Enforcement of Awards and Foreign Awards

Enforcement of Awards - Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996

The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996

Enforcement of Awards and Foreign Awards

Introduction to Enforcement of Awards

The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 provides a comprehensive framework for enforcement of both domestic and foreign arbitral awards in India. The Act distinguishes between awards made in India (Part I) and foreign awards (Part II).

Key Provisions:

Section 36: Enforcement of domestic arbitral awards

Sections 47-49: Enforcement of foreign awards under the New York Convention

Section 51-60: Enforcement of foreign awards under the Geneva Convention

Example 1: Domestic Award Enforcement

ABC Ltd. obtained an arbitral award of Rs. 50 lakhs against XYZ Ltd. in a domestic arbitration held in Mumbai. After the 3-month appeal period expired without any challenge, ABC Ltd. can directly enforce this award as a court decree under Section 36 of the Act.

Enforcement of Domestic Arbitral Awards (Part I)

Section 36 - Enforcement

An arbitral award made under Part I of the Act shall be enforced in accordance with the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 as if it were a decree of the Court.

Key Features:

Award becomes enforceable after expiry of 3 months from the date on which it is received (time for filing Section 34 application)

If Section 34 application is filed, enforcement is stayed until disposal

Award holder can execute it like a court decree

No separate suit required for enforcement

Example 2: Timeline for Enforcement

An arbitral award was passed on January 1, 2025. The unsuccessful party has time until April 1, 2025 to file a Section 34 application to set aside the award. If no application is filed by April 1, 2025, the award becomes enforceable immediately thereafter. However, if an application is filed on March 15, 2025, enforcement is automatically stayed pending the court's decision on the Section 34 application.

Enforcement of Foreign Awards (Part II)

New York Convention Awards (Sections 44-52)

Foreign awards from countries that are signatories to the New York Convention, 1958 are enforceable in India under Part II of the Act.

Requirements for Enforcement (Section 47):

Original award or duly authenticated copy

Original arbitration agreement or certified copy

Evidence proving that the award is foreign

Certified translation (if not in English)

Example 3: Foreign Award Enforcement

A Singapore-based company obtained an arbitral award of USD 2 million against an Indian company in a Singapore arbitration conducted under SIAC rules. Since Singapore is a signatory to the New York Convention, the award can be enforced in India by filing an application under Section 47 in the appropriate Indian court along with the required documents.

Geneva Convention Awards (Sections 53-60)

Awards from countries that are only signatories to the Geneva Convention, 1927 (and not the New York Convention) are governed by these provisions.

Procedure for Enforcement

For Domestic Awards:

Step 1: Wait for 3 months from receipt of award (Section 34 period)

Step 2: If no Section 34 application filed, file execution petition in competent court

Step 3: Court treats award as decree and issues execution notice

Step 4: Recovery through court execution mechanisms (attachment, sale, etc.)

For Foreign Awards:

Step 1: File application under Section 47 in competent court

Step 2: Submit required documents (award, agreement, translations)

Step 3: Court examines grounds under Section 48

Step 4: If no grounds for refusal, court enforces award as decree

Step 5: Execution through normal court processes

Grounds for Refusal of Enforcement

For Domestic Awards (Section 34):

Party under incapacity

Arbitration agreement not valid

Lack of proper notice or opportunity

Award deals with matters beyond submission to arbitration

Improper composition of arbitral tribunal

Subject matter not arbitrable

Award in conflict with public policy of India

For Foreign Awards (Section 48):

Similar grounds as Section 34

Award not binding on parties

Award has been set aside in country of origin

Dispute not arbitrable under Indian law

Enforcement contrary to public policy of India

Important Note:

The Supreme Court has held that the scope of interference with arbitral awards should be minimal. Courts cannot re-appreciate evidence or sit in appeal over the arbitrator's findings.

Leading Case Laws

1. Shri Lal Mahal Ltd. v. Progetto Grano Spa (2014) 2 SCC 433

Facts:

Italian company obtained arbitral award in London against Indian company

Sought enforcement in India under Section 47

Indian company challenged enforcement on grounds of public policy

Held by Supreme Court:

Foreign awards can only be challenged on limited grounds under Section 48

Public policy means fundamental policy of Indian law

Courts cannot re-examine merits of foreign awards

Enforcement cannot be refused merely because Indian court would have decided differently

Significance:

This case established the principle of minimal judicial intervention in enforcement of foreign awards and clarified the narrow scope of public policy exception.

2. Bharat Aluminium Co. v. Kaiser Aluminium Technical Services Inc. (BALCO) (2012) 9 SCC 552

Facts:

American company obtained award in London against Indian PSU

BALCO filed petition under Section 34 to set aside the award

Question arose whether Part I applies to international commercial arbitrations held outside India

Held by Supreme Court:

Part I of the Act applies only to arbitrations held in India

Section 34 cannot be invoked for awards made outside India

Foreign awards can only be challenged under Section 48 at enforcement stage

Clear demarcation between domestic and foreign awards

Significance:

Landmark judgment clarifying territorial applicability of Part I and Part II. Established that foreign awards cannot be challenged under Section 34.

3. Fuerst Day Lawson Ltd. v. Jindal Exports Ltd. (2011) 8 SCC 333

Facts:

Award debtor challenged enforcement claiming time bar under Limitation Act

Question of applicability of limitation to execution of arbitral awards

Held by Supreme Court:

Limitation period of 3 years applies to execution of arbitral awards

Period starts from date when award becomes enforceable under Section 36

Award holder must initiate execution within limitation period

Provisions of Limitation Act, 1963 apply to arbitral awards

Significance:

Clarified that arbitral awards are subject to limitation for execution purposes and award holders must be diligent in enforcement.

4. Vijay Karia v. Prysmian Cavi E Sistemi SRL (2020) 11 SCC 1

Facts:

Question regarding when a foreign award becomes enforceable

Whether automatic stay applies to enforcement of foreign awards

Held by Supreme Court:

Foreign awards are enforceable immediately upon filing Section 47 application

No automatic stay on enforcement of foreign awards

Court may grant stay only in exceptional circumstances

Burden is on award debtor to show grounds for stay

Significance:

Strengthened enforcement regime for foreign awards by removing automatic stay provisions.

5. Ssangyong Engineering & Construction Co. Ltd. v. NHAI (2019) 15 SCC 131

Facts:

Scope of judicial review under Section 34 examined

Meaning of public policy in context of arbitral awards

Held by Supreme Court:

Public policy includes fundamental policy of Indian law, interest of India, and justice or morality

Patent illegality is limited to domestic awards only

Courts cannot re-appreciate evidence in Section 34 proceedings

Minimal judicial intervention is the guiding principle

Significance:

Comprehensive analysis of public policy exception and limits of judicial review in arbitration matters.

Comparison Table: Domestic vs. Foreign Awards

Aspect Domestic Awards (Part I) Foreign Awards (Part II)
Governing Provisions Sections 34-36 Sections 47-49 (New York Convention)
Challenge Mechanism Section 34 - Set aside application Section 48 - Resistance at enforcement stage
Time Limit for Challenge 3 months from receipt of award (extendable by 30 days) At time of enforcement proceedings
Automatic Stay Yes, if Section 34 application filed No automatic stay on foreign awards
Enforcement After 3 months or disposal of Section 34 Immediately upon filing Section 47 application
Grounds for Refusal Section 34 - Including patent illegality Section 48 - No patent illegality ground
Territorial Scope Arbitration held in India Arbitration held outside India
Appeal Against Refusal Appeal to High Court/Supreme Court Appeal to High Court/Supreme Court
Documents Required Award and arbitration agreement Award, agreement, evidence of foreign nature, translations
Public Policy Scope Broader scope including patent illegality Narrower scope - fundamental policy only

Enforcement Flowcharts

Domestic Award Enforcement Flow

Award Passed
Award Received by Parties
3 Month Period (Section 34)
No Challenge ↓
Award Becomes Enforceable
File Execution Petition
Enforcement as Decree
Section 34 Filed ↓
Automatic Stay on Enforcement
Court Decision
Upheld → Enforce
Set Aside → No Enforcement

Foreign Award Enforcement Flow

Foreign Award Obtained
Prepare Required Documents
File Section 47 Application in Indian Court
Notice to Award Debtor
Award Debtor's Response
No Objection ↓
Award Enforced as Decree
Raises Section 48 Grounds ↓
Court Examines Objections
Court Decision
Objections Rejected → Enforce
Objections Sustained → Refuse

Practice Questions and Solutions

Question 1: What is the time limit for filing a Section 34 application?

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Question 2: Can a foreign award be challenged under Section 34 of the Act?

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Question 3: What documents are required to enforce a foreign award in India?

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Question 4: Is there an automatic stay on enforcement when a Section 34 application is filed?

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Question 5: What is the meaning of 'public policy' as a ground for refusing enforcement?

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Question 6: Distinguish between New York Convention and Geneva Convention awards.

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Summary and Key Takeaways

Domestic awards under Part I are enforceable after the 3-month Section 34 period expires

Foreign awards under Part II are enforceable immediately without waiting period

Automatic stay applies to domestic awards but not foreign awards

Courts follow minimal intervention principle in arbitration matters

Public policy is a narrow ground and cannot be used for re-appreciation of evidence

Proper documentation is crucial for enforcement of foreign awards

Limitation period of 3 years applies to execution of all arbitral awards

The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 - Enforcement of Awards

This is an educational resource for understanding arbitration law in India

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