πŸ“‹ Overview of Part IV

What is Part IV About?

Part IV of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 contains Supplementary Provisions. These are like the "support system" of the Act - they provide the tools and mechanisms needed to make the main provisions work smoothly.

Think of it like this: If Part I, II, and III are the main engine of a car, Part IV is the fuel system, electrical wiring, and maintenance manual that keeps everything running!

Key Features of Part IV:

  • Rule-Making Powers: Authorizes High Courts and Central Government to create detailed rules
  • Transitional Provisions: Handles the shift from old laws to the new Act
  • Difficulty Removal: Empowers the government to solve implementation problems
  • Temporal Application: Clarifies which version of law applies to which proceedings
Section 82

Power of High Court to Make Rules

πŸ—£οΈ Simple Explanation:

This section gives High Courts the power to create their own detailed rules for handling arbitration cases. It's like giving the principal of a school the authority to make school rules - as long as those rules don't contradict the main education laws.

Key Points:
  • Who has the power? Each High Court in India
  • What can they make? Rules about court procedures under this Act
  • Important Condition: Rules must be "consistent" with the Act (cannot contradict it)
  • Purpose: To manage local court procedures efficiently

πŸ“ Practical Example:

Scenario: The Delhi High Court receives many applications under Section 11 (appointment of arbitrators). To handle these efficiently, the High Court can make rules specifying:

  • The format of the application form
  • The fees to be paid
  • The number of copies required
  • The time slots for hearings

These rules help standardize the process and make it smoother for everyone!

βš–οΈ Landmark Case Law:

Sundaram Finance Ltd. v. NEPC India Ltd.

Citation: (1999) 2 SCC 479

Court: Supreme Court of India

Key Point: The Supreme Court observed that High Courts have the authority to frame rules for smooth administration of arbitration proceedings, but such rules cannot override or contradict the substantive provisions of the Act. The rule-making power is procedural in nature.

Significance: This case established that Section 82 provides ancillary/procedural power, not substantive law-making authority.

πŸ“Š Section 82 at a Glance:

Aspect Details
Authority High Courts
Scope Procedural rules for court proceedings
Limitation Must be consistent with the Act
Nature Delegated legislation (subordinate)
Section 83

Removal of Difficulties

πŸ—£οΈ Simple Explanation:

This is the "emergency repair kit" of the Act! Sometimes when a new law starts operating, unexpected problems pop up. This section allows the Central Government to fix those problems quickly without going through the lengthy process of amending the Act in Parliament.

Key Points:
  • Who can act? Central Government only
  • When can they act? When there's a "difficulty" in implementing the Act
  • How do they act? By publishing an order in the Official Gazette
  • Time Limit: Only within 2 years from when the Act started (22nd August 1996)
  • Parliament's Role: Every such order must be placed before Parliament

πŸ“ Practical Example:

Scenario: Imagine the Act came into force on 22nd August 1996. In March 1997, courts discovered that the Act didn't clearly specify who should maintain the register of arbitral awards. This created confusion.

Solution: The Central Government could issue an order under Section 83 clarifying this procedural gap, as long as:

  • It's done before 22nd August 1998 (2-year limit)
  • The order doesn't contradict any existing provision
  • The order is published in the Official Gazette
  • The order is laid before Parliament

βš–οΈ Landmark Case Law:

Jalan Trading Co. (P) Ltd. v. Mill Mazdoor Sabha

Citation: (1967) 1 SCR 15

Court: Supreme Court of India

Key Point: While dealing with removal of difficulties clauses generally, the Supreme Court held that such provisions cannot be used to make changes that are inconsistent with the main Act. The power is to remove obstacles in implementation, not to amend or modify the substantive law itself.

Significance: This principle applies to Section 83 - the Government cannot use this section to effectively amend the Act.

πŸ“Š Section 83 at a Glance:

Aspect Details
Authority Central Government
Trigger Difficulty in giving effect to the Act
Time Limit 2 years from commencement
Publication Official Gazette
Parliamentary Oversight Must be laid before both Houses
Limitation Cannot be inconsistent with the Act
Section 84

Power to Make Rules

πŸ—£οΈ Simple Explanation:

This section is like giving the Central Government a permanent "instruction manual writing" power. While Section 83 was for emergencies (2-year limit), Section 84 allows the Government to make detailed rules forever!

Key Points:
  • Who can make rules? Central Government
  • Purpose: To carry out (implement) the provisions of the Act
  • Publication: Must be in the Official Gazette
  • Parliamentary Check: Rules must be placed before both Houses of Parliament for 30 days
  • Parliament's Power: Can modify or reject the rules
  • No Time Limit: Unlike Section 83, this power continues indefinitely

πŸ“ Practical Example:

Scenario: The Act mentions that arbitrators can charge fees, but doesn't specify rates. The Central Government can make rules under Section 84 specifying:

  • Fee scales based on the amount in dispute
  • Maximum fees that can be charged
  • Procedure for fee disputes
  • Refund policies

Real Example: The Fourth Schedule (added by 2015 Amendment) contains model fees for arbitrators - such rules are made under the rule-making power!

βš–οΈ Landmark Case Law:

Union of India v. Cynamide India Ltd.

Citation: (1987) 2 SCC 720

Court: Supreme Court of India

Key Point: The Supreme Court explained that delegated legislation (rules made under an Act) must remain within the four corners of the parent Act. The rule-making power cannot be used to travel beyond the scope of the enabling Act or to contradict its provisions.

Significance: Rules made under Section 84 must be strictly in accordance with the Act and cannot expand or restrict its scope.

πŸ”„ Section 83 vs Section 84:

Feature Section 83 Section 84
Purpose Remove difficulties Carry out provisions
Time Limit 2 years only No time limit
Parliamentary Role Just laying before Parliament 30-day scrutiny + modification power
Nature Emergency/Transitional Permanent/Ongoing
Section 85

Repeal and Savings

πŸ—£οΈ Simple Explanation:

This section is like a "retirement notice with pension" for the old arbitration laws! It says goodbye to three old Acts but ensures that ongoing cases under those old laws don't get disrupted.

Three Acts Repealed:
  • Arbitration (Protocol and Convention) Act, 1937 - Dealt with international arbitration
  • Arbitration Act, 1940 - The main domestic arbitration law
  • Foreign Awards (Recognition and Enforcement) Act, 1961 - Enforcing foreign awards
The "Savings" Part:
  • Old proceedings protected: If arbitration started before 22nd August 1996, old laws apply
  • New proceedings: If arbitration starts on/after 22nd August 1996, new Act applies
  • Party Agreement: Parties can agree to apply new Act to old proceedings
  • Old Rules Saved: Rules made under old Acts continue if not conflicting

πŸ“ Practical Example:

Scenario 1: An arbitration between Company A and Company B started in January 1996 (before the new Act). The hearing is still going on in 1997.

Result: The old Arbitration Act, 1940 will continue to apply to this case.

Scenario 2: Same companies start a NEW dispute in December 1996.

Result: The new 1996 Act will apply.

Scenario 3: In the first scenario, both companies agree to shift to the new Act.

Result: Allowed! The 1996 Act will now apply because parties agreed.

βš–οΈ Landmark Case Law:

Thyssen Stahlunion GmbH v. Steel Authority of India Ltd.

Citation: (1999) 9 SCC 334

Court: Supreme Court of India

Key Point: The Supreme Court held that Section 85(2)(a) creates a clear dividing line - arbitrations commenced before the 1996 Act came into force continue under the old law, while those commenced after fall under the new Act. The word "commenced" is crucial - it refers to when arbitral proceedings actually began, not when the dispute arose.

Significance: This case established the principle of temporal application based on "commencement" of arbitration, not the date of agreement or dispute.

πŸ“Š Section 85 Timeline:

Proceeding Started Applicable Law Can Change?
Before 22nd Aug 1996 Old Acts (1937/1940/1961) Yes, if parties agree
On/After 22nd Aug 1996 New 1996 Act N/A (Mandatory)
Section 86

Repeal and Saving

πŸ—£οΈ Simple Explanation:

This section has a very specific purpose - it deals with the transition from the Ordinance (temporary law) to the permanent Act.

Background:

In India, when Parliament is not in session and urgent legislation is needed, the President can issue an "Ordinance" - a temporary law. Before the 1996 Act was passed by Parliament, there were Ordinances in force. The third such Ordinance (Ordinance 27 of 1996) was the one active when the Act finally passed.

What This Section Does:
  • Repeals: Cancels the Third Ordinance
  • Saves: Everything done under the Ordinance remains valid
  • Deems: Actions under Ordinance are treated as actions under the Act

πŸ“ Practical Example:

Scenario: In July 1996, while the Third Ordinance was in force, a court appointed an arbitrator under that Ordinance. In August 1996, the permanent Act came into force.

Question: Is that arbitrator's appointment still valid?

Answer: Yes! Section 86(2) says the appointment is "deemed to have been made" under the new Act. The arbitration can continue without any interruption.

βš–οΈ Landmark Case Law:

State of Orissa v. Bhupendra Kumar Bose

Citation: AIR 1962 SC 945

Court: Supreme Court of India

Key Point: While dealing with similar transitional provisions (Ordinance to Act), the Supreme Court held that when an Act replaces an Ordinance and contains a saving clause, all actions taken under the Ordinance are preserved and treated as if done under the Act. There is no break in legal continuity.

Significance: This principle of "legal continuity" is exactly what Section 86 ensures for arbitration proceedings.

πŸ’‘ Why Both Section 85 and Section 86?

Section 85 Section 86
Deals with OLD permanent Acts Deals with the ORDINANCE
Repeals: 1937, 1940, 1961 Acts Repeals: Third Ordinance of 1996
Transition from OLD framework Transition from TEMPORARY framework
Section 87

Effect of Arbitral and Related Court Proceedings Commenced Prior to 23rd October, 2015

πŸ—£οΈ Simple Explanation:

This section was added by the 2019 Amendment Act (but made effective retrospectively from 30th August 2019). It's like a "time machine rule" that clarifies which version of the Act applies to which proceeding!

The Key Date: 23rd October, 2015

This is when the major 2015 Amendment Act came into force.

The Rules:
  • OLD ARBITRATIONS (before 23rd Oct 2015):
    • 2015 amendments DO NOT apply
    • Even court cases from these arbitrations follow old law
    • Doesn't matter when the court case started
  • NEW ARBITRATIONS (on/after 23rd Oct 2015):
    • 2015 amendments APPLY
    • Court cases from these arbitrations also follow new law
  • PARTY AGREEMENT: Parties can agree to apply 2015 amendments to old proceedings

πŸ“ Practical Example:

Scenario 1: Arbitration started in 2014. Award given in 2016. Challenge filed in court in 2020.

Question: Which law applies to the challenge?

Answer: The OLD law (pre-2015 version) because the arbitration COMMENCED before 23rd Oct 2015.

Scenario 2: Arbitration started in December 2015. Award given in 2017. Challenge filed in 2018.

Question: Which law applies?

Answer: The NEW law (with 2015 amendments) because arbitration commenced AFTER 23rd Oct 2015.

Why does this matter? The 2015 amendments made MAJOR changes like:

  • Automatic stay of award removed (Section 36)
  • Time limits for arbitration (Section 29A)
  • Stricter public policy grounds (Section 34)

βš–οΈ Landmark Case Law:

BCCI v. Kochi Cricket Pvt. Ltd.

Citation: (2018) 6 SCC 287

Court: Supreme Court of India

Key Point: Before Section 87 was inserted, there was confusion about whether 2015 amendments applied to pending proceedings. The Supreme Court held that Section 26 of the 2015 Amendment Act was prospective, meaning 2015 amendments would apply to pending court proceedings from old arbitrations. This created problems, leading to Section 87's insertion.

Significance: This case's interpretation was OVERRULED by Section 87. Now, the law is clear - 2015 amendments don't apply to arbitrations commenced before 23rd Oct 2015.

Hindustan Construction Co. Ltd. v. Union of India

Citation: (2020) 17 SCC 324

Court: Supreme Court of India

Key Point: The Supreme Court upheld the validity of Section 87 and clarified its retrospective operation. The court recognized that Section 87 was inserted to provide legal certainty and settle the controversy created by conflicting interpretations.

Significance: Confirmed that Section 87 provides definitive clarity on temporal application of 2015 amendments.

πŸ“Š Section 87 Decision Matrix:

Arbitration Commenced 2015 Amendments Apply? Court Proceedings
Before 23rd Oct 2015 NO (unless parties agree) Follow old law
On/After 23rd Oct 2015 YES Follow new law

πŸ“Š Complete Comparison Table - All Sections of Part IV

Section Title Authority Purpose Time Limit Key Feature
82 Power of High Court to Make Rules High Courts Procedural rules for court proceedings No limit Must be consistent with Act
83 Removal of Difficulties Central Government Remove implementation difficulties 2 years from commencement Emergency provision
84 Power to Make Rules Central Government Carry out Act's provisions No limit 30-day Parliamentary scrutiny
85 Repeal and Savings Automatic (Statutory) Transition from old Acts N/A Repeals 1937, 1940, 1961 Acts
86 Repeal and Saving Automatic (Statutory) Transition from Ordinance N/A Preserves Ordinance actions
87 Effect of Prior Proceedings Automatic (Statutory) 2015 Amendment applicability N/A Key date: 23rd Oct 2015

πŸ“ˆ Flowchart - Understanding Part IV

🧠 Mind Map - Part IV Supplementary Provisions

πŸ—ΊοΈ Roadmap - Implementation Journey of Part IV

⚠️ Educational Disclaimer

This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

The information provided herein is intended to give a general understanding of Part IV of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. For specific legal matters, please consult a qualified legal professional. Laws are subject to amendments and judicial interpretations may vary.

Last Updated: November 2025 | Β© Digital E-Filing Coach - Amanuddin Education