‑
(a) the filing of awards and all proceedings,
consequent thereon or incidental thereto;
(b) the filing and hearing of special cases and all
proceedings consequent thereon or incidental thereto;
(c) the staying of any suit or proceeding in
contravention of an arbitration agreement;
(d) the forms to be used for
the purposes of this Act; and
(e) generally, all
proceedings in Court under this Act.
45.
Government to be bound. The provisions of this Act shall be binding on the
Government.
46.
Application of Act to statutory arbitrations. The provisions
of this Act, except sub‑section (1) of Section 6 and Section 7, 12, 36 and 37,
shall apply to every arbitration under any other enactment for the time being
in force, as if the arbitration were pursuant to an arbitration agreement and
as if that other enactment were an arbitration agreement and except in so far
as this Act is inconsistent with that other enactment o: with any rules made
thereunder.
47. Act to apply to all arbitrations. Subject to the provisions of Section 46, and save insofar
as is otherwise provided by any law for the time being in force, the provision
s of this Act shall apply to all arbitrations and to all proceedings
thereunder:
Provided that an arbitration award otherwise obtained may
with the consent of all the parties interested be taken into consideration as a
compromise or adjustment of a suit by any Court before which the suit is
pending.
Execution application. The principles applicable to suits
would be applicable to execution proceedings also. Hence, a valid reference to
arbitration in execution proceedings whether with or without the intervention
of the Court followed by an award must be treated as an adjustment of the
award. For the other cases under Section 47, proviso see case‑law under Order
XXIII, Rule 3, C.P.C.
48.
Saving for pending references. The provisions of this Act shall not
apply to any reference pending at the commencement of this "Act, to which
the law in force immediately before the commencement of this Act shall,
notwithstanding any repeal affected by this Act, continue to apply.
49- [Repeals and amendments] Rep. By the Repealing and Amending
Act, 1945 (VI of 1945), S. 2 and First Schedule.
26‑A. Award to set out reasons. (1) The arbitrator or umpire shall state in the award the
reasons for the award in sufficient detail to enable the Court to consider any
question of law arising out of the award.
(2) Where the award does not state the reasons in sufficient
detail, the Court shall remit the award to the arbitrators or umpire and fix
the time within which the arbitrator or umpire shall submit the award together
with the reasons in sufficient detail:
Provided that any time so fixed may be extended by
subsequent order of the Court.
(3) An award remitted under sub‑section (2) shall become
void on the failure of the arbitrator or umpire to submit it in accordance with
the direction of the Court.
THE
FIRST SCHEDULE
(See Section 3)
IMPLIED CONDITIONS OF ARBITRATION
AGREEMENT
1. Unless
otherwise expressly provided, the reference shall be to a sole arbitrator.
2.
If the reference is to an even number of arbitrators, the arbitrators shall
appoint an umpire not later than one month from the latest date of their
respective appointments.
3. 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 times as the Court may allow.
4. If the
arbitrators have allowed their time to expire without making an award or have
delivered to any party to the arbitration agreement or to the umpire a notice
in writing stating that they cannot agree, the umpire shall forthwith enter on
the reference in lieu of the arbitrators.
5. The umpire
shall make his award within two months of entering on the reference or within
such extended time as the Court may allow.
6. The parties to
the reference and all persons claiming under them shall subject to the
provisions of any law for the time being in force;"%.5f6mit to be examined
by the arbitration or umpire on oath or affirmation in relation to the matters
in difference and shall, subject as aforesaid, produce before the arbitrators
or umpire all books, deeds, papers, accounts writings and documents within
their possession or power respectively, which may be required or called for,
and do all other things which, during the proceedings on the reference, the
arbitrators, or umpire may require.
7. The award shall
be final and binding on the parties and persons claiming under them
respectively.
8. The cost of the
reference and award shall be in the discretion of the arbitrators or umpire who
may direct to and by whom, and in what manner, such costs or any part thereof,
shall be paid, and may tax or settle the amount of costs to be so paid or any
part thereof and may award costs to be paid as between legal practitioner and
client.
THE SECOND SCHEDULE
(See
Section 41)
POWER
OF COURT
1. The preservation, interim custody or sale of any goods
which are subject‑matter of the reference.
2. Securing the amount in difference in the reference.
3.
The detention, preservation or
inspection of any property or thing which is the subject of the reference or as
to which any question may arise therein and authorizing for any of the
aforesaid purposes any person to enter upon or into any land or building in the
possession or any party to the reference, or authorizing any samples to be
taken or any observation to be made, or experiment to be tried, which may be
necessary or expedient for the purpose of obtaining full information or
evidence.
4. Interim in junction or the appointment of a receiver.
5. The appointment of a guardian for a minor or person of
unsound mind for the purposes of arbitration proceedings.
THE THIRD SCHEDULE
[ENACTMENTS
REPEALED. ENACTMENTS AMENDED.]
[Rep. by the Repealing and Amending
Act, 1945 (VI of 1945), Section 2 and First Schedule.]
THE FOURTH SCHEDULE
[ENACTMENTS
REPEALED. ENACTMENTS AMENDED.]
[Rep. by the Repealing and Amending
Act, 1945 (VI of 1945), Section 2 and First Schedule.]
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