Arbitration
Subject : Law - Litigation
MUMBAI – In a significant ruling that reinforces the high threshold for judicial interference in arbitral awards, the Bombay High Court has declined to grant an unconditional stay on the execution of a ₹250.82 crore award against the Mumbai Metro Rail Corporation Limited (MMRCL). Justice Somasekhar Sundaresan directed the state-run corporation to deposit the entire awarded sum, plus interest, within eight weeks, holding that MMRCL had failed to establish a prima facie case of "abject perversity" in the arbitral tribunal's decision.
The October 10 order underscores the judiciary's pro-arbitration stance, emphasizing that an award, being akin to a money decree, commands a high degree of credibility. The court clarified that an unconditional stay is an exception, reserved only for awards that are so facially untenable that no reasonable person could have arrived at such a conclusion.
The dispute, rooted in a contract for the design and construction of tunnels and stations for the Mumbai Metro Rail project, pitted MMRCL against the L&T-STEC Joint Venture. The core of the conflict revolved around the reimbursement of Goods and Services Tax (GST) following its introduction in 2017, a change in law that occurred after the contract was awarded in 2015.
A three-member arbitral tribunal, by a majority decision, had ordered MMRCL to pay approximately ₹229.56 crore towards GST reimbursement for the period between July 2017 and September 2022. An additional ₹21.26 crore was awarded for extra works allegedly performed by the contractor beyond the contractual scope.
The dissenting arbitrator, appointed by MMRCL, had proposed a significantly lower GST reimbursement of ₹134.42 crore. This divergence prompted MMRCL to challenge the majority award before the High Court under Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, and simultaneously seek an unconditional stay on its execution.
Appearing for MMRCL, Advocate General Birendra Saraf launched a multi-pronged attack on the award, arguing it was riddled with serious factual and legal errors. He contended that the tribunal had fundamentally erred by granting GST compensation without first analysing the actual impact of the change in law on the lump-sum contract price. According to Saraf, the tribunal failed to examine what portion of the original price constituted indirect taxes, making any reimbursement calculation arbitrary.
Furthermore, Saraf submitted that the tribunal incorrectly applied pre-GST exemptions to activities unrelated to metro construction and that its findings on the claim for additional works were not supported by evidence demonstrating the use of extra materials. A key procedural grievance raised was that the tribunal had allegedly disregarded the testimony of MMRCL’s engineer-in-charge, who had supervised the project and could have provided crucial technical and contractual clarifications.
In response, Senior Advocate Vikram Nankani, representing L&T-STEC JV, robustly defended the tribunal's findings. He argued that the contract was based on a fixed lump-sum price, which, by its nature, could not be dissected to identify individual tax components.
Nankani emphasized that the methodology for assessing the GST impact was not a novel creation of the tribunal. Instead, it had been previously settled through reviews by both the engineer-in-charge and the pre-arbitral Dispute Adjudication Board (DAB). The tribunal's conclusions, he argued, were consistent with these prior assessments. Addressing the issue of the engineer's testimony, Nankani clarified that the evidence was not excluded but that the tribunal had reasonably treated his expert inferences with caution, acknowledging he was not an independent witness.
Justice Sundaresan, in his detailed order, framed the central issue as whether MMRCL could demonstrate that the award was so perverse that it screamed for an unconditional stay without the requirement of a deposit. The court observed, “They do not scream themselves aloud calling for an ex facie finding of abject perversity warranting an unconditional stay.”
The judgment highlighted that the objections raised by MMRCL amounted to interpretational differences on fiscal notifications and technical matters—areas squarely within the tribunal's domain. The court noted that the tribunal's conclusions were largely aligned with the DAB's report, lending further credence to its findings.
On the specific allegation that MMRCL’s witness was "shut out," the court found this claim to be unsubstantiated. Justice Sundaresan clarified that the record showed the witness was both examined and cross-examined. The tribunal had merely discounted his claims to expertise, a permissible exercise of its discretion. “It is apparent that the witness was not shut out by the Learned Arbitral Tribunal... The tribunal merely indicated that it would discount his claims to expertise since he could not be treated as an independent expert,” the order stated.
The court also made a noteworthy observation on the language used by tribunals, particularly those comprising technical experts. It remarked that arbitral tribunals with engineers could not be expected to employ "lawyerly precision" in their language, but their underlying reasoning made it clear that the witness’s testimony was considered and not ignored.
Concluding that the award was neither facially untenable nor tainted by patent illegality, the court refused to grant an unconditional stay. Justice Sundaresan asserted a vital principle of arbitration jurisprudence: “When parties proceed to arbitration and that too after a detailed pre-arbitral process being contracted, there has to be a higher credibility and credence given to the arbitral award.”
The court directed MMRCL to deposit the entire awarded sum with accrued interest within eight weeks. Upon this deposit, the stay on the award's execution will become operational. The order further permits L&T-STEC to withdraw the deposited amount, provided it furnishes an unconditional bank guarantee for the same sum.
#ArbitrationLaw #BombayHighCourt #Infrastructure
Limiting Crop Damage Compensation to Specific Wild Animals Excluding Birds Violates Article 14: Bombay HC
28 Apr 2026
Appeal Limitation in 1991 Police Rules Yields to Uttarakhand Police Act 2007 on Inconsistency: Uttarakhand HC
28 Apr 2026
Nashik Court Reserves Verdict on Khan's TCS Bail Plea
29 Apr 2026
Delhi Court Grants Bail to I-PAC Director in PMLA Case
30 Apr 2026
No Historic Record of Saraswati Temple Demolition, Muslim Body Tells MP High Court in Bhojshala Dispute
30 Apr 2026
No Absolute Bar on Simultaneous Parole/Furlough for Co-Accused Under Delhi Prisons Rules: Delhi High Court
30 Apr 2026
Rejection of Jurisdiction Plea under Section 16 Arbitration Act Not Challengeable under Section 34 Till Final Award: Supreme Court
30 Apr 2026
'Living Separately' Under Section 13B HMA Means Cessation Of Marital Obligations, Regardless Of Residence: Patna High Court
30 Apr 2026
Belated Challenge by Non-Bidders to GeM Tender Conditions for School Sports Equipment Not Maintainable: Delhi High Court
30 Apr 2026
Login now and unlock free premium legal research
Login to SupremeToday AI and access free legal analysis, AI highlights, and smart tools.
Login
now!
India’s Legal research and Law Firm App, Download now!
Copyright © 2023 Vikas Info Solution Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved.