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ASK Law Xperts  •  Adv. Sanjay Kumar  •  D/4029/2014, Bar Council of Delhi
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Commercial Disputes — Arbitration & ADR Practice

Arbitration & ADR

Informational guide to Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution in India — the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (as amended in 2015, 2019, and 2021), domestic and international arbitration, institutional vs ad hoc arbitration, S.11 appointment, S.34 challenge, S.36 enforcement, MSME arbitration, Mediation Act 2023, and landmark SC judgments including BALCO (2012) and Ssangyong (2019). The firm's practice covers arbitration matters before the Delhi High Court, Delhi District Courts, and Arbitral Tribunals.

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Last Updated: 16 June 2026 Content Verified: checked against India Code & reported judgments

How the Arbitration Process Moves

1
Check Arbitration Agreement / Clause
2
Issue Notice Invoking Arbitration
3
Appointment of Arbitrator — S.11
4
Pleadings — Statement of Claim and Defence
5
Hearing and Evidence
6
Award, Challenge (S.34) and Enforcement (S.36)

Arbitration & ADR — Framework

The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (A&C Act) — based on the UNCITRAL Model Law — is the primary legislation governing arbitration in India. It has been significantly amended in 2015, 2019, and 2021 to make Indian arbitration more efficient and effective. Key provisions: S.7 (arbitration agreement — must be in writing); S.8 (court to refer parties to arbitration if agreement exists); S.11 (appointment of arbitrator by court if parties fail to agree); S.16 (kompetenz-kompetenz — arbitral tribunal decides its own jurisdiction); S.17 (interim measures by tribunal); S.34 (challenge to award — limited grounds); S.36 (enforcement of award as a court decree); S.37 (appeal against specified court orders); S.48 (enforcement of foreign award — New York Convention grounds).

The 2021 Amendment introduced the Arbitration Council of India (ACI) and strengthened confidentiality provisions (S.42A). The Mediation Act, 2023 — India's first standalone mediation legislation — creates a statutory framework for mediation with mediated settlement agreements enforceable as court decrees. MSME Facilitation Councils provide free statutory arbitration for payment disputes involving MSME units under Section 18 of the MSMED Act, 2006.

In plain terms: arbitration is a private alternative to going to court — parties choose a neutral arbitrator (instead of a judge) to decide their dispute. The arbitrator's decision (called an "award") is binding and can be enforced like a court order, and is typically more confidential than court litigation. Before arbitration can happen there must be an "arbitration clause" in the contract; if parties cannot agree on an arbitrator, the High Court appoints one under S.11. The award can only be challenged on very limited grounds under S.34 — courts cannot re-examine the merits of the decision.

Four Types of ADR — Overview

Arbitration — A&C Act 1996
Binding award by neutral arbitrator(s). Private tribunal chosen by parties. Governed by Part I (domestic — seat in India) or Part II (foreign awards — New York Convention / Geneva Convention). Award enforced under S.36 as court decree. Challenge only on limited S.34 grounds. Most common ADR form in India for commercial disputes.
Conciliation — A&C Act Part III
Neutral conciliator actively assists parties and may propose settlement terms. Settlement agreement if parties accept — binding and enforceable as arbitral award under S.74 A&C Act. Not the same as mediation — conciliator is more directive. Can be initiated even without a prior conciliation clause. Either party can terminate conciliation at any stage.
Mediation — Mediation Act 2023
Neutral mediator facilitates discussion — parties themselves decide the outcome. Mediator does not propose solutions (unlike conciliation). Mediation Act 2023 creates statutory framework — mediated settlement agreement is enforceable as a court decree. Confidentiality is protected by statute. Mediation Council of India established. Online mediation permitted. Pre-litigation mediation now mandatory for certain categories.
Lok Adalat — Legal Services Authorities Act 1987
Pre-litigation or post-litigation settlement before a panel. Lok Adalat award is final, non-appealable, and enforceable as a court decree. No court fee — court fee refunded if already paid. National Lok Adalats held monthly across India. Very effective for NI Act cheque bounce cases, motor accident claims, MSME payment disputes, and matrimonial matters where parties are willing to settle.
Key Takeaways
  • Arbitration in India is governed by the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (amended in 2015, 2019 and 2021); it covers both domestic and international commercial arbitration seated in India.
  • Courts play a minimal, supportive role — at the Section 11 appointment stage the court confines itself to a prima facie check on the existence of the arbitration agreement (Duro Felguera; Vidya Drolia), and an award is set aside under Section 34 only on narrow grounds such as patent illegality or conflict with public policy (narrowed in Ssangyong).
  • The seven-Judge Constitution Bench in In Re: Interplay (2023) held that an unstamped or insufficiently stamped arbitration agreement is not void — the defect is curable and the arbitration can proceed; this overruled NN Global.
  • A non-signatory can be bound to an arbitration agreement under the Group of Companies doctrine where there is a defined legal relationship and consent, express or implied (Cox and Kings, 2023).
  • The five-Judge Constitution Bench in Gayatri Balasamy (2025) recognised a limited power of courts to modify an arbitral award under Sections 34/37 in narrow circumstances.
  • An arbitral award is enforced as a decree of the court (Section 36); a Section 34 challenge does not by itself stay enforcement — a separate stay must be sought and the court may impose conditions such as deposit.

Key Requirements for Valid Arbitration

Arbitration Agreement — S.7 A&C Act
Must be in writing — signed by parties, or contained in an exchange of letters, telex, telegrams, or other means of communication including electronic means. Email and digital contracts satisfy the writing requirement. The agreement must clearly record the intention to submit disputes to arbitration. An arbitration clause referencing another document's arbitration rules also constitutes a valid agreement (incorporation by reference).
Arbitrable Subject Matter
Not all disputes can be arbitrated. Non-arbitrable per Vidya Drolia (2021): (1) actions in rem — insolvency, probate; (2) disputes assigned by statute to special forums — consumer forums, labour courts; (3) matrimonial status disputes; (4) criminal matters. Delhi Rent Control Act tenancies are non-arbitrable. TP Act tenancies are generally arbitrable. Fraud allegations — arbitrable unless they go to the validity of the arbitration agreement itself.
Arbitrator Independence — Fifth & Seventh Schedules
Fifth Schedule: categories of relationships that give rise to justifiable doubts about an arbitrator's independence — must be disclosed. Seventh Schedule: categories that make a person per se ineligible to act as arbitrator. Mandatory disclosure obligations apply from the time of appointment throughout the proceedings. Failure to disclose is a ground for challenge under S.12 and setting aside under S.34.
Seat Determines Jurisdiction — BALCO 2012
The seat of arbitration (juridical home) determines which courts have supervisory jurisdiction. Part I A&C Act — appointment (S.11), interim relief (S.9), challenge (S.34), enforcement (S.36) — applies only if the seat is in India. If seat is abroad — Part I does not apply; only Part II (enforcement of foreign award) applies in India. Seat is distinct from venue (physical hearing location).
S.34 Challenge Limitation
A S.34 application to set aside an award must be filed within 3 months (90 days) of receipt of the award. An additional 30-day extension may be sought if sufficient cause is shown — but courts have held that this 30-day limit is absolute and cannot be condoned further. Beyond 120 days from receipt of award — the court has no power to entertain the S.34 application regardless of the reason for delay.
S.29A — Mandatory Award Timeline
The arbitral award must be made within 12 months of the date of completion of pleadings. Parties may by consent extend this by a further 6 months (total 18 months). Beyond 18 months — extension requires court permission. If the court grants extension — it may reduce the arbitrator's fee by up to 5% per month of delay. If no extension — the arbitrator's mandate terminates and a fresh arbitrator may be appointed.

A&C Act 1996 — Key Amendments

AspectOriginal Position 1996Post-2015 / 2019 / 2021 Position
Award timelineNo statutory time limit — arbitrations routinely dragged on for years without conclusion2015 Amendment: S.29A — award within 12 months from pleading completion (extendable to 18 months by parties). Fast-track arbitration under S.29B: 6 months, decided on documents
Court intervention at S.11 stageHigh Courts examined merits at the S.11 appointment stage — causing lengthy delays and effectively a mini-trial before arbitration even started2015 Amendment: S.11(6A) — court examines only existence of arbitration agreement. 2019 Amendment: designated arbitral institutions to handle S.11 appointments directly, with 60-day timeline
S.34 challenge — public policyBroad public policy ground — courts frequently interfered, re-examining the merits of awards and effectively becoming appellate bodies over arbitrators2015 Amendment: patent illegality applies only to domestic awards (not international commercial). Courts must not re-examine merits. S.34(2A): patent illegality = illegality going to root, no evidence, or irrelevant factors considered
Interim measures during arbitrationOnly courts under S.9 could grant interim measures — parties had to approach courts during live arbitrations for every interim order2015 Amendment: S.17 — arbitral tribunal has full power to grant interim measures — enforceable as court orders. Reduced court intervention; S.9 court applications restricted post-constitution of tribunal
Arbitrator neutralityParty-appointed arbitrators often biased — no structured disclosure obligations created enforcement problems domestically and internationallyFifth Schedule (relationships triggering doubt) and Seventh Schedule (per se disqualifying relationships) introduced. Mandatory disclosure obligations throughout proceedings. Failure to disclose = ground for challenge
ConfidentialityNo statutory confidentiality provisions — arbitration proceedings and awards could be made public2021 Amendment: S.42A — mandatory confidentiality of arbitration proceedings on all parties, arbitrators, institutions, and experts. S.42B — arbitrators and institutions protected from civil liability for bona fide acts

Arbitration Procedure — Step by Step

1
Check Arbitration Agreement / Clause
Verify whether the contract contains a valid written arbitration clause under S.7 A&C Act. The clause must clearly reflect the intention to submit disputes to arbitration. If no clause exists in the original contract — parties can enter into a separate arbitration agreement after the dispute arises. If one party files a court case despite a valid arbitration agreement — the other party may apply under S.8 for reference to arbitration, and the court is obligated to refer the dispute.
2
Issue Notice Invoking Arbitration
Send a formal written notice invoking arbitration — specifying the dispute, the relief claimed, the arbitration clause relied upon, and nominating your arbitrator if a three-member panel is prescribed in the clause. The other party has 30 days to respond and nominate their arbitrator. If both party-appointed arbitrators are appointed — they jointly appoint the presiding arbitrator. The 2019 Amendment designated arbitral institutions to handle S.11 appointments where parties cannot agree within 30 days.
3
Appointment of Arbitrator — S.11
If parties fail to appoint within 30 days — an application under S.11(6) is made to the Delhi High Court or a designated arbitral institution (for international commercial arbitration — Supreme Court). The court/institution examines only the existence of the arbitration agreement and appoints the arbitrator within 60 days of application (2019 Amendment timeline). Once appointed — the arbitral tribunal is constituted and the S.29A award timeline begins running from completion of pleadings.
4
Pleadings — Statement of Claim and Defence
Claimant files Statement of Claim — setting out all facts, legal basis, and relief sought. Respondent files Statement of Defence — and any counter-claim if applicable. The arbitral tribunal may direct exchange of documents. Interim relief: applications for interim measures should be made to the tribunal under S.17 (once constituted). Court may be approached under S.9 for urgent interim relief before the tribunal is constituted — or if the tribunal cannot grant effective relief.
5
Hearing and Evidence
The arbitral tribunal conducts hearings — examination and cross-examination of witnesses, document submissions. The tribunal is not bound by the CPC or the Evidence Act / Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam — though the general principles of natural justice and due process must be followed. Expert witnesses may be appointed by the tribunal or by parties. The tribunal may opt for documents-only fast-track arbitration under S.29B — no oral hearing unless considered necessary.
6
Award, Challenge (S.34) and Enforcement (S.36)
Arbitral award: must be in writing, signed by all members, and reasoned (reasons mandatory post-2015 Amendment). Award becomes final after 3 months if no S.34 challenge is filed. S.34 challenge: filed before the designated court within 3 months of receipt of award — on limited grounds only. S.36 enforcement: if no S.34 challenge is filed, or if the challenge is rejected — the award is enforced as a court decree. S.37: limited appeals lie against specific court orders, not against the award itself.
Important Note
The seat of arbitration decides which court exercises supervisory jurisdiction — choose and record it clearly in the arbitration clause. An application to set aside an award under Section 34 must be filed within three months of receipt of the award, extendable by a further 30 days on sufficient cause, but not thereafter. Since the seven-Judge Bench in In Re: Interplay (2023), an unstamped arbitration agreement no longer defeats a Section 11 appointment — the stamping defect is curable and does not render the agreement void. The Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Bill, 2024 (proposing emergency arbitrators and a renamed “Arbitration Act”) is at the consultation stage and is not yet law.

Documents Required

For invoking arbitration / filing S.11 application:

Contract / agreement containing the arbitration clause
Notice invoking arbitration with proof of service (postal / email)
Statement of Claim with all supporting documents
Invoices, purchase orders, correspondence evidencing the dispute
KYC / registration documents of parties (Aadhaar, PAN, GST, MCA)
Arbitrator's appointment letter / institution reference number
Electronic evidence — emails, WhatsApp messages, digital contracts
Expert reports (technical / financial / valuation) if applicable

Additional documents for S.34 challenge or S.36 enforcement:

Certified copy of the arbitral award (signed, reasoned)
Proof of date of receipt of award (for limitation under S.34)
Pleadings and proceedings record from the arbitration
Arbitration agreement adequately stamped (curable defect — In Re: Interplay, 2023)
Practical Tip
Draft the arbitration clause with care: specify the seat and venue, the number and mode of appointment of arbitrators, the governing law, the language, and whether the arbitration is institutional (for example MCIA, DIAC or ICA) or ad hoc — a well-drafted clause prevents most Section 11 disputes. Invoke arbitration by a clear written notice under Section 21 before approaching the court, and watch limitation: the claim itself must be within time under the Limitation Act, and Section 11 cannot revive an ex-facie time-barred claim. For urgent protection before the tribunal is constituted, an interim application lies to the court under Section 9.

Key Points — A&C Act 1996

⏱ Key Reference Points — Arbitration
Award timeline — S.29A12 months from pleading completion
Maximum extension — parties' consentFurther 6 months (total 18 months)
Fast-track arbitration — S.29B6 months — documents only
S.34 challenge limitation3 months + 30 days max (absolute outer limit)
S.11 appointment — court timeline60 days from application (2019 Amendment)
Response to arbitration notice30 days to nominate arbitrator
Arbitration agreement — formMust be in writing — S.7 (email satisfies)
MSME Facilitation Council — arbitrationFree — government funded under MSMED Act 2006
Seat determines Part I applicabilityBALCO 2012 — seat in India → Part I applies
Enforcement of foreign awardPart II A&C Act — New York Convention / Geneva Convention

Relevant Statutes

Section 7 — Arbitration agreement · A&C Act, 1996
“(1) In this Part, ‘arbitration agreement’ means an agreement by the parties to submit to arbitration all or certain disputes which have arisen or which may arise between them in respect of a defined legal relationship, whether contractual or not. (2) An arbitration agreement may be in the form of an arbitration clause in a contract or in the form of a separate agreement.”— Section 7, Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (India Code)
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 — Part I (Domestic)
S.7: Arbitration agreement — writing requirement. S.8: Court reference to arbitration. S.9: Interim measures by court. S.11: Appointment of arbitrator. S.16: Kompetenz-kompetenz. S.17: Interim measures by tribunal — enforceable as court orders (post-2015). S.25: Default procedure. S.29A: Award timeline. S.29B: Fast-track arbitration. S.34: Setting aside award — limited grounds. S.36: Enforcement of award as court decree. S.37: Limited appeals against specific court orders. Fifth & Seventh Schedules: arbitrator eligibility and disclosure.
View on India Code →
A&C Act 1996 — Part II (Foreign Awards)
S.44–52: New York Convention Awards — enforcement of foreign arbitral awards in India. S.53–60: Geneva Convention Awards. S.48: Grounds for refusing enforcement (limited — incapacity, invalid agreement, no notice, beyond scope, improper composition, non-arbitrable, public policy). Indian courts take a generally pro-enforcement stance — cannot re-examine merits of foreign award at the enforcement stage. Once enforcement petition is admitted and grounds not established — enforced under S.49 as a domestic decree.
View on India Code →
A&C Amendment Acts 2015, 2019 & 2021
2015 Amendment: S.29A timeline, S.17 tribunal interim measures, S.34 narrowed, arbitrator disclosure obligations, Fifth & Seventh Schedules introduced. 2019 Amendment: S.11 — designated institutions for appointment, S.29A extended, fast-track for international arbitrations. 2021 Amendment: Arbitration Council of India (ACI) for grading institutions and arbitrators, S.42A confidentiality, S.42B immunity for arbitrators.
Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006 — S.18
S.18 MSMED Act: If an MSME unit has a dispute with a buyer regarding payment — the MSME can file a reference before the MSME Facilitation Council (MSEFC). Council conciliates first; if conciliation fails — refers to arbitration under A&C Act. Arbitration is free — government funded. The buyer cannot easily stay these proceedings — SC has upheld MSEFC jurisdiction. Important and underutilised remedy for small businesses against large companies suffering from delayed payment.
View on India Code →
Mediation Act, 2023
India's first standalone Mediation Act — in force from 2024. Creates statutory framework: mediation agreement, mediated settlement agreement enforceable as a court decree, confidentiality of mediation proceedings, Mediation Council of India, accreditation of mediators. Online mediation permitted. Mediated settlement cannot be challenged on merits — only on fraud, coercion, or incapacity. Pre-litigation mediation now mandatory for certain dispute categories before filing suit.
View on India Code →
Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 — Lok Adalat
Lok Adalat: pre-litigation or post-litigation — any disputes where settlement is possible. Lok Adalat award = final, non-appealable, enforceable as court decree. No court fee — court fee refunded if already paid. National Lok Adalats held monthly. Highly effective for NI Act cheque bounce cases, motor accident claims, and commercial disputes where parties are willing to settle. DLSA maintains a permanent Lok Adalat for pre-litigation matters in Delhi.
View on India Code →

Landmark & Recent Judgments

1 Recent — Limited S.34/37 Interference (2026) Jan De Nul Dredging India Pvt. Ltd. v. Tuticorin Port Trust Supreme Court of India | 2026 INSC 34 | Decided: 07.01.2026
The Supreme Court reaffirmed the minimal-intervention design of the Act: an arbitral award cannot be interfered with under Section 34 or Section 37 merely because the court considers an alternative interpretation of the contract to be possible. Where the Arbitral Tribunal's interpretation is a plausible view and has been upheld under Section 34, the Section 37 appellate court has no authority to substitute its own interpretation or re-appraise the evidence as if hearing a regular first appeal. The Court restored the tribunal's award of idle-time charges, holding that a claim cannot be defeated merely because it was labelled under a different contractual clause if the entitlement is traceable to the contract read as a whole.
View on Supreme Court (sci.gov.in) →
2 Recent — Court's Power to Modify an Award (Constitution Bench, 2025) Gayatri Balasamy v. ISG Novasoft Technologies Ltd. Supreme Court of India | 2025 INSC 605 | Constitution Bench (5 Judges) | Decided: 30.04.2025
By a 4:1 majority, a five-Judge Bench held that courts under Sections 34 and 37 of the A&C Act possess a limited power to modify an arbitral award — for example to sever an invalid portion, correct a clerical or computational error apparent on the face of the record, or vary post-award interest in appropriate cases. The Court clarified this narrow power is distinct from a merits review and does not permit re-writing the award, settling a long-standing divergence on whether the power to set aside includes a lesser power to modify.
View on Indian Kanoon →
3 Superseded — see 7-Judge Bench (Dec 2023) M/s. NN Global Mercantile Pvt. Ltd. v. Indo Unique Flame Ltd. Supreme Court of India | (2023) 7 SCC 1 | 5-Judge Constitution Bench | 3:2 Majority | Decided: 25.04.2023 | Overruled (2023)
A five-Judge Constitution Bench, by a 3:2 majority, held that an unstamped or insufficiently stamped arbitration agreement could not be acted upon until duly stamped. This view has since been overruled by a seven-Judge Constitution Bench in In Re: Interplay between Arbitration Agreements under the A&C Act 1996 and the Indian Stamp Act 1899 (13 December 2023), which held that non-stamping or insufficient stamping is a curable defect that renders the instrument inadmissible in evidence but not void or unenforceable — the stamping objection is for the arbitral tribunal, not the referral court. The current position therefore favours arbitration: an unstamped agreement does not bar reference. Verify the present position before relying on it.
View on Indian Kanoon →
4 Recent — 7-Judge Constitution Bench (current law) In Re: Interplay between Arbitration Agreements (A&C Act 1996) and the Indian Stamp Act 1899 Supreme Court of India | 2023 INSC 1066 | Curative Petition (C) No. 44 of 2023 | 7-Judge Bench | Unanimous | Decided: 13.12.2023
A seven-Judge Constitution Bench unanimously held that an unstamped or inadequately stamped instrument containing an arbitration agreement is not void or unenforceable — insufficiency of stamping is a curable defect that only renders the instrument inadmissible in evidence under S.35 of the Stamp Act until the duty (and any penalty) is paid. The question of stamping is to be examined by the arbitral tribunal under the principle of kompetenz-kompetenz, not by the court at the S.8 or S.11 referral stage. This overruled NN Global (2023) and SMS Tea Estates (2011), and partly overruled Garware Wall Ropes (2019). This is the current governing position on unstamped arbitration agreements.
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5 Recent — Group of Companies Doctrine (Constitution Bench) Cox and Kings Ltd. v. SAP India Pvt. Ltd. Supreme Court of India | 2023 INSC 1051 | 2023 SCC OnLine SC 1634 | Arb. Petition (C) No. 38 of 2020 | 5-Judge Constitution Bench | Decided: 06.12.2023 | CJI D.Y. Chandrachud, Hrishikesh Roy, P.S. Narasimha, J.B. Pardiwala & Manoj Misra JJ
The Constitution Bench authoritatively settled the place of the “Group of Companies” doctrine in Indian arbitration law. It held that a non-signatory company within a corporate group can be bound by an arbitration agreement where the conduct and mutual intention of the parties demonstrate consent to be bound — a determination to be made on a case-specific basis. The doctrine flows from the definition of “party” under Section 2(1)(h) read with Section 7 and can be subsumed within Section 7(4)(b); at the referral stage the court should ordinarily leave the question of whether a non-signatory is bound to the arbitral tribunal. The earlier reasoning in Chloro Controls (2013) tying the doctrine to “claiming through or under” was held to be conceptually incorrect.
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6 Landmark — Arbitrability of Disputes Vidya Drolia v. Durga Trading Corporation Supreme Court of India | (2021) 2 SCC 1 | Decided: 14.12.2020
3-Judge Bench clarified which disputes are non-arbitrable and must be decided only by courts or special forums: (1) Actions in rem — probate, insolvency/winding up proceedings; (2) Disputes where a statute expressly or by necessary implication excludes arbitration — consumer disputes, labour disputes, competition law matters; (3) Disputes involving special rent control legislation such as the Delhi Rent Control Act (non-arbitrable). Disputes under TP Act tenancies (without special rent control protection) are generally arbitrable. Fraud allegations are arbitrable unless the fraud goes to the validity of the arbitration agreement itself.
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7 Landmark — Public Policy / Patent Illegality Narrowed Ssangyong Engineering & Construction Co. Ltd. v. NHAI Supreme Court of India | (2019) 15 SCC 131 | Decided: 2019
SC clarified the scope of "public policy of India" and "patent illegality" as grounds for setting aside domestic awards under S.34 — post the 2015 Amendment. The public policy ground must be read narrowly — courts cannot re-examine the merits of the award. Patent illegality under S.34(2A) (for domestic awards only) means: (1) illegality going to the root of the matter; (2) award based on no evidence; (3) arbitrator considering irrelevant factors. Mere error of fact or law — even an incorrect decision — does not constitute patent illegality. Courts must exercise maximum restraint when reviewing arbitral awards.
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8 Landmark — S.11 Stage Examination Narrowed Duro Felguera S.A. v. Gangavaram Port Limited Supreme Court of India | (2017) 9 SCC 729 | Decided: 2017
SC held — post the 2015 Amendment — that at the stage of S.11 application for appointment of arbitrator, the court must confine its examination solely to the existence of an arbitration agreement between the parties. The court must not examine the merits of the disputes, the validity of the claims, or any other substantive issue — all these are for the arbitral tribunal to decide. This dramatically reduced the time and satellite litigation at the S.11 stage, which had previously become an extended mini-trial in many cases under the pre-amendment regime.
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9 Landmark — Seat of Arbitration / Part I Applicability BALCO v. Kaiser Aluminium Technical Services Inc. Supreme Court of India | (2012) 9 SCC 552 | Constitution Bench (5 Judges) | Decided: 06.09.2012
Constitution Bench settled the foundational question — Part I of the A&C Act (Indian courts' supervisory jurisdiction: appointment, challenge, enforcement) applies only if the seat of arbitration is in India. If the seat is abroad — Part I does not apply. The "seat" of arbitration is distinct from the "venue" (physical location of hearings). BALCO overruled the earlier Bhatia International (2002) position, which had allowed Indian courts to intervene in foreign-seated arbitrations — creating uncertainty that had deterred foreign parties. BALCO made India a credible international arbitration jurisdiction with clear territorial boundaries.
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10 Landmark — Arbitrability Test (Rights in rem vs in personam) Booz Allen & Hamilton Inc. v. SBI Home Finance Ltd. Supreme Court of India | (2011) 5 SCC 532 | Decided: 15.04.2011
Laid down the foundational test for arbitrability — disputes over rights in personam (private rights between parties) are generally arbitrable, while disputes affecting rights in rem (rights against the world at large) are not. The Court illustratively listed non-arbitrable categories: criminal offences, matrimonial, guardianship, insolvency/winding-up, testamentary (probate) and eviction/tenancy governed by special statutes. This framework was later refined by the four-fold test in Vidya Drolia (2020).
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Recent Developments

2023-24 — New Legislation
Mediation Act 2023 — India's First Standalone Mediation Law
Mediation Act 2023 enacted — key provisions in force from 9 October 2023 — creates statutory framework for mediation. Mediated settlement agreement enforceable as a court decree. Online mediation permitted. Mediation Council of India to be established. Pre-litigation mediation now mandatory for certain categories. Complementary to arbitration.
Ongoing — MSME
MSME Facilitation Councils — Free Arbitration for Small Businesses
MSME Facilitation Councils across India conducting free arbitration for MSME payment disputes under S.18 MSMED Act. SC has upheld MSEFC jurisdiction — buyers cannot stay proceedings. Awareness improving. Important remedy for small businesses against large companies for delayed payment recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions

What must an arbitration agreement contain to be valid under S.7?

Under S.7 A&C Act, an arbitration agreement must be in writing — signed by parties, or contained in an exchange of letters, emails, or other electronic communications (electronic communications satisfy the writing requirement). The agreement must clearly reflect the parties' intention to submit their disputes to arbitration — no particular form of words is required. Even a reference in a contract to another document containing an arbitration clause constitutes a valid arbitration agreement if the reference is clear (incorporation by reference). A one-line arbitration clause in a commercial contract is sufficient.

What is the significance of the BALCO judgment (2012)?

BALCO v. Kaiser Aluminium (2012) 9 SCC 552 — Constitution Bench — settled that Part I of the A&C Act (Indian courts' powers to supervise, appoint, and hear challenges to awards) applies only when the seat of arbitration is in India. If the seat is abroad — Indian courts have no supervisory Part I jurisdiction. This overruled the earlier Bhatia International (2002) and Venture Global (2008) position, which had allowed Indian courts to intervene in foreign-seated arbitrations — creating significant uncertainty. BALCO made India a credible international arbitration jurisdiction with clear, predictable rules on court intervention.

On what grounds can an arbitral award be challenged under Section 34?

S.34 A&C Act provides limited grounds: (1) incapacity of a party or invalid arbitration agreement; (2) no proper notice of appointment of arbitrator or proceedings; (3) award beyond the scope of the reference; (4) composition of tribunal or procedure contrary to the agreement; (5) subject matter not arbitrable; (6) award contrary to public policy of India; (7) for domestic awards only — patent illegality going to the root of the matter (S.34(2A)). Critically — courts cannot re-examine the merits of the award under S.34. Limitation: 3 months from receipt of award, with a further 30-day condonable extension. Beyond 120 days — court has no power regardless of cause.

What is MSME Facilitation Council arbitration?

Under S.18 MSMED Act 2006 — if an MSME unit has a payment dispute with a buyer — the MSME can file a reference before the MSME Facilitation Council (MSEFC). The Council first attempts conciliation — if successful, the settlement is binding. If conciliation fails — the matter is referred to arbitration under the A&C Act. The arbitration is free of cost — conducted at government expense. The buyer (often a large company) cannot easily obtain a stay of these proceedings — the SC has upheld the MSEFC's jurisdiction. This is an important and underutilised remedy for small businesses suffering from payment delays from large buyers.

What is the difference between the seat and venue of arbitration?

The "seat" of arbitration is the juridical home — it determines which country's law governs the arbitration proceedings (the lex arbitri) and which courts have supervisory jurisdiction. The "venue" is merely the physical location where hearings take place — which may differ from the seat. For example: seat = Delhi, but a hearing session held in Mumbai. The seat determines the applicability of Part I of the A&C Act (BALCO 2012). Choosing the seat is a critical contractual decision — particularly in international arbitrations where parties may prefer a neutral seat such as Singapore, London, or Dubai.

Can a court intervene during ongoing arbitration proceedings?

Court intervention during arbitration is limited. Permitted interventions: (1) S.9 — court grants interim measures before the tribunal is constituted or if the tribunal cannot grant effective relief; (2) S.11 — appointment of arbitrator; (3) S.14 — termination of arbitrator's mandate on incapacity or failure to act; (4) S.27 — court assistance in taking evidence. Once the tribunal is constituted — applications for interim relief should go to the tribunal under S.17 (not the court). The guiding principle is minimum court intervention and maximum arbitral autonomy — consistent with the UNCITRAL Model Law framework.

Which disputes are non-arbitrable in India?

Per Vidya Drolia v. Durga Trading Corporation (2021) 2 SCC 1, non-arbitrable disputes include: (1) actions in rem — insolvency/winding up, probate matters, matrimonial status; (2) disputes assigned by statute to special courts or tribunals — consumer disputes (Consumer Commissions), labour disputes (Labour Courts/Industrial Tribunals), competition law (CCI), IPR matters; (3) criminal matters; (4) tenancy disputes under special rent control legislation — Delhi Rent Control Act (non-arbitrable). Disputes under ordinary TP Act tenancies may be arbitrable. Fraud allegations are arbitrable unless the fraud goes to the validity of the arbitration agreement itself.

How is a foreign arbitral award enforced in India?

Foreign arbitral awards (from New York Convention or Geneva Convention countries) are enforced in India under Part II of the A&C Act. The award holder files an enforcement petition before the High Court. The court enforces the award unless the opposing party establishes one of the limited grounds in S.48 (incapacity, invalid agreement, no notice, beyond scope, improper composition, non-arbitrable subject matter, public policy of India). Indian courts maintain a generally pro-enforcement stance — limiting the public policy ground strictly. Once the enforcement petition is admitted and grounds are not established — the award is enforced as a domestic court decree under S.49.

What is mediation under the Mediation Act 2023 — how is it different from conciliation?

Both involve a neutral third party assisting settlement — but they differ in approach. Conciliation (A&C Act Part III): the conciliator may actively propose settlement terms — a more directive, evaluative approach. Mediation (Mediation Act 2023): the mediator facilitates discussion without proposing solutions — the parties themselves agree on the terms. The new Mediation Act 2023 creates a distinct statutory framework with registered mediators, the Mediation Council of India, and a mediated settlement agreement that is enforceable as a court decree. Online mediation is permitted. Pre-litigation mediation is now mandatory for certain categories of cases before filing suit.

What is the advantage of institutional over ad hoc arbitration?

Institutional arbitration advantages: (1) pre-drafted rules — comprehensive procedural framework reducing uncertainty; (2) managed appointment — institution maintains a panel and handles appointment disputes promptly; (3) administrative support — filing, fee management, hearing facilities, case management; (4) fixed fee schedules — parties know cost upfront; (5) reputation — awards from recognised institutions (ICC, SIAC, DIAC, MCIA) carry greater credibility internationally; (6) enforcement — institutionally administered awards are generally easier to enforce globally. Ad hoc arbitration can become chaotic if parties are uncooperative — making institutional arbitration preferable for high-value or complex commercial disputes.

Test Your Knowledge — Arbitration Quiz

⚖ Arbitration & ADR

Key Legal Terms

Arbitration Agreement (S.7)
Written agreement by parties to submit their disputes to arbitration — can be a clause in a contract or a separate agreement. Email and electronic exchange satisfies the writing requirement. Foundation of all arbitration proceedings — no valid agreement means no valid arbitration.
Seat of Arbitration
The juridical home of the arbitration — determines which country's courts have supervisory jurisdiction and which procedural law (lex arbitri) applies. BALCO (2012): Part I A&C Act applies only if seat is in India. Distinct from venue (physical hearing location).
Arbitral Award (S.31)
The arbitral tribunal's final decision — equivalent to a court judgment. Must be in writing, signed, and reasoned (post-2015 Amendment). Becomes final after 3 months if no S.34 challenge. Enforced as a court decree under S.36 A&C Act.
S.34 Challenge
Application to set aside an arbitral award — filed before the court within 3 months of award. Very limited grounds — courts cannot re-examine merits. Public policy and patent illegality (domestic only) are the main substantive grounds. Beyond 120 days from receipt — no power to entertain.
Kompetenz-Kompetenz (S.16)
Principle that the arbitral tribunal has the power to rule on its own jurisdiction — including validity of the arbitration agreement. Parties cannot bypass the tribunal to go directly to court on jurisdiction questions once the tribunal is constituted.
S.29A — Award Timeline
2015 Amendment: arbitral award must be made within 12 months of tribunal constitution (extendable to 18 months by parties). Beyond 18 months — court permission required; court may reduce arbitrator's fee. Promotes timely conclusion of arbitration proceedings.
MSME Facilitation Council
Free government-funded arbitration under MSMED Act 2006 — S.18 — for disputes involving MSME units against buyers. Council conciliates; if failed — arbitration. Buyer cannot stay proceedings. SC has upheld MSEFC jurisdiction. Important remedy for small businesses.
Patent Illegality — S.34(2A)
Additional ground for setting aside domestic (not international) arbitral awards — introduced by 2015 Amendment. Means: illegality going to root of matter, award based on no evidence, or arbitrator considering wholly irrelevant factors. Does NOT mean mere error of law or incorrect decision.
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This is an informational guide and is reviewed periodically against the official sources cited above. If any provision appears outdated or an inadvertent error is noticed, it may be pointed out using the contact details on this page so that the content can be reviewed and corrected. Readers should verify the current statutory text and case law from authentic sources before relying on it.

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