Is your Arbitration Agreement/Clause valid enough and enforceable?
Is your Arbitration Agreement/Clause valid enough and enforceable?
This review was necessitated to address the court’s jurisdiction to adjudicate issues at the pre-appointment stage, which has been the subject matter of numerous cases before the hon’ble Supreme Court as well as various High Courts in India. Different benches of the Supreme Court have rendered conflicting decisions on this issue.
The constitutional bench of the Supreme Court which has ruled in 3:2 that – “an instrument which is eligible to stamp duty may contain an arbitration clause and which is not stamped cannot be said to be a contract enforceable in law within the meaning of S. 2(h) of the Contract Act and is not enforceable under S 2(g) of the Contract Act”, which in essence means that- If an Agreement is unstamped or insufficiently stamped, the arbitration clause is not enforceable. With the ramifications and impact on the future arbitrations as it’s now a settled law that any agreement without payment of stamp duty or insufficient stamp are not enforceable, there are few issues which need to review by the parties, litigants etc. to avoid any future settlement of conflict among the commercial transactions via arbitration :
- The impact on on-going arbitration with unstamped agreement?
- The parties who already have an arbitration agreement/clause but no stamp duty has been paid on such agreements? Would their disputes to be settled through civil court or is there any way for them to enforce the arbitration agreements?
- Are there any precautionary measures which the parties should opt for it, to avoid any non-enforcement issues w.r.t. arbitration agreements/clause in future?
This article is for information purpose only and should not be taken as legal advice.
To know further details, clarification, assistance or any advice on arbitration or legal issues on arbitration, you may connect with us at admin@equicorplegal.com / 08448824659 and visit www.equicorplegal.com.