The Corporate & Commercial Law Society Blog, HNLU

Category: Supreme Court

  • In Dissent Lies the Truth: A Critical Look at the Court’s Power to Modify an Arbitral Award

    In Dissent Lies the Truth: A Critical Look at the Court’s Power to Modify an Arbitral Award

    BY ANMOL TYAGI, THIRD-YEAR STUDENT AT RGNUL, PATIALA.

    INTRODUCTION

    With a 4:1 majority decision in Gayatri Balasamy vs. M/S ISG Novasoft Technologies Ltd. (2025), (‘Balasamy’) the Supreme Court fundamentally altered India’s arbitration landscape by recognizing courts’ power to modify arbitral awards under Sections 34 and 37 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (‘the Act’) to modify an arbitral award. This watershed judgment resolves a decade-long jurisprudential conflict sparked by the Court’s 2021 M. Hakeem ruling, which categorically denied modification powers. By permitting limited judicial corrections from computational errors to compensation adjustments, the majority attempts to balance arbitration’s finality with the practical need for efficient justice. However, Justice K.V. Viswanathan’s dissent warns that this “judicial innovation” risks reviving the very interventionist culture the 1996 Act sought to eradicate. This article, firstly, delves into the controversy and analyses the ratio in its pragmatic context; secondly, it analyses its implications and advocates for how what should have been a unanimous verdict is penned down as a dissenting opinion; and lastly, it tries to explore a way forward.

    THE MAJORITY ON THE POWER TO MODIFY

    The Apex Court, through judicial precedents, proffered minimal judicial intervention in arbitral awards, not extending to correction of errors of fact, reconsideration of costs, or engagement in the review of the arbitral awards.

    For modification of awards, the court held that a modification does not necessarily entail the examination of the merits of the case, thereby allowing limited power of modification within the confines of Section 34 without a merit-based evaluation under certain circumstances including; where severing invalid from the valid, correcting clerical, computational and typographical error, certain post award interest and under Article 142 of the Constitution of India, where it is required and necessary to end litigation.  Progressively, such a decision was held to prevent the hardship of re-filing an arbitration and a manifestation of the objects of the Act.

    To that end, the majority in Balasamy invoked the maxim omne majus continet in se minus (“the greater includes the lesser”) to justify modification as incidental to the power to set aside awards. This reasoning hinges on Section 34(2)(a)(iv), which permits partial annulment if an award exceeds the scope of submission. By framing severability as statutory intent, the Court positioned modification as a natural extension of existing powers rather than a novel judicial innovation.

    For severability of awards, the court held that the greater power to set aside an award under Section 34 also includes the lesser power to sever the invalid portion of an award from the valid portion under Section 34(2)(a)(iv) of the Act, whenever they are legally and practically separable. The court differentiated the power conferred under section 34(4) from the limited power to modify on the ground of flexibility. The court upheld the idea of remittal under Section 34(4) as a remedial mechanism enabling the arbitral tribunal to correct curable defects in the award upon court adjournment. On the other hand, modification involves the court directly changing the award, which is limited and requires certainty.

    ANALYSIS OF THE MAJORITY OPINION

    While the court may have tried to weave the principle of equity and justice without offending the judicial fabric of Section 34 and the legislative intent of the Act, certain shortcomings are still exposed. Justice K.V. Vishwanathan’s dissent helps explore these shortcomings.

    i) Theoretical tensions: Party Autonomy vs. Judicial Paternalism

    Justice K.V. Vishwanathan’s dissent concurs with the idea that the power to modify subsumes the power to set aside under section 34 of the Act is fallacious, since the power to set aside an arbitral award does not inherently include the power to modify it because the two functions serve distinct purposes within the arbitration framework. Similar was the rationale of the court in M. Hakeem. Setting aside an award under Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, is a corrective measure that allows courts to annul an award if it violates fundamental legal principles, such as public policy or procedural fairness. In contrast, modification implies an active intervention where the court alters the substance of the award, which contradicts the principle of minimal judicial interference in arbitration, as in the Mcdermott International Case.

    The proposition of limited modification of an award in the interest of expeditious dispute resolution may seem attractive at first instance, especially for commercial arbitrations involving public law, where the courts may modify the award to enhance compensation for the land acquisition. However, it points to vital concerns regarding its applicability by the courts in general and arguably, the power of remand under section 34(4), though different from the modification powers, acts as a safety valve and serves a similar purpose as it arrays wide powers upon the arbitral tribunal to modify an arbitral award for an effective enforceability.

    Theoretically, arbitration is a voluntary act of dispute resolution through a third party, different from courts and its legal procedures.  While the judgment provides for modification powers to remove the ‘invalid’ from the ‘valid’ and enforce complete justice under Article 142 of the Constitution, it not only raises concerns as to its applicability and limitation in determining what constitutes ‘invalid’ or complete justice, but also strikes at the core of arbitration. It does so by contradicting the fundamental characteristic and statutory intent of arbitration, i.e., the finality of the award through minimal judicial intervention, as was held in Re: Interplay Between Arbitration Agreements Under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, and the Indian Stamp Act, 1899.

    Justice K.V. Viswanathan’s dissent highlights a critical tension: the 1996 Act deliberately omitted modification powers present in its predecessor, the 1940 Arbitration Act. The legislature’s conscious choice to limit courts to setting aside or remitting awards reflects a policy decision to prioritize finality over granular corrections. Noting that the Parliament intentionally omitted the ‘powers to modify’ from the repealed Arbitration Act, 1940, the majority’s interpretation risks judicial overreach by reading into the Act what the Parliament excluded, a point underscored by the dissent’s warning that using Article 142 to modify awards subverts legislative authority.

    To that end, arbitration’s legitimacy stems from its contractual nature. By allowing courts to “improve” awards, Balasamy subtly shifts arbitration from a party-driven process to one subject to judicial paternalism. This contravenes the kompetenz-kompetenz principle, which reserves jurisdictional decisions for tribunals. Notably, the UNCITRAL Model Law emphasizes tribunal autonomy in rectifying awards (Article 33), a responsibility now partially appropriated by Indian courts

    ii. Impact on Arbitral decision making

    The threat of post-hoc judicial adjustments may incentivize arbitrators to over-explain conclusions or avoid innovative remedies. For instance, tribunals awarding compensation in land acquisition cases might default to conservative valuations to pre-empt judicial reduction. Conversely, the power to correct clerical errors (e.g., miscalculated interest rates) could save parties from unnecessary remands.

    iii. Enforcement Challenges

    While the Court envisions modification as a time-saving measure, practical realities suggest otherwise. District courts lacking commercial arbitration expertise may struggle to apply the “severability” test, leading to inconsistent rulings and appeals. The Madras High Court’s conflicting orders in Balasamy (first increasing compensation, then slashing it) illustrate how modification powers can prolong litigation.

    Arguably, with the possibility of modification, the judgment practically creates uncertainty and opens Pandora’s box, thereby exposing every arbitration being challenged under some pretext or other. The effect of the judgment might extend to various PSUs, companies, and individuals opting out of arbitration, fearing the non-finality of the award.

    The majority’s reliance on Article 142 to justify modifications creates a constitutional paradox.

    While the provision gives the Supreme Court the power to do “complete justice,” applying it to an arbitral mechanism of private dispute settlement blurs the line between public law exceptionalism and the enforcement of private contracts, which arguably would render Article 142 a “universal fix” for disenchanted arbitral awards.

    For land acquisition cases and corporate disputes both, this poses a paradox: courts acquire efficiency tools at the risk of sacrificing arbitration’s fundamental promise of expert-driven finality. As Justice Viswanathan warns, the distinction between “severance” and appellate review remains precariously thin. With ₹1.3 trillion in ongoing arbitrations at stake, Balasamy’s real test lies in whether lower courts use this power with the “great caution” prescribed inadvertently to revive India’s reputation for boundless arbitration litigation

    COMPARITIVE INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES

    Leading arbitration hubs strictly reserve judicial modification. Singapore’s International Arbitration Act only allows setting aside on grounds of procedure and not on a substantive basis. The UK Arbitration Act 1996 can correct only clerical errors or clarifications (Section 57), whereas Hong Kong’s 2024 rules authorize tribunals-not courts-to correct awards. India’s new “limited modification” system varies by allowing courts to modify compensation values and interest rates, which amounts to re-introducing appellate-style review.

    The UNCITRAL Model Law that influenced the Act limits courts to setting aside awards (Article 34). More than 30 Model Law jurisdictions, such as Germany and Canada, allow modifications by way of tailormade legislative provisions. The Balasamy judgment establishes a hybrid model where there is judicial modification without an express statutory authority, raising concerns in enforcement under the New York Convention. As Gary Born observes, effective jurisdictions identify procedural predictability as a core value threatened by unfettered judicial discretion.

    THE WAY FORWARD: ENSURING EQUILIBRIUM

    The decision permitting limited alteration of the arbitral award represents a paradigm shift in the jurisprudence. The decision demonstrates a genuine effort to balance efficiency with fairness. However, its success depends on responsible judicial application. In the absence of strict adherence to the “limited circumstances” paradigm, India stands the risk of undermining arbitration’s essential strengths: speed, finality, and autonomy. As Justice Viswanathan warned, the distinction between correction and appellate review remains hair-thin. What is relevant here is how the courts apply the new interpretation to amend arbitral awards. Objectively, the courts have to be careful not to exercise the powers of amendment in exceptional situations to that extent, refraining from any impact on the finality of the arbitral award as well as the faith of the citizenry and other institutions within it.

    To avoid abuse, parliament has to enact modification grounds by amending Section 34, in line with Section 57 of the UK Arbitration Act, specifically allowing for corrections confined to reasons specified, promoting clarity and accountability. The Supreme Court would need to direct guidelines to the lower courts for arbitral award modification only when the errors are patent and indisputable, refrain from re-assessing evidence or re-iterating legal principles, and give preference to remission to tribunals under Section 34(4) where possible.

  • Sanctity Of The Commercial Wisdom Of CoC’ Vis-À-Vis ‘Interest Of The Dissenting Financial Creditors’ Under IBC : A Curious Case

    Sanctity Of The Commercial Wisdom Of CoC’ Vis-À-Vis ‘Interest Of The Dissenting Financial Creditors’ Under IBC : A Curious Case

    By Vijpreet Pal and Sanskar Modi, third-year students at NLIU, Bhopal.

    Introduction

    Before the enactment of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Bill of 2019 (‘2019 Amendment’), there were no provisions to guide the Committee of Creditors’ (‘CoC’) discretionary power in the approval of the resolution plan. However, the 2019 Amendment demystified the distinction between the secured and unsecured creditors under the resolution plan and illustrated distinct provisions for dissenting Financial Creditors. The Amendment added, “the manner of distribution proposed, which may take into account the order of priority amongst creditors as laid down in sub-section (1) of section 53, including the priority and value of the security interest of a secured creditor,” to Section 30(4) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (‘IBC’).

    However, this amendment gave rise to the conundrum that whether the secured financial creditors can challenge the approved resolution plan by arguing that enforcement of the entire security interest is their prerogative and henceforth they must be awarded a higher amount. The Honorable Supreme Court (‘SC’) in the recent case of India Resurgence Arc Private Limited vs. Amit Metaliks Limited & Another resolved this dubiety by holding that it would be against the objectives of IBC if the secured creditor is allowed a higher amount than entitled under the approved resolution plan on the basis of security interest available to him over the corporate debtor’s assets. The Court basically tried to create a balance between the established principle of sanctity of the commercial wisdom of CoC and the interests of the dissenting secured creditor post 2019 amendment. This article shall briefly delineate upon the misconstrued understanding of the 2019 amendment. It will also examine the inequitable scenario which would be created if the financial creditors are awarded higher amount than proposed in the resolution plan for the same class of creditors.

    Background to the dispute

    The appellant company i.e India Resurgence Arc Pvt. Ltd. was the secured financial creditor of the corporate debtor i.e. Amit Metaliks Ltd. (respondent). In the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (‘CIRP’) commenced against the respondent, the appellant expressed his dissatisfaction on the share being proposed with reference to the value of security interest held by it and remained a dissentient financial creditor. However, the resolution plan proposed by the resolution applicant got appreciably approved by the CoC with 95.35% votes. Since all the mandatory compliances prescribed under Section 30 of the IBC were fulfilled and entitlements of all the stakeholders were taken care of, the National Company Law Tribunal (‘NCLT’) Kolkata approved the resolution plan. On an appeal before the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (‘NCLAT’), the appellate tribunal relying upon the judgment of Committee of Creditors of Essar Steel India Ltd. vs. Satish Kumar & Ors.(Essar) observed that the amendment to Section 30(4) falls into the exclusive domain of the CoC and therefore, it is a discretionary, a non-mandatory power conferred upon the CoC to take into account the security interest like considerations.

    Aggrieved by the NCLAT’s ruling, the appellant challenged it before the SC. The major contention of the appellant was the failure on the part of CoC to consider the value of security interest even after the amendment made to Section 30(4). The appellant urged that the value of the security possessed by him was INR 12 Crores, still he was offered the minimal amount of INR 2.026 Crores against the admitted claim of the amount INR 13.38 Crores. 

    It was strongly postulated by the appellant that Section 30(4) manifestly requires the CoC to consider the waterfall mechanism (if a company is being liquidated, secured financial creditors must be first paid the full extent of their admitted claim before any sale proceedings are distributed to any other unsecured creditor) as laid down under Section 53(1), including the value of the security interest created by the secured creditor and CoC cannot shut their eyes to the value of security interest while considering the viability and reasonableness of the proposed resolution plan.

    Judicial Review of the Resolution Plan confined to Section 30(2)

    The Honorable SC on the issue regarding judicial review of the approved resolution plan held that it is undisputed that the scope of judicial review of the commercial wisdom of CoC is limited within the mandatory requirements mentioned under Section 30(2) of the IBC.

    Placing reliance on K. Sashidhar vs. Indian Overseas Bank & Ors., the court noted that the legislature while enacting the IBC has knowingly not provided any ground to challenge the commercial wisdom of the CoC before the Adjudicating Authority (‘AA’) and that the decision of CoC’s commercial wisdom has been made non-justiciable. Further, relying upon Jaypee Kensington Boulevard Apartments Welfare Association and Ors vs. NBCC (India) Ltd. & Ors (Jaypee Kensington), the court observed that the powers of the AA dealing with the resolution plan do not extend to examine the correctness of the commercial wisdom exercised by the CoC. AA by exercising its power under Section 30(2) is only authorized to examine that the resolution plan does not contravene any of the provisions of law and it confirms other requirements like payment of IRP Cost, payment of Debts of operational creditors, payment of debts of dissenting financial creditor, management of affairs of corporate debtor after the approval of resolution plan and implementation and supervision of resolution plan. It is not vested with the power to assess the resolution plan on the basis of qualitative analysis and therefore, the dissatisfaction of every secured creditor like the appellant cannot take a legal character under the IBC.

    The CoC accountable for equitable treatment of similar class creditors

    The appellant reiteratively contended that the CoC has not prioritized its claims as per the amended provision of Section 30(4) which obligates the CoC to take into account priority and value of security interest of the secured creditor. The Court clarified this issue by referring to the Essar ruling which observed that the amended provision of Section 30(4) only amplified the considerations for the CoC while exercising its commercial wisdom so as to make an informed decision regarding the feasibility and viability of the resolution plan.  The business decision of the CoC does not call for interference unless creditors belonging to a similar class are denied fair and equitable treatment. Similar reasoning could be traced from the case of Hero Fincorp Limited v. Ravi Scans Private Limited & Others wherein the NCLAT ruled that IBC does not provide any discrimination among financial creditors on the ground of their dissenting status, post the 2019 amendment made to Section 30(2)(b).

    In the instant case, the court noted that the proposal for payment to the dissenting financial creditor (appellant) is equitable and is at par with the percentage of payment proposed to other secured financial creditors. Therefore, the dissenting secured creditors like the appellant cannot suggest a higher amount to be paid by relying on the value of the security interest held by them.

    Amended S. 30(2)(b)- Not a panacea for the dissenting Financial Creditors

    The SC further observed that the amended provision of Section 30(2)(b), on which the excessive reliance has been placed by the appellant, only states that the dissentient financial creditor shall be provided with the payment of a debt which shall not be less than the amount paid to such creditors in accordance with the waterfall mechanism enshrined in Section 53(1).

    The Insolvency Law Committee Report of 2018, which lead to 2019 amendment, has also observed that providing priority to the dissenting financial creditors will not be prudent as it may encourage financial creditors to vote against the plan and may consequently hinder resolution. The objective behind the 2019 amendment was never to provide the enforcement of the entire security interest available with the secured creditors. The only intention was to grant security to dissenting financial creditors who may be cramped down by the secured creditors holding majority votes, overpowering dissenting financial creditors and giving them nothing or next to nothing for their dues.

    Such creditors are only allowed to receive payment to the extent of their entitlement and that would satisfy Section 30(2)(b) of the IBC which mandates that a dissentient secured creditor be provided with a certain minimum amount which shall not be less than the amount paid to such creditors in the event of liquidation.

    As a result, the Court while dismissing the appellant’s claim observed that any dissenting secured creditor like appellant cannot interfere in the CIRP process by urging a higher amount to be paid with reference to the value of their security interest.

    The ruling of the Court, henceforth, leads to two main observations-:

    • Commercial Wisdom of CoC can’t be interfered.

    The commercial wisdom of CoC is amenable to judicial review as long as it goes in consonance with the basic provisions and objectives of the IBC.

    • Equitable Treatment among the creditors is the main objective.

    The Resolution Plan submitted under Section 30 does not advocate equal treatment among all the creditors, rather it obligates a fair and equitable treatment.

    Therefore, the interest of the dissenting secured creditor like appellant can’t be satisfied under the guise of ‘Security Interest’ and the commercial wisdom of CoC prescribing the equitable treatment of creditors shall prevail in such cases.

    Conclusion

    The instant judgment gives an important observation on the issue when the commercial wisdom of the CoC in respect of the distribution of assets is challenged by the secured financial creditor. The Court while answering in favor of the commercial wisdom of CoC noted that a resolution plan under the IBC cannot be challenged by a dissenting financial creditor just on the ground that he is entitled to a higher amount based on the value of security interest. If the reasoning as contended by the appellant were to be accepted, the process will witness more liquidation than resolution with every secured financial creditor choosing to dissent. Therefore, by reiterating the principles of ‘limited judicial review’ and the ‘supremacy of the commercial wisdom of CoC’ after the approval of the resolution plan, the Court has bolstered the objectives of the IBC which is balancing the interest of all the stakeholders by maximizing the value of assets of interested persons.