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DELAYS
    Karthik Madhavan
      SCMHRD, Pune.
CAUSES FOR DELAY
• Defects in
  documents/design/decision.
• Incompetence of parties to cope
  up with changes.
• Differing site conditions.
• Attitude of any one or both the
  parties.
EXCUSABLE DELAYS
• The consideration to excuse would be:
   – Non-foreseeable situation.
     Non-critical in impact.
     Concurrent with party's delay.
• Labour disputes.
• Fire.
• Unusual delay in deliveries.
• Unavoidable delays.
NON-EXCUSABLE DELAYS
• Ordinary and foreseeable weather
  conditions.
• A subcontractor's delays.
• The contractor's failure to adequately
  manage and coordinate the project site.
• The contractor's financing problems.
• The contractor's failure to mobilize quickly
  enough.
• Delay by the contractor in obtaining
COMPENSABLE DELAYS
• Unforeseen delays in transportation.
• Other causes beyond „the contractor's control‟.

CRITICAL AND NON-
CRITICAL DELAYS
• Time is of the essence.

CONCURRENT DELAYS
• While one party undergoes a phase of delay of its own
  making, the other party too is delayed due to its own
  deficiencies.

Thus a non-critical, concurrent delay is Excusable and
therefore what gives rise to claim for damages is Critical,
GAIL INDIA LTD.
      V/S
  HINDUSTAN
CONSTRUCTION
   COMPANY
FACTS
• Contract Awarded On 6th July 1994
• For upgradation of the Auraiya Gas Compressor
  Station for HBJ Pipeline.
• To be completed by 27th February 1995.
• Actually completed on 31st October 1996
• Delay of about 20 months.
• GAIL claims that HCC was not serious about the
  execution of the job awarded to it
• Various notices/letters were issued to HCC by
  GAIL, and also by Engineers India Ltd. (`EIL')
  who were the Engineer-in-charge of the project.
ISSUES
• HCC had already submitted its NCC while
  requesting EoT by a letter dated 7th
  March 1997.
• GAIL by its letter dated 14th January 1998
  requested HCC to submit a fresh NCC.
  This was done by the HCC on 16th
  January 1998.
• HCC also issued another letter dated 16th
  April 1999, that no further amount is due
  to it under the contract in question.
ISSUES
• 6th October 1999: HCC filed it claims to arbitrator
• GAIL's objection as to maintainability of HCC's claim was
  rejected by the learned Arbitrator in the impugned
  Award dated 11th August 2003.
• HCC had imposed a condition for issuance of such NCC.
   – “We shall have no claim whatsoever of any kind
      towards the Contract and the works executed at GAIL
      Dibiyapur subject to sanction of final extension of
      time without levy of Liquidated Damages and
      payment of our final bill”
• GAIL‟s reply:
   – “You had submitted conditional No Claim Certificate
      subject to extension of contractual completion period
JUDGEMENT

• HCC insisted on GAIL extending the period of
  completion of the contract without imposition of
  LD as a pre-condition to issuing the NCC.
• GAIL acceded to the said condition and
  thereafter HCC issued the NCC.
• The two parties were in negotiation as regards
  the settlement of the final bill and there was no
  compulsion on HCC, much less any coercion, to
  issue an NCC.
• For the aforementioned reasons, the Court sets
  aside the impugned Award dated 11th August
SUDHIR GENSETS LTD
          v/s
INDIAN OIL CORPORATION
          LTD
FACTS
• Delayed the supply and installation of the
  Gen-sets beyond the time limit.
• Work was not completed on time.
• EoT is not to be granted according to the
  contract.
• Section 73 and 74 was violated to which
  Indian Oil claimed LD.
• Time was extended by letter dated 4-12-
  1996 with a specific demand that the
  clause for liquidated damages would be
FACTS
• Sudhir Gen-sets had supplied the goods
• Indicates that they were agreeable to pay
  liquidated damages.
• Sudhir gen-sets raised issue with arbitrator
  claiming there was no loss to IOC.
• Arbitrator dismissed the claims.
• No justifiable reason for the Arbitral Tribunal to
  arrive at a conclusion that still the purchaser
  should prove loss suffered by it because of delay
  in supply of goods.
• It was LD and not Penalty.
ISSUES
• There is specific stipulation in the agreement
  that the time and date of delivery of the goods
  was of the essence of the contract;
• In case of failure to deliver the goods within the
  period fixed for such delivery in the schedule,
  ONGC was entitled to recover from the
  contractor liquidated damages as agreed;
• It was also explicitly understood that the agreed
  liquidated damages were genuine pre-estimate
  of damages;
• On the request of the respondent to extend the
ISSUES
• Specifically that time was extended but
  stipulated liquidated damages as agreed would
  be recovered;
• Liquidated damages for delay in supply of goods
  were to be recovered by paying authorities from
  the bills for payment of cost of material supplied
  by the contractor;
• There is nothing on record to suggest that
  stipulation for recovering liquidated damages
  was by way of penalty or that the said sum was
  in any way unreasonable.
JUDGEMENT
• Damages were pre-fixed by the
  parties with regard to loss suffered by
  IOC on account of delay in supplying
  the equipment.
• It is not necessary for the respondent
  to prove actual damages.
• Thus, the arbitrator was justified in
  dismissing the claim of Sudhir Gen-
  sets by virtue of Clause 13 of the
MAYURDWAJ COOPERATIVE GROUP
              V/S
 DELHI DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
•DELHI DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY –
Defendants and Housing Society Ltd –
Plaintiff
                 FACTS
•Suit for recovery of Rs 61,42,790/-
•Plaintiff allotted 5 acres of land by
defendant in 1982
•As per plaintiff, land was sufficient for
construction of only 300 flats, whereas
the membership of the plaintiff-society,
• Defendant later offered additional
  land to the plaintiff for the remaining
  160 members and asked it to deposit
  Rs 11,87,119.80/- towards cost of the
  additional land.
• The plaintiff made payment of Rs
  6,82,689.65/- and asked the
  defendant to allot the additional land
  to it.
• The defendant did not allot additional
  land for the remaining 160 members
•The defendant directed the plaintiff
to deposit Rs 39,88,824.38/- for
granting extension of time for
construction of flats.
• The aforesaid amount was
deposited by the plaintiff under
protest
•Despite legal notices for possession
of additional land and refund of Rs
26 39,88,824.38/-, the defendant
• The plaintiff thus claimed the
  aforesaid amount of Rs
  39,88,824.38/- along with interest
  @18% p.a. amounting to Rs
  21,53,964.62/-, thus making a total
  claim of Rs 61,42,790/-
• Defendant objected that the suit is
  not maintainable for want of notice
  under Section 53-B Delhi
  Development Act.
•Due to the arbitration clause contained in Perpetual Lease
Deed, the suit is not maintainable and the matter is
required to be referred for arbitration.
•The plaintiff-society represented that it had 460 members
and requested for allotment of land measuring 7.666 acres
and also deposited Rs 8,53,800/- on 03rd March, 1982 but
only 5 acres of land was available in Patparganj.
•It was decided to allot land measuring 7.666 acres,
subject to payment of Rs 11,87,119.80/- towards cost of
additional land, but, the society failed to deposit the cost
of additional land.
• Since the society had paid Rs 25,28,300/- towards
premium 5 acres was allotted to it.
•The plaintiff paid Rs 3,00,000/- on 11th March, 1983, Rs
3,68,250/- on 30th April, 1983 and Rs 11,87,119/- on 21st
June, 1983 and interest, amounting to Rs 6,82,689.68 on
ISSUES
•Whether present suit is barred for want of
proper legal notice under Section 53-B of the
Delhi Development Act?
•Whether notice under Section 53-B of the
Delhi Development Act had been served on
the defendant?
•Whether the present suit is barred by time?
•Whether there is an arbitration agreement
between the parties, if so what would be its
effect?
•Whether plaintiff is entitled to claim the
JUDGEMENT
•It would make no difference to the merits of the
case as that there was no linkage between
construction on the land measuring 5 acres allotted
to the plaintiff-society at Patparganj and allotment of
additional land to it.
•This is not a suit for damages on account of delay
in allotment of additional land to the plaintiff-society
nor is this a suit for payment of interest on the
amount paid as premium for additional rent on the
ground that there was no delay on the part of the
DDA in allotting additional land to the plaintiff-
society, despite receipt of entire land premium from
it alongwith requisite interest.
• Since construction was not dependent
  on allotment of additional land and
  there was no hindrance such as
  encroachment on the land at
  Patparganj, non-completion of
  construction within the time
  stipulated was not justified.
• The lessor, therefore, was very much
  entitled to recover composition fee
  while acceding to the request of the
RAUNAQ INTERNATIONAL LIMITED
              V/S
   I.V.R. CONSTRUCTION LTD.
FACTS
•The Maharashtra State Electricity Board floated a tender
for design, engineering, manufacture, supply, erection
and commissioning of large diameter pipes and steel
tanks with all accessories and auxiliaries of Khaperkheda
Thermal Power Station, Maharashtra, each unit being of
210 MW.
•The qualifying requirements was that the bidder should
have designed
fabricated/manufactured, supplied, erected and
successfully commissioned large diameter piping system
comprising the supply of M.S. pipes not less than 2000
mm diameter and laid/buried for a minimum total length
of 3 kms. in a thermal power station.
• 4 tenderers qualified as per the qualifying
  criteria. M/s. IVR Construction was one of
  them.
• Raunaq International Ltd. had done work
  for less than 3 kms but had done CW
  piping for 210 MW units.
• M/s. IVR Construction Ltd. fell short of the
  requisite experience by one year.
• Raunaq International Ltd.‟s offer was the
  most competitive and hence tender
  awarded to it.
• IVR Const. challenged this decision in High
  Court.
JUDGEMENT OF SUPREME
•
                  COURT under the
    Relaxation was permissible
  terms of the tender. The relaxation
  granted to M/s. Raunaq International Ltd.
  is on valid principles looking to the
  expertise of the tenderer and his past
  experience although it does not exactly
  tally with the prescribed criteria.
• IVR Construction Ltd. themselves do not
  fulfil the requisite criteria. Thus, any
  judicial is not valid in this case.
• Even if criteria can be relaxed both, offer
• Also stopping the performance of the
  contract so awarded, there is a major
  detriment to the public because the
  construction of two thermal power
  units is held up.
• There is no allegation of collateral
  reasons for granting the contract to
  Raunaq International Ltd.
• High Court has erred in granting the
  interim order. M/s. IVR Construction
THANK YOU!

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Cases in Delays - Indian Contract Act, 1872

  • 1. DELAYS Karthik Madhavan SCMHRD, Pune.
  • 2. CAUSES FOR DELAY • Defects in documents/design/decision. • Incompetence of parties to cope up with changes. • Differing site conditions. • Attitude of any one or both the parties.
  • 3. EXCUSABLE DELAYS • The consideration to excuse would be: – Non-foreseeable situation. Non-critical in impact. Concurrent with party's delay. • Labour disputes. • Fire. • Unusual delay in deliveries. • Unavoidable delays.
  • 4. NON-EXCUSABLE DELAYS • Ordinary and foreseeable weather conditions. • A subcontractor's delays. • The contractor's failure to adequately manage and coordinate the project site. • The contractor's financing problems. • The contractor's failure to mobilize quickly enough. • Delay by the contractor in obtaining
  • 5. COMPENSABLE DELAYS • Unforeseen delays in transportation. • Other causes beyond „the contractor's control‟. CRITICAL AND NON- CRITICAL DELAYS • Time is of the essence. CONCURRENT DELAYS • While one party undergoes a phase of delay of its own making, the other party too is delayed due to its own deficiencies. Thus a non-critical, concurrent delay is Excusable and therefore what gives rise to claim for damages is Critical,
  • 6. GAIL INDIA LTD. V/S HINDUSTAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
  • 7. FACTS • Contract Awarded On 6th July 1994 • For upgradation of the Auraiya Gas Compressor Station for HBJ Pipeline. • To be completed by 27th February 1995. • Actually completed on 31st October 1996 • Delay of about 20 months. • GAIL claims that HCC was not serious about the execution of the job awarded to it • Various notices/letters were issued to HCC by GAIL, and also by Engineers India Ltd. (`EIL') who were the Engineer-in-charge of the project.
  • 8. ISSUES • HCC had already submitted its NCC while requesting EoT by a letter dated 7th March 1997. • GAIL by its letter dated 14th January 1998 requested HCC to submit a fresh NCC. This was done by the HCC on 16th January 1998. • HCC also issued another letter dated 16th April 1999, that no further amount is due to it under the contract in question.
  • 9. ISSUES • 6th October 1999: HCC filed it claims to arbitrator • GAIL's objection as to maintainability of HCC's claim was rejected by the learned Arbitrator in the impugned Award dated 11th August 2003. • HCC had imposed a condition for issuance of such NCC. – “We shall have no claim whatsoever of any kind towards the Contract and the works executed at GAIL Dibiyapur subject to sanction of final extension of time without levy of Liquidated Damages and payment of our final bill” • GAIL‟s reply: – “You had submitted conditional No Claim Certificate subject to extension of contractual completion period
  • 10. JUDGEMENT • HCC insisted on GAIL extending the period of completion of the contract without imposition of LD as a pre-condition to issuing the NCC. • GAIL acceded to the said condition and thereafter HCC issued the NCC. • The two parties were in negotiation as regards the settlement of the final bill and there was no compulsion on HCC, much less any coercion, to issue an NCC. • For the aforementioned reasons, the Court sets aside the impugned Award dated 11th August
  • 11. SUDHIR GENSETS LTD v/s INDIAN OIL CORPORATION LTD
  • 12. FACTS • Delayed the supply and installation of the Gen-sets beyond the time limit. • Work was not completed on time. • EoT is not to be granted according to the contract. • Section 73 and 74 was violated to which Indian Oil claimed LD. • Time was extended by letter dated 4-12- 1996 with a specific demand that the clause for liquidated damages would be
  • 13. FACTS • Sudhir Gen-sets had supplied the goods • Indicates that they were agreeable to pay liquidated damages. • Sudhir gen-sets raised issue with arbitrator claiming there was no loss to IOC. • Arbitrator dismissed the claims. • No justifiable reason for the Arbitral Tribunal to arrive at a conclusion that still the purchaser should prove loss suffered by it because of delay in supply of goods. • It was LD and not Penalty.
  • 14. ISSUES • There is specific stipulation in the agreement that the time and date of delivery of the goods was of the essence of the contract; • In case of failure to deliver the goods within the period fixed for such delivery in the schedule, ONGC was entitled to recover from the contractor liquidated damages as agreed; • It was also explicitly understood that the agreed liquidated damages were genuine pre-estimate of damages; • On the request of the respondent to extend the
  • 15. ISSUES • Specifically that time was extended but stipulated liquidated damages as agreed would be recovered; • Liquidated damages for delay in supply of goods were to be recovered by paying authorities from the bills for payment of cost of material supplied by the contractor; • There is nothing on record to suggest that stipulation for recovering liquidated damages was by way of penalty or that the said sum was in any way unreasonable.
  • 16. JUDGEMENT • Damages were pre-fixed by the parties with regard to loss suffered by IOC on account of delay in supplying the equipment. • It is not necessary for the respondent to prove actual damages. • Thus, the arbitrator was justified in dismissing the claim of Sudhir Gen- sets by virtue of Clause 13 of the
  • 17. MAYURDWAJ COOPERATIVE GROUP V/S DELHI DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
  • 18. •DELHI DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY – Defendants and Housing Society Ltd – Plaintiff FACTS •Suit for recovery of Rs 61,42,790/- •Plaintiff allotted 5 acres of land by defendant in 1982 •As per plaintiff, land was sufficient for construction of only 300 flats, whereas the membership of the plaintiff-society,
  • 19. • Defendant later offered additional land to the plaintiff for the remaining 160 members and asked it to deposit Rs 11,87,119.80/- towards cost of the additional land. • The plaintiff made payment of Rs 6,82,689.65/- and asked the defendant to allot the additional land to it. • The defendant did not allot additional land for the remaining 160 members
  • 20. •The defendant directed the plaintiff to deposit Rs 39,88,824.38/- for granting extension of time for construction of flats. • The aforesaid amount was deposited by the plaintiff under protest •Despite legal notices for possession of additional land and refund of Rs 26 39,88,824.38/-, the defendant
  • 21. • The plaintiff thus claimed the aforesaid amount of Rs 39,88,824.38/- along with interest @18% p.a. amounting to Rs 21,53,964.62/-, thus making a total claim of Rs 61,42,790/- • Defendant objected that the suit is not maintainable for want of notice under Section 53-B Delhi Development Act.
  • 22. •Due to the arbitration clause contained in Perpetual Lease Deed, the suit is not maintainable and the matter is required to be referred for arbitration. •The plaintiff-society represented that it had 460 members and requested for allotment of land measuring 7.666 acres and also deposited Rs 8,53,800/- on 03rd March, 1982 but only 5 acres of land was available in Patparganj. •It was decided to allot land measuring 7.666 acres, subject to payment of Rs 11,87,119.80/- towards cost of additional land, but, the society failed to deposit the cost of additional land. • Since the society had paid Rs 25,28,300/- towards premium 5 acres was allotted to it. •The plaintiff paid Rs 3,00,000/- on 11th March, 1983, Rs 3,68,250/- on 30th April, 1983 and Rs 11,87,119/- on 21st June, 1983 and interest, amounting to Rs 6,82,689.68 on
  • 23. ISSUES •Whether present suit is barred for want of proper legal notice under Section 53-B of the Delhi Development Act? •Whether notice under Section 53-B of the Delhi Development Act had been served on the defendant? •Whether the present suit is barred by time? •Whether there is an arbitration agreement between the parties, if so what would be its effect? •Whether plaintiff is entitled to claim the
  • 24. JUDGEMENT •It would make no difference to the merits of the case as that there was no linkage between construction on the land measuring 5 acres allotted to the plaintiff-society at Patparganj and allotment of additional land to it. •This is not a suit for damages on account of delay in allotment of additional land to the plaintiff-society nor is this a suit for payment of interest on the amount paid as premium for additional rent on the ground that there was no delay on the part of the DDA in allotting additional land to the plaintiff- society, despite receipt of entire land premium from it alongwith requisite interest.
  • 25. • Since construction was not dependent on allotment of additional land and there was no hindrance such as encroachment on the land at Patparganj, non-completion of construction within the time stipulated was not justified. • The lessor, therefore, was very much entitled to recover composition fee while acceding to the request of the
  • 26. RAUNAQ INTERNATIONAL LIMITED V/S I.V.R. CONSTRUCTION LTD.
  • 27. FACTS •The Maharashtra State Electricity Board floated a tender for design, engineering, manufacture, supply, erection and commissioning of large diameter pipes and steel tanks with all accessories and auxiliaries of Khaperkheda Thermal Power Station, Maharashtra, each unit being of 210 MW. •The qualifying requirements was that the bidder should have designed fabricated/manufactured, supplied, erected and successfully commissioned large diameter piping system comprising the supply of M.S. pipes not less than 2000 mm diameter and laid/buried for a minimum total length of 3 kms. in a thermal power station.
  • 28. • 4 tenderers qualified as per the qualifying criteria. M/s. IVR Construction was one of them. • Raunaq International Ltd. had done work for less than 3 kms but had done CW piping for 210 MW units. • M/s. IVR Construction Ltd. fell short of the requisite experience by one year. • Raunaq International Ltd.‟s offer was the most competitive and hence tender awarded to it. • IVR Const. challenged this decision in High Court.
  • 29. JUDGEMENT OF SUPREME • COURT under the Relaxation was permissible terms of the tender. The relaxation granted to M/s. Raunaq International Ltd. is on valid principles looking to the expertise of the tenderer and his past experience although it does not exactly tally with the prescribed criteria. • IVR Construction Ltd. themselves do not fulfil the requisite criteria. Thus, any judicial is not valid in this case. • Even if criteria can be relaxed both, offer
  • 30. • Also stopping the performance of the contract so awarded, there is a major detriment to the public because the construction of two thermal power units is held up. • There is no allegation of collateral reasons for granting the contract to Raunaq International Ltd. • High Court has erred in granting the interim order. M/s. IVR Construction