Calcutta High Court
Virgo Softech Limited & Anr vs Srei Equipment Finance Ltd on 13 May, 2025
Author: Shampa Sarkar
Bench: Shampa Sarkar
ORDER OCD-37
IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA
COMMERCIAL DIVISION
ORIGINAL SIDE
AP-COM/360/2025
VIRGO SOFTECH LIMITED & ANR.
VS
SREI EQUIPMENT FINANCE LTD.
BEFORE:
The Hon'ble JUSTICE SHAMPA SARKAR
Date:13th May, 2025.
Appearance:
Mr. Akhil Sachar, Adv.
Ms. Sunanda Tulsyan, Adv.
Mr. Roshan Pathak, Adv.
...for petitioners.
Mr. Swatarup Banerjee, Adv.
Mr. Sariful Haque, Adv.
Mr. Subhankar Chakraborty, Adv.
Ms. Ruchira Manna, Adv.
...for respondent.
1. This is an application for setting aside the award, on the ground that the
arbitrator was unilaterally appointed and such unilateral appointment
was not permissible in law. The award is vulnerable not only on the
ground of patent illegality, but also on the ground that it is opposed to the
fundamental policy of Indian law. The law requires an independent and
impartial arbitral tribunal to decide the dispute between the parties. The
Hon'ble Apex Court has laid down that, when an award suffers from non-
consideration of the judgment of the Hon'ble Court, the same is also liable
to be set aside on the ground of patent illegality. The Hon'ble Apex Court
laid down that unilateral appointment of an arbitrator was contrary to the
principle of party autonomy and was statutorily barred.
2
2. The petitioner has rightly challenged the order, in view of the provisions of
Section 12(5) of theArbitration and Prohibition Act. The law prohibits
unilateral appointment of an arbitrator by interested parties. Reference is
made to the decisions Perkins Eastman Architects DPC and Another
vs. HSCC (India) Ltd. reported in 2019 SCC OnLine SC 1517, and
Central Organisation for Railway Electrification vs. ECI SPIC SMO
MCML (JV) A joint Venture Company reported in 2024 SCC OnLine SC
3219.
3. The Hon'ble Apex Court in Central Organization for Railway
Electrification (supra), held thus:-
"73. The 2015 amendment has introduced concrete standards of
impartiality and independence of arbitrators. One of the facets of
impartiality is procedural impartiality. Procedural impartiality
implies that the rules constitutive of the decision-making process
must favour neither party to the dispute or favour or inhibit both
parties equally. Further, a procedurally impartial adjudication
entails equal participation of parties in all aspects of adjudication
for the process to approach legitimacy. Participation in the
adjudicatory process is meaningless for a party against whom the
arbitrator is already prejudiced. Equal participation of parties in the
process of appointment of arbitrators ensures that both sides have
an equal say in the establishment of a genuinely independent and
impartial arbitral process.
74. Under Sections 12(1) and 12(5), the Arbitration Act recognises
certain mandatory standards of independent and impartial
tribunals. The parties have to challenge the independence or
impartiality of the arbitrator or arbitrators in terms of Section 12(3)
before the same arbitral tribunal under Section 13. If the tribunal
3
rejects the challenge, it has to continue with the arbitral proceedings
and make an award. Such an award can always be challenged
under Section 34. However, considerable time and expenses are
incurred by the parties by the time the award is set aside by the
courts. Equal participation of parties at the stage of the appointment
of arbitrators can thus obviate later challenges to arbitrators.
75. Independence and impartiality of arbitral proceedings and
equality of parties are concomitant principles. The independence
and impartiality of arbitral proceedings can be effectively enforced
only if the parties can participate equally at all stages of an arbitral
process. Therefore, the principle of equal treatment of parties
applies at all stages of arbitral proceedings, including the stage of
the appointment of arbitrators.
***
124. The doctrine of bias as evolved in English and Indian law emphasizes independence and impartiality in the process of adjudication to inspire the confidence of the public in the adjudicatory processes. Although Section 12 deals with the quality of independence and impartiality inherent in the arbitrators, the provision's emphasis is to ensure an independent and impartial arbitral process.
169. In view of the above discussion, we conclude that:
a. The principle of equal treatment of parties applies at all stages of arbitration proceedings, including the stage of appointment of arbitrators ;
b. The Arbitration Act does not prohibit PSUs from empanelling potential arbitrators. However, an arbitration clause cannot mandate the other party to select its arbitrator from the panel curated by PSUs;
c. A clause that allows one party to unilaterally appoint a sole arbitrator gives rise to justifiable doubts as to the independence and impartiality of the arbitrator. Further, such a unilateral clause is 4 exclusive and hinders equal participation of the other party in the appointment process of arbitrators;
d. In the appointment of a three-member panel, mandating the other party to select its arbitrator from a curated panel of potential arbitrators is against the principle of equal treatment of parties. In this situation, there is no effective counterbalance because parties do not participate equally in the process of appointing arbitrators. The process of appointing arbitrators in CORE (supra) is unequal and prejudiced in favour of the Railways;
e. Unilateral appointment clauses in public-private contracts are violative of Article 14 of the Constitution ;
f. The principle of express waiver contained under the proviso to Section 12(5) also applies to situations where the parties seek to waive the allegation of bias against an arbitrator appointed unilaterally by one of the parties. After the disputes have arisen, the parties can determine whether there is a necessity to waive the nemo judex rule;"
In Perkins Eastman (supra), the Hon'ble Apex Court held thus :-
..."20. We thus have two categories of cases. The first, similar to the one dealt with in TRF Ltd. [TRF Ltd. v. Energo Engg. Projects Ltd., (2017) 8 SCC 377 : (2017) 4 SCC (Civ) 72] where the Managing Director himself is named as an arbitrator with an additional power to appoint any other person as an arbitrator. In the second category, the Managing Director is not to act as an arbitrator himself but is empowered or authorised to appoint any other person of his choice or discretion as an arbitrator. If, in the first category of cases, the Managing Director was found incompetent, it was because of the interest that he would be said to be having in the outcome or result of the dispute. The element of invalidity would thus be directly relatable to and arise from the interest that he would be having in such outcome or decision. If that be the test, similar invalidity would always arise and spring even in the second category of cases. If the interest that he has in the outcome of the dispute, is taken to be the basis for the possibility of bias, it will always be present irrespective of whether the matter stands under the first or second category of 5 cases. We are conscious that if such deduction is drawn from the decision of this Court in TRF Ltd. [TRF Ltd. v. Energo Engg. Projects Ltd., (2017) 8 SCC 377 : (2017) 4 SCC (Civ) 72] , all cases having clauses similar to that with which we are presently concerned, a party to the agreement would be disentitled to make any appointment of an arbitrator on its own and it would always be available to argue that a party or an official or an authority having interest in the dispute would be disentitled to make appointment of an arbitrator.
21. But, in our view that has to be the logical deduction from TRF Ltd. [TRF Ltd. v. Energo Engg. Projects Ltd., (2017) 8 SCC 377 :
(2017) 4 SCC (Civ) 72] Para 50 of the decision shows that this Court was concerned with the issue, "whether the Managing Director, after becoming ineligible by operation of law, is he still eligible to nominate an arbitrator" The ineligibility referred to therein, was as a result of operation of law, in that a person having an interest in the dispute or in the outcome or decision thereof, must not only be ineligible to act as an arbitrator but must also not be eligible to appoint anyone else as an arbitrator and that such person cannot and should not have any role in charting out any course to the dispute resolution by having the power to appoint an arbitrator. The next sentences in the paragraph, further show that cases where both the parties could nominate respective arbitrators of their choice were found to be completely a different situation. The reason is clear that whatever advantage a party may derive by nominating an arbitrator of its choice would get counter-balanced by equal power with the other party. But, in a case where only one party has a right to appoint a sole arbitrator, its choice will always have an element of exclusivity in determining or charting the course for dispute resolution. Naturally, the person who has an interest in the outcome or decision of the dispute must not have the power to appoint a sole arbitrator. That has to be taken as the essence of the amendments brought in by the Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act, 2015 (3 of 2016) and recognised by the decision of this Court in TRF Ltd. [TRF Ltd. v. Energo Engg. Projects Ltd., (2017) 8 SCC 377 :
(2017) 4 SCC (Civ) 72] ...
24. In Voestalpine [VoestalpineSchienen GmbH v. DMRC, (2017) 4 SCC 665 : (2017) 2 SCC (Civ) 607] , this Court dealt with independence and impartiality of the arbitrator as under : (SCC pp. 687-88 & 690-91, paras 20 to 22 & 30) "20. Independence and impartiality of the arbitrator are the hallmarks of any arbitration proceedings. Rule against bias is one of the fundamental principles of natural justice which applied to all judicial and quasi-judicial proceedings. It is for this reason that notwithstanding the fact that relationship between the parties to the arbitration and the arbitrators themselves are contractual in nature 6 and the source of an arbitrator's appointment is deduced from the agreement entered into between the parties, notwithstanding the same non-independence and non-impartiality of such arbitrator (though contractually agreed upon) would render him ineligible to conduct the arbitration. The genesis behind this rational is that even when an arbitrator is appointed in terms of contract and by the parties to the contract, he is independent of the parties. Functions and duties require him to rise above the partisan interest of the parties and not to act in, or so as to further, the particular interest of either parties. After all, the arbitrator has adjudicatory role to perform and, therefore, he must be independent of parties as well as impartial. The United Kingdom Supreme Court has beautifully highlighted this aspect in Hashwani v. Jivraj [Hashwani v. Jivraj, (2011) 1 WLR 1872 : 2011 UKSC 40] in the following words : (WLR p. 1889, para 45) '45. ... the dominant purpose of appointing an arbitrator or arbitrators is the impartial resolution of the dispute between the parties in accordance with the terms of the agreement and, although the contract between the parties and the arbitrators would be a contract for the provision of personal services, they were not personal services under the direction of the parties.'
21. Similarly, Cour de Cassation, France, in a judgment delivered in 1972 in Consorts Ury [Fouchard, Gaillard, Goldman on International Commercial Arbitration, 562 [Emmanuel Gaillard & John Savage (Eds.) 1999] {quoting Cour de cassation [Cass.] [Supreme Court for judicial matters] Consorts Ury v. S.A. des Galeries Lafayette, Cass.2e civ., 13-4-1972, JCP, Pt. II, No. 17189 (1972) (France)}.] , underlined that:
'an independent mind is indispensable in the exercise of judicial power, whatever the source of that power may be, and it is one of the essential qualities of an arbitrator'.
22. Independence and impartiality are two different concepts. An arbitrator may be independent and yet, lack impartiality, or vice versa. Impartiality, as is well accepted, is a more subjective concept as compared to independence. Independence, which is more an objective concept, may, thus, be more straightforwardly ascertained by the parties at the outset of the arbitration proceedings in light of the circumstances disclosed by the arbitrator, while partiality will more likely surface during the arbitration proceedings.
***
30. Time has come to send positive signals to the international business community, in order to create healthy arbitration environment and conducive arbitration culture in this country. Further, as highlighted by the Law Commission also in its report, duty becomes more onerous in government contracts, where one of 7 the parties to the dispute is the Government or public sector undertaking itself and the authority to appoint the arbitrator rests with it. In the instant case also, though choice is given by DMRC to the opposite party but it is limited to choose an arbitrator from the panel prepared by DMRC. It, therefore, becomes imperative to have a much broadbased panel, so that there is no misapprehension that principle of impartiality and independence would be discarded at any stage of the proceedings, specially at the stage of constitution of the Arbitral Tribunal. We, therefore, direct that DMRC shall prepare a broadbased panel on the aforesaid lines, within a period of two months from today..."
4. Under such circumstances, this Court is of the view that the petitioners have made out a strong case for interference by this Court under Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. The learned arbitrator did not take note of decisions discussed hereinabove. The learned arbitrator was unilaterally appointed by the respondent. The petitioner allegedly raised an objection before the learned arbitrator, but the said objection was not considered. It is alleged that sometime in 2016-2017, the learned arbitrator had appeared on behalf of the respondent, as a counsel.
5. Be that as it may, this award is liable to be set aside on the grounds stated above and also on the ground of perversity. The award also suffers from erroneous assumption of jurisdiction. Accordingly, the application is allowed. The award is set aside.
6. Mr. Banerjee submits before this Court that the Court may appoint an arbitrator here and now, to adjudicate the disputes between the parties.
However, the learned advocate for the petitioner opposes such prayer.
87. Under such circumstances, as a consequence of the award being set aside on the ground of unilateral appointment, the respondent is at liberty to proceed in accordance with law.
8. As no affidavits have been called for, the factual aspects are deemed not to have been admitted. The matter has been decided on the point of law.
(SHAMPA SARKAR, J.) S. Kumar / R.D. Barua