S. Manuel Raj & Company
v.
J. Manilal & Company
(High Court Of Gujarat At Ahmedabad)
Civil Revision No. 1056 of 1960 | 29-08-1962
(1) This revision application is filed by the original defendants. the plaintiffs placed an order on a printed form of the defendants on which it was printed in bold types Subject to Madras Jurisdiction. An order form was signed by the plaintiffs and sent to the defendants. The learned Judge of Court of Small Causes Ahmedabad rejected the contention of the defendants that only the Madras Court had jurisdiction and decreed the suit. Therefore the original defendants have now come to this Court in revision. The main contention urged by them is that only the Madras Court has jurisdiction in view of the fact that the order form signed by the plaintiffs contains in bold types Subject to Madras jurisdiction and it is also underlined in print. This contention must be accepted because when the order form signed by the plaintiffs contains in bold types the words Subject to Madras Jurisdiction it must be taken that the plaintiffs agreed to the term that only the Madras Court must have jurisdiction.
(2) The learned counsel for the opponents contends that the words Subject to Madras Jurisdiction do not mean that the Madras Court alone has jurisdiction. He also contends that the finding that the Ahmedabad Court has jurisdiction is a finding of fact and cannot be interfered in revision. He relies on Amritsar Transport Co. Ltd. v. S. Sohanlal A.I.R. 1957 Jammu and Kashmir 7 M/s. Patel Bros. v. M/s. Vadilal A.I.R. 1959 Madras 227 and on sec. 3 of the Indian Contract Act. In A. I. R. 1957 Jammu and Kashmir 7 there was a receipt which was signed by one of the parties and the party who signed the receipt relied on the receipt to show that only the Courts of a particular place had jurisdiction But the receipt which was relied on by him was not signed by the opposite party but had been merely given to the opposite party. Therefore that case does not apply to the facts of the present case. In the Madras case which is strongly relied on by the learned counsel for the opponents it was held that the words Subject to Bombay jurisdiction printed on a document which evidenced the contract did not exclude the jurisdiction of any other Court and that ouster of jurisdiction of a Court to which a person is entitled to resort to under the C. P. Code or any other statute cannot be a matter of assumption or presumption but one to be proved by express words contained in the contract or atleast by necessary or inevitable implication The learned Judge there held that mere printing of the words Subject to Bombay jurisdiction on the document which evidenced the contract cannot amount to a contract that both the parties agreed to have Bombay as the venue for the settlement of disputes. The question whether parties to contract can select one of the two Courts having jurisdiction has not been argued.
(3) When one of the parties to a contract signs a printed form printed by the other party containing the words subject to the jurisdiction of a place Q and sends the order form to the other party it must be assumed that that party agreed that Q is the place for the settlement of disputes. It is not open to a person who signs an order form of the opposite party containing the printed words to say that the printed words are not part of the contract. To take the view taken by the learned Judge of the Madras High Court would be to upset the commercial practice of India and unless such a position is necessary in view of the wording of any particular section I am not prepared to take that view. I am not prepared to upset the commercial practice of India unless the last required me to do so. There is nothing in the law to hold that the expression Subject to jurisdiction of Q printed at the top of a form may not bind M who signed the order form.
(4) The learned counsel for the opponent has relied on sec. 3 of the Indian Contract Act which reads as follows :
The communication of proposals the acceptance of proposals and the revocation of proposals and acceptances respectively are deemed to be made by any act or omission of the party proposing accepting or revoking by which he intends to communicate such proposal acceptance or revocation or which has the effect of communicating it.
(5) This section of the Contract Act must be given full effect. On this point Mulla has observed as follows :
English authorities have established that the first point to be considered is whether the nature of the transaction is such that the person accepting the document may suppose not unreasonably that the document contains no terms at all but is a mere acknowledgment of an agreement not intended to be varied by special terms [per Stephen J in Watkins v. Rymill 10 Q.B.D. 178 189 (1883) ]. In short is the ticket a contract or a mere receipt
(6) In Chapelton v. Barry U. D. C. (1940) 1 K. B. 532 P took a deck-chair from a pile near a notice reading Hire of Chairs 2 d. per session of 3 hours The notice asked hirers to obtain a ticket from Ds attendant and retain it for inspection. P obtained a ticket pocketed it unread sat on the chair and was injured when it collapsed. D relied on a provision on the ticket excluding liability but the Court of Appeal held for P on the ground that the ticket was not a contractual document.
(7) If the defendant has established that the document was contractual he must further prove that he did what was reasonably sufficient to give the plaintiff notice of the conditions. This is a question of fact (In Henderson v. Stevenson (1875) L.R. 2 [LQ/PC/1875/17] Sc. and D. 470) where an endorsement on a Steamboat ticket was not referred to on its face and Richardson v. Rowntree (1894) A.C. 217 where the ticket was folded up so that no writing was visible without opening it a finding of fact that the passenger knew nothing of any conditions was supported. The correct form of putting the question of fact was laid down by the C. A. in Parker v. S. E. R. Co. (1877) 2 C.P.D. 416. See Madras Railway Co. v. Govinda Rao (1898) 21 Mad 172 174 and for a general summary of the law Hood v. Anchor Line (1918) A.C. 837 where both the contract and a notice on the envelope enclosing it pointedly called attention to the conditions. Failure to read is no excuse; Sheik Dawood v S. I. Ry. Co. Ltd. (1945) Mad. 174 [LQ/MadHC/1944/263] . In an English case inability to read has been held to be no excuse; Thompson v. L.M.S. (infra). It has been held that there is sufficient notice if the face of a railway ticket refers to conditions on the back which are not expressly reproduced but incorporated by a reference to the time-tables of the railway Company: Thompson v. L.M.S. (1930) 1 K.B. 41 C.A.. But the passenger is not bound by a purported exemption from liability if the ticket is printed in such a way or delivered to him in such a state as not to give reasonable notice on the face of it that it does embody some special conditions: Sugar v. L.M.S. [ (1941) 1 All. E. R. 172. Here the words for conditions see back were obliterated by the date stamp on the ticket ]
(8) In determining these questions the class of persons to whom the special conditions are offered and the degree of intelligence to be expected of them may properly be taken into account. (See Lord Ashbournes remarks in Richardson v. Rowntree supra).
(9) It is the contention of the learned counsel for the opponents that only the part at the bottom of the order form contains the conditions of the contract and not the words printed at the top. This contention is that the words Subject to Madras jurisdiction are not a part of the contract but the rest of the docuMent contains the terms of the contract. It is not their case that the printed form does not evidence the contract. It is conceded that the contract is contained in the document namely the order form. Prom the English cases cited by Mulla above it would be clear that the words printed at the top would be a part of the contract and would be binding on the plaintiffs who have signed the order form. This is not a case of a ticket or a receipt taken by the plaintiffs but this is a case of an order placed by the plaintiffs themselves on a form signed by them and whatever is contained in the form would be binding on them in view of the signature on the form. It was easy for the plaintiffs to strike out the words Subject to Madras jurisdiction before signing it. As they did not do so these words are binding on the plaintiffs.
(10) It is next contended that the words do not mean that the jurisdiction of other Courts is excluded. Under the law of contract certain Courts have jurisdiction and it is with a view to exclude other Courts that the words like Subject to Bombay jurisdiction Subject to Madras jurisdiction and so on are written in the terms of a contract. The object of printing such words in printed forms exclude the jurisdiction of other Courts and to give sole jurisdiction at one Court. With respect I find it difficult to agree with the view taken by the learned Judge of the Madras High Court. I am not prepared to upset the commercial practice of India.
(11) The next contention is that this is a finding of fact which cannot be interfered with in revision. the order form is an admitted document and it is admitted that it is signed by the plaintiffs. On these admissions the only inference that can be drawn is that the words Subject to Madras jurisdiction are a part of the contract. To take any other view of admitted facts is erroneous and on the face of admitted facts such a finding can always be interfered with in revision.
(12) I therefore allow this revision application set aside the decree of the lower Court and the lower Court is directed to return the plaint for presentation to the proper Court. The revision application is allowed with costs. Application allowed.
Advocates List
For the Appearing Parties S.K. Zaveri, S.M. Shah, Advocates.
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE V.B. RAJU
Eq Citation
AIR 1963 GUJ 148
(1963) GLR 540
LQ/GujHC/1962/95
HeadNote
— Jurisdiction — Contract — Contractual exclusion of jurisdiction of Courts — Words Subject to Madras jurisdiction printed in bold types on printed form of defendants — Words binding on plaintiffs who signed the form — Held, when order form signed by plaintiffs contains in bold types the words Subject to Madras Jurisdiction it must be taken that plaintiffs agreed to the term that only Madras Court must have jurisdiction — Words Subject to Madras Jurisdiction do not mean that Madras Court alone has jurisdiction — When one of the parties to a contract signs a printed form printed by the other party containing the words subject to the jurisdiction of a place Q and sends the order form to the other party, it must be assumed that that party agreed that Q is the place for the settlement of disputes — It is not open to a person who signs an order form of the opposite party containing the printed words to say that the printed words are not part of the contract — Contract Act, 1872, S. 3