Summary
| Category | Data |
|---|---|
| Court | Supreme Court of India |
| Case Number | ARBIT.PETITON No.-000065 – 2023 |
| Diary Number | 34759/2023 |
| Judge Name | HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE PAMIDIGHANTAM SRI NARASIMHA |
| Bench |
HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE PAMIDIGHANTAM SRI NARASIMHA HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE ATUL S. CHANDURKAR |
| Precedent Value | Binding authority reaffirming that Section 11 cannot be invoked for foreign-seated arbitration and that the arbitration clause in the principal (mother) agreement prevails over ancillary India-seated clauses |
| Overrules / Affirms | Affirms existing precedents (BALCO, Mankastu, BGS SGS SOMA JV, PASL Wind) |
| Type of Law | International Commercial Arbitration; Interpretation of Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 |
| Questions of Law |
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| Ratio Decidendi | The Court held that (i) the dispute under the Buyer and Seller Agreement (BSA) was an international commercial arbitration with a clear choice of the seat in Benin and curial law of Benin, excluding Part I of the Act by operation of Section 2(2); (ii) subsequent Sales Contracts and High Seas Sale Agreements (HSSAs) were discrete, ancillary instruments that neither referred to nor novated the BSA, so their India-seated arbitration clauses could not override the mother agreement’s clause; (iii) the Benin-seated tribunal validly exercised kompetenz-kompetenz and rendered an award; (iv) the Delhi High Court’s Section 45 dismissal constituted issue estoppel on the identical jurisdictional facts; and (v) the group of companies doctrine cannot automatically bind non-signatories absent clear common intent. |
| Judgments Relied Upon |
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| Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon by the Court |
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| Facts as Summarised by the Court | The petitioner and respondent No. 1 executed a Buyer and Seller Agreement (BSA) on 6 June 2019 (and an Addendum on 9 January 2021) with arbitration in Benin under Benin law. Respondent No. 1 assigned supply obligations via Sales Contracts to respondent No. 2 (arbitration in New Delhi under Act, 1996) and via HSSAs to respondent No. 3 (arbitration under Indian Arbitration Act, 1940). Disputes on quantity and payment arose, respondent No. 1 invoked Benin arbitration and obtained an award on 21 May 2024; petitioner’s anti-arbitration suit in the Delhi High Court under Section 45 was dismissed on 8 November 2024; petitioner filed Section 11 petition in the Supreme Court, which was dismissed. |
Practical Impact
| Category | Impact |
|---|---|
| Binding On | All Indian courts and tribunals deciding on arbitrability and appointments under Section 11 of the Act, 1996 |
| Persuasive For | High Courts and parties in arbitration-related litigation, especially on the territorial scope of Part I |
| Distinguishes | Limited application of the group of companies doctrine for impleading non-signatories |
| Follows | BALCO; Mankastu Impex; BGS SGS SOMA JV; PASL Wind Solutions; Balasore Alloys |
What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note
- The Supreme Court reiterates that Section 11 cannot be used to appoint arbitrators for foreign-seated international commercial arbitrations under Part I.
- A “mother agreement” with an express foreign seat and governing law cannot be novated or displaced by subsequent ancillary contracts lacking clear substitution language.
- An arbitral award rendered by a foreign tribunal precludes a parallel Section 11 petition in India on the same subject-matter.
- A prior dismissal of an anti-arbitration injunction under Section 45 creates issue estoppel on the identical jurisdictional facts in subsequent Section 11 proceedings.
- The group of companies doctrine will not bind non-signatories absent evidence of a common intention to arbitrate together.
Summary of Legal Reasoning
- Characterisation as international commercial arbitration under Section 2(1)(f) triggered exclusion of Part I by Section 2(2) because the seat was in Benin.
- The BSA’s Article 11 and the Addendum’s Article 5 collectively designated Benin as both seat and curial law—Mankastu and BGS SGS SOMA JV principles.
- Sales Contracts (with respondent No. 2) and HSSAs (with respondent No. 3) were limited-purpose, consignment-based agreements that did not refer to or novate the BSA—Balasore Alloys principle.
- The Benin tribunal validly asserted jurisdiction (kompetenz-kompetenz) and issued a final award.
- The Delhi High Court’s Section 45 dismissal of the anti-arbitration injunction constituted issue estoppel on the same operative facts—Hope Plantations, Anil v. Rajendra.
- The group of companies doctrine requires clear evidence of common intention; shareholding overlap alone is insufficient—Cox & Kings.
Arguments by the Parties
Petitioner
- All disputes form a composite transaction under the TGI Group; group of companies doctrine mandates a single reference.
- Subsequent Sales Contracts and HSSAs novate the BSA arbitration clause in favour of India-seated arbitration.
- Benin was only a venue, not the juridical seat; later agreements show Indian seat and law (Mankastu Impex).
- Any Benin award is unenforceable in India as Benin is not a reciprocating territory under Section 44(b).
- The Delhi High Court’s Section 45 order has no bearing on Section 11 jurisdiction.
Respondent No. 1
- Part I (including Section 11) is inapplicable as the BSA (and Addendum) specify arbitration in Benin under Benin law (international arbitration).
- Sales Contracts and HSSAs are independent agreements; respondent No. 1 is not a party and cannot be bound by their Indian arbitration clauses.
- There was no novation; the BSA remains the mother agreement with its seat and law.
- The Delhi High Court’s final Section 45 dismissal creates issue estoppel on jurisdiction.
Respondent No. 2
- Each Sales Contract is a standalone consignment agreement; its arbitration clause is limited to disputes “arising out of or relating to this Agreement.”
Respondent No. 3
- Each HSSA is a separate high-seas sale contract; its arbitration clause (under Indian Arbitration Act, 1940) pertains only to that contract.
Factual Background
The petitioner and respondent No. 1 executed a Buyer and Seller Agreement on 6 June 2019 (with an Addendum on 9 January 2021) for cottonseed cake supplies, governed by Benin law with arbitration in Benin. Respondent No. 1 assigned performance via Sales Contracts with respondent No. 2 (arbitration in New Delhi under the Act, 1996) and via HSSAs with respondent No. 3 (arbitration under the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940). Disputes over quantity and payment led respondent No. 1 to invoke Benin arbitration, and the Benin tribunal issued an award on 21 May 2024. The petitioner’s anti-arbitration injunction under Section 45 in the Delhi High Court was dismissed on 8 November 2024. The petitioner then filed a Section 11 petition in the Supreme Court, which was dismissed.
Statutory Analysis
- Section 2(1)(f): Defines “international commercial arbitration” to include disputes with at least one foreign party.
- Section 2(2): Part I applies only if the seat of arbitration is in India; foreign-seated arbitrations fall under Part II.
- Section 11(6), (12)(a): Empowers the Supreme Court to appoint arbitrators under Part I for India-seated arbitrations.
- Section 44(b): Allows the Central Government to declare reciprocating territories for award enforcement; Benin is not so declared.
Alert Indicators
- ✔ Precedent Followed