Mere Use of Word ‘Arbitration’ Does Not Create Arbitration Agreement Unless Parties Clearly Intend So: Supreme Court

By Vanita
6 Min Read

The Supreme Court of India has recently clarified that merely using the term “arbitration” in a dispute resolution clause does not automatically amount to a binding arbitration agreement under the law. Unless the contract clearly reflects the intention of the parties to refer disputes to arbitration and be bound by the decision of an arbitral tribunal, the clause cannot be treated as an arbitration agreement under Section 7 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.

This judgment reinforces the foundational principle that arbitration is consensual, and the parties must demonstrate a clear ad idem (meeting of minds) to resolve disputes through arbitration.

Background of the Case

The dispute arose out of a Software Implementation Agreement between:

  • Appellant: Alchemist Hospitals Ltd.
  • Respondent: ICT Health Technology Services India Pvt. Ltd.

The agreement concerned the installation and implementation of a hospital management software. Problems emerged regarding alleged defects in the software, leading to disagreements between the parties.

The controversy centered around Clause 8.28, titled “Arbitration”, which provided that disputes shall first be referred to the Chairman of the respective companies. If the dispute remained unresolved, the parties were free to approach civil courts.

The Appellant sought the appointment of an arbitrator under Section 11(6) of the Arbitration Act. However, the Punjab and Haryana High Court rejected the request, holding that the clause did not amount to an arbitration agreement. The matter then reached the Supreme Court.

Supreme Court’s Findings

The Supreme Court upheld the High Court’s conclusion, holding that:

“The mere use of the word ‘arbitration’ is not sufficient to treat the clause as an arbitration agreement when the corresponding mandatory intention to refer disputes to arbitration and be bound by the arbitral decision is missing.”

The Court observed that the clause allowed the parties to move to civil courts if not satisfied with the decision of the internal authority. Therefore, the decision made under the so-called arbitration clause was not final or binding.

Where the clause allows the parties to avoid, ignore, or challenge the decision in civil court, the Court held, no arbitration agreement exists.

Key Legal Principles Reaffirmed

The Supreme Court relied on its earlier decisions, particularly:

  • K.K. Modi v. K.N. Modi, (1998) 3 SCC 573
  • Jagdish Chander v. Ramesh Chander, (2007) 5 SCC 719

These cases set out the essential elements of a valid arbitration agreement.

Essential Requirements of a Valid Arbitration Agreement

According to the Court, an arbitration agreement must demonstrate:

  1. Binding nature of the tribunal’s decision — the parties must agree that the tribunal’s decision is final.
  2. Jurisdiction of the tribunal must be derived from consent — not from internal managerial authority.
  3. Tribunal must decide substantive rights — not act as a mediator or negotiator.
  4. Decision-making must be fair, impartial, and judicial in nature.
  5. The reference must be legally enforceable — not merely advisory or recommendatory.
  6. Dispute must already be formulated for adjudication.

In the present case, none of these characteristics were satisfied.

Why Clause 8.28 Failed to Qualify as Arbitration

The Court stressed that the disputed clause only created an internal dispute resolution mechanism, not an arbitration process. It did not contemplate:

  • Appointment of an independent neutral arbitrator
  • Finality of the decision
  • Binding effect enforceable under law

Therefore, the clause amounted to conciliation or internal review, not arbitration.

Significance of the Judgment

1. Protection Against Forced Arbitration

This judgment prevents parties from being forced into arbitration merely because the contract contains the word “arbitration”.

2. Reinforces Consent as the Foundation of Arbitration

Arbitration is *voluntary, not automatic. This ruling ensures that the *intent of the parties remains central.

3. Drafting of Contracts Must Be Precise

Businesses must ensure clear drafting of dispute resolution clauses. Merely adding the term “arbitration” is not enough.

Impact on Commercial Agreements

This judgment has important implications for:

StakeholderImpact
Businesses & CorporationsNeed to carefully review dispute resolution clauses
Legal Drafting ProfessionalsMust ensure clarity, enforceability, and binding intent
LitigantsCan challenge vague or internal resolution clauses
CourtsProvided clear criteria to identify valid arbitration agreements

This case serves as a reminder that parties should avoid ambiguous, hybrid, or multi-stage dispute clauses that lack clarity regarding the finality of arbitration.

Conclusion

The Supreme Court has once again emphasized that a valid arbitration agreement requires clear and conscious intention by both parties to:

  • Refer disputes to arbitration
  • Accept the binding nature of the arbitral award

If the agreement allows recourse to civil courts or provides only internal review, the clause cannot be treated as arbitration.

This decision strengthens the integrity and clarity of arbitration law in India and ensures that arbitration remains a choice, not a default triggered merely by wording.

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