Meaning & Attributes of Arbitration
Landmark Case: Bharat Aluminium Co. v. Kaiser Aluminium Technical Services (BALCO) (2012) 9 SCC 552 — A Constitution Bench held that Part I of the A&C Act, 1996 applies only to arbitrations seated in India, modernising Indian arbitration and aligning it with international standards.
Meaning & Definition
Arbitration is the resolution of a dispute by a private tribunal chosen by the parties, whose decision (the “award”) is final and binding.
Section 2(1)(a), Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996: “‘arbitration’ means any arbitration whether or not administered by a permanent arbitral institution.”
In Simple Terms:
- Parties choose a neutral private judge (arbitrator).
- The arbitrator hears both sides and gives a binding award.
- The award is enforced like a court decree (Section 36).
Attributes / General Principles of Arbitration
- Consent-based: Parties must agree in writing (Section 7).
- Private Tribunal: Parties choose their arbitrator(s).
- Quasi-judicial: Arbitrator acts like a judge.
- Binding Award: Final, with limited grounds of challenge (Section 34).
- Confidentiality: Section 42A — proceedings are confidential.
- Procedural flexibility: Section 19 — parties decide procedure.
- Minimum court interference: Section 5.
- Independence & impartiality: Section 12 + Fifth & Seventh Schedules.
- Speed and finality: Section 29A — award within 12 months.
- Equal treatment: Section 18 — equal opportunity to both parties.
- Kompetenz-Kompetenz: Tribunal decides its own jurisdiction (Section 16).
Salient Features of the Arbitration & Conciliation Act, 1996
- Based on UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration, 1985.
- Consolidates law on domestic, international, and foreign awards in one statute.
- Minimum court interference (Section 5).
- Separability of arbitration clause — survives even if the main contract is void (Section 16).
- Award is final and binding (Section 35), enforced as a decree (Section 36).
- Limited grounds for setting aside award (Section 34).
- Interim measures — by tribunal (Section 17) and court (Section 9).
- Recognises institutional arbitration (post-2019 Amendment).
- Time-bound disposal (Section 29A — 12 months; Section 29B Fast-Track — 6 months).
- Mandatory disclosure of conflict of interest (Section 12 + Schedules).
- Confidentiality (Section 42A — inserted by 2019 Amendment).
Structure of the Act
| Part | Sections | Subject |
|---|---|---|
| Part I | 2–43 | Domestic Arbitration |
| Part II | 44–60 | Foreign Awards (New York / Geneva Conventions) |
| Part III | 61–81 | Conciliation |
| Part IV | 82–86 | Supplementary provisions |
| Schedules | I–VII | Grounds for disqualification etc. |
Key Section Numbers — Must Know
| Section | Subject |
|---|---|
| 5 | Minimum court interference |
| 7 | Arbitration agreement |
| 9 | Interim measures by court |
| 11 | Appointment of arbitrators |
| 12 | Grounds for challenge |
| 16 | Kompetenz-Kompetenz + Separability |
| 17 | Interim measures by tribunal |
| 18 | Equal treatment |
| 29A | 12-month time-limit for award |
| 29B | Fast-Track — 6-month award |
| 31 | Form & contents of award |
| 34 | Setting aside award |
| 35 | Finality of award |
| 36 | Enforcement as decree |
| 42A | Confidentiality |
Info
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