top of page


Arbitration clause in tax invoices forms valid agreement even if purchase orders are silent, rules Bombay High Court
Bombay High Court Affirms Validity of Arbitration Clauses in Tax Invoices as Binding Agreements, Regardless of Silent Purchase Orders. Hitesh Coal Traders v. Indapur Dairy and Milk Products Ltd. | Commercial Arbitration Application No. 93 of 2026 | Bombay High Court | May 5, 2026 In a significant ruling on the existence of arbitration agreements in commercial transactions, the Bombay High Court has held that an arbitration clause printed on tax invoices and delivery challans,


The fee fixation principle: Arbitrators cannot unilaterally revise their remuneration
Arbitration Insight: Understanding the Fee Fixation Principle and the limitation on arbitrators from unilaterally revising their remuneration. Background In Chennai Metro Rail Limited v. Transtonnel stroy Afcons JV, (2024) 6 SCC 211, the Supreme Court was called upon to examine two related questions: first, whether a tribunal could unilaterally revise its fee after it had been fixed by agreement with all parties; and second, whether such revision, when insisted upon by the t


An Arbitrator Can Grant Post-Award Interest on the Principal Alone: Supreme Court in Morgan Securities v. Videocon Industries
Supreme Court Ruling on Arbitration: Arbitrators Can Grant Post-Award Interest on Principal Alone in Morgan Securities v. Videocon Industries. A question that has long troubled arbitration practitioners in India concerns the scope of an arbitrator's discretion when awarding post-award interest. Must the arbitrator always apply the statutory rate of eighteen percent on the entire awarded sum, including pre-award interest? Or does the arbitrator retain the freedom to tailor the


The Section 11 Deadline: Supreme Court Settles the Limitation Clock for Arbitrator Appointment
Supreme Court Decision Clarifies Arbitrator Appointment Deadlines Under Section 11. M/s. Arif Azim Co. Ltd. v. M/s. Aptech Ltd. | Supreme Court of India | Section 11(6), Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 How long does a party have to knock on the court's door when the other side refuses to appoint an arbitrator? The Supreme Court has now answered this with clarity: three years, and not a day more. In a significant ruling that tidies up one of arbitration law's long-stan
bottom of page
_edited.png)