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Why The Supreme Court Is Revisiting A Milestone In Arbitration

A larger bench of the top court will be giving a fresh understating of the group of companies doctrine.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>Chief Justice Of India NV Ramana. (Photo: BQ Prime)</p></div>
Chief Justice Of India NV Ramana. (Photo: BQ Prime)

Party autonomy or consent is the key basis of arbitration and multiple court judgments have held that this understanding must be present in writing.

In 2012, however, the Supreme Court of India delivered an important judgment which made way for including those who may not have explicitly signed the arbitration agreement.

In what's come to be known as the Chloro Controls case, the apex court held that a non-signatory can be made party to international arbitration proceedings if there was a legal relationship between them. The group of companies doctrine was accepted as a basis to establish this relationship.

"An arbitration agreement entered into by a company within a group of companies can bind its non-signatory affiliates, if the circumstances demonstrate that the mutual intention of the parties was to bind both the signatory as well as the non-signatory parties". -Supreme Court in Chloro Controls

Soon after, the Arbitration & Conciliation Act,1996 was amended to apply this principle to domestic arbitration. Since then, the group of companies doctrine has served as a basis to include non-signatories to an arbitration.

But now, a three-judge bench of Chief Justice of India Justice NV Ramana, and Justices Hima Kohli and Surya Kant has raised doubts on the correctness of principle laid down in Chloro Controls, prompting it to refer the issue to a larger bench.

Chloro Controls Took Contradictory Positions: Supreme Court

The issue came up in a matter involving Cox and Kings and SAP India Pvt., and the attempt by the former to include Germany-based SAP SE GMBH to the arbitration proceedings. SAP SE GMBH argued that the group of companies doctrine was not applicable as it never participated in the negotiating process of the contract.

The apex court pointed out that amendments to the domestic arbitration law to incorporate the Chloro Controls principle has resulted in certain practical anomalies. For instance, while non-signatories can be made party to arbitration proceedings, they cannot approach courts to seek interim relief since the arbitration law lacks necessary amendments.

Similarly, the bench noted, contradictions exist in how Chloro Controls has been followed:

  • In Cheran Properties case, an arbitral award was enforced against a non-signatory even though it did not participate in the proceedings, extending the group of companies doctrine to even execution proceedings.

  • In another instance, the court refused to apply the ‘’group of companies’’ doctrine as the applicant failed to prove the commonality of intention to be bound by the arbitration agreement.

  • In Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd. case, the court bound a third-party to arbitration on reasoning that a tight corporate group structure constituting a single economic reality existed.

The group of companies doctrine must be applied with caution and mere fact that a non-signatory is a member of a group of affiliated companies will not be sufficient to claim extension of the arbitration agreement to the non-signatory.
Supreme Court in Cox and Kings judgment

The judgment in Chloro Controls case itself had a contradictory approach on when a third party may be bound by the arbitration, Justice Surya Kant noted in his separate opinion.

On the one hand, the court emphasized on the intention of the parties to include the non­-signatory party, but on other, it went on to add that non­signatories may be added to the arbitration proceedings without their consent in “exceptional" cases.
Opinion by Justice Surya Kant

The bench held that it doubts the correctness of the law laid down in Chloro Controls and cases following it.

The law laid down in Chloro Control and the cases following it appear to have been based more on economics and convenience rather than law. This may not be a correct approach.
Supreme Court in Cox and Kings judgment

It framed the following questions for the larger bench:

  • Whether phrase ‘claiming through or under’ in sections 8 and 11 could be interpreted to include ‘group of companies’ doctrine. Section 8 allows a court to refer a party or any person claiming through or under him to arbitration, and Section 11 deals with appointment of arbitrators.

  • Whether the ‘group of companies’ doctrine, as interpreted by Chloro Controls case and subsequent judgments, is valid in law.

  • Whether the group of companies doctrine should be read the arbitration act or whether it can exist in Indian jurisprudence independent of any statutory provision.

  • Whether the group of companies doctrine be construed as a means of interpreting the implied consent or intent to arbitrate between the parties.

  • Whether the principles of alter ego and/or piercing the corporate veil can alone justify pressing the group of companies doctrine into operation even in the absence of implied consent.

Revisit Exercise Must Be Done With Caution, Experts Say

Besides the correctness of Chloro Controls and subsequent judgments, the larger bench will also look at principles in other jurisdictions which have not yet been dealt with by Indian courts.

For instance, the Supreme Court notes, the doctrine originated in Dow Chemicals case before the International Chamber of Commerce. Here a non-signatory did not resist but actually wanted to join an arbitration initiated by a group affiliate.

"How should this question be dealt has not been evaluated in any precedents of this court and needs to be examined." - Supreme Court in Cox and Kings judgment

The process should be carried out judiciously and with care, Shaneen Parikh, partner at Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, said. The basic conditions of party autonomy and consent to arbitrate must be paramount in deciding each case, she said.

While the Supreme Court may be lauded for keeping in mind commercial realities and moving with the times, a re-opening of the "group of companies doctrine", albeit with reference to a few provisions of the Arbitration Act, could end up upending established principles of piercing the corporate veil, and ought to be done judiciously and with care.
Shaneen Parikh, Partner, Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas

In the ongoing litigations, parties seeking inclusion of non-signatories to arbitration based on group of companies doctrine may face difficulties in view of observations of the Supreme Court and the reference, said Jatin Pore, partner at DSK Legal.

Generally the judgments hold the field till they are overruled. However, observation of the Delhi High Court in August last year in Star Infratech case are to be noted. The court observed that whether lower courts should continue to follow an earlier Supreme Court decision once correctness of the same is doubted by another Supreme Court bench of co-equal strength, and the issue is referred to a larger bench, appears to be debatable.
Jatin Pore, Partner, DSK Legal

Therefore, the parties insisting on inclusion of non-signatories on basis of law laid down in Chloro Controls and cases following it may now face difficulties, Pore said.

The composition or the date on when the larger bench will hear the case is not known yet.