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Ramdarash Yadav vs State Of U.P. And Another on 25 February, 2026

1. List revised. 2. Heard Sri Ram Chandra Yadav, learned counsel for the petitioner and Sri Birendra Pratap Singh, learned counsel for the State/O.P.No.1...
HomeAltf Spaces Private Limited vs Ms Dhindora Club on 25 March, 2026

Altf Spaces Private Limited vs Ms Dhindora Club on 25 March, 2026

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Delhi High Court

Altf Spaces Private Limited vs Ms Dhindora Club on 25 March, 2026

                          $~8
                          *         IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
                                                                        Date of Decision : 25.03.2026
                          +         ARB.P. 253/2026
                                    ALTF SPACES PRIVATE LIMITED                            .....Petitioner
                                                            Through:   Mr. Sadheer Aaryaan
                                                                       Sadanand, Advocate.
                                                            versus

                                    MS DHINDORA CLUB                                   .....Respondent
                                                 Through:              Mr. Vinit Trehan, Ms. Urvi
                                                                       Syal & Mr. Yash Srivastava,
                                                                       Advocates.
                                    CORAM:
                                    HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE HARISH VAIDYANATHAN
                                    SHANKAR

                          %                                 JUDGEMENT (ORAL)

                          HARISH VAIDYANATHAN SHANKAR, J.

1. The present Petition has been filed under Section 11(5) of the
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 19961, seeking the appointment of
a Sole Arbitrator to adjudicate the disputes between the parties arising
out of the Customer Agreement dated 08.05.20242, executed
between the parties.

2. Clauses 18(i) & (j) of the said Agreement, which are the
Arbitration and Jurisdiction Clauses, read as under:

SPONSORED

“18. Miscellaneous
****

(i) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Agreement or
the Terms of Use, any dispute arising out of or in
connection with the Agreement or Terms of Use shall be

1
Act
2
Agreement
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sought to be resolved and settled amicably within 30
(thirty) days of such dispute arising, failing which the
dispute shall be referred to and finally resolved by a sole
arbitrator. The Parties agree that in the event of a dispute
which needs to be resolved by arbitration, the arbitrator
shall be mutually appointed. There shall be no conflict of
interest for the chosen arbitrator with either party. The cost
of the arbitration shall be borne equally by the Parties. The
provisions of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
shall remain applicable.

(j) All proceedings in any such arbitration shall be conducted
in English. The seat of the arbitration proceedings shall be
in Delhi and the award of the arbitrator shall be final and
binding on the Parties.”

3. The material on record reflects that the notice under Section 21
of the Act invoking arbitration was issued on 10.07.2025.

4. Learned counsel for the Respondent enters appearance and
submits that he has no objection if the matter is referred to arbitration.

5. It is apposite to note that the legal position governing the scope
and standard of judicial scrutiny under Section 11(6) of the Act is no
longer res integra. A three-Judge Bench of the Hon’ble Supreme
Court in SBI General Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Krish Spinning3, after
taking into consideration the authoritative pronouncement of the
seven-Judge Bench in Interplay Between Arbitration Agreements
under Arbitration Act, 1996 & Stamp Act, 1899, In re4,
comprehensively delineated the contours of judicial intervention at the
stage of Section 11of the Act. The excerpt of Krish Spg (supra) reads
as under:-

“(c) Judicial interference under the 1996 Act

110. The parties have been conferred with the power to decide and
agree on the procedure to be adopted for appointing arbitrators. In
cases where the agreed upon procedure fails, the courts have been
vested with the power to appoint arbitrators upon the request of a

3
(2024) 12 SCC 1
4
(2024) 6 SCC 1
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party, to resolve the deadlock between the parties in appointing the
arbitrators.

111. Section 11 of the 1996 Act is provided to give effect to the
mutual intention of the parties to settle their disputes by arbitration
in situations where the parties fail to appoint an arbitrator(s). The
parameters of judicial review laid down for Section 8 differ from
those prescribed for Section 11. The view taken in SBP &
Co. v. Patel Engg. Ltd., (2005) 8 SCC 618 and affirmed in Vidya
Drolia v. Durga Trading Corpn.
, (2021) 2 SCC 1 that Sections 8
and 11, respectively, of the 1996 Act are complementary in nature
was legislatively overruled by the introduction of Section 11(6-A)
in 2015. Thus, although both these provisions intend to compel
parties to abide by their mutual intention to arbitrate, yet the scope
of powers conferred upon the courts under both the sections are
different.

112. The difference between Sections 8 and 11, respectively, of the
1996 Act is also evident from the scope of these provisions. Some
of these differences are:

112.1. While Section 8 empowers any “judicial authority” to refer
the parties to arbitration, under Section 11, the power to refer has
been exclusively conferred upon the High Court and the Supreme
Court.

112.2. Under Section 37, an appeal lies against the refusal of the
judicial authority to refer the parties to arbitration, whereas no such
provision for appeal exists for a refusal under Section 11.
112.3. The standard of scrutiny provided under Section 8 is that of
prima facie examination of the validity and existence of an
arbitration agreement. Whereas, the standard of scrutiny under
Section 11 is confined to the examination of the existence of the
arbitration agreement.

112.4. During the pendency of an application under Section 8,
arbitration may commence or continue and an award can be passed.

On the other hand, under Section 11, once there is failure on the
part of the parties in appointing the arbitrator as per the agreed
procedure and an application is preferred, no arbitration
proceedings can commence or continue.

113. The scope of examination under Section 11(6-A) is confined
to the existence of an arbitration agreement on the basis of Section

7. The examination of validity of the arbitration agreement is also
limited to the requirement of formal validity such as the
requirement that the agreement should be in writing.

114. The use of the term “examination” under Section 11(6-A) as
distinguished from the use of the term “rule” under Section 16
implies that the scope of enquiry under Section 11(6-A) is limited
to a prima facie scrutiny of the existence of the arbitration
agreement, and does not include a contested or laborious enquiry,
which is left for the Arbitral Tribunal to “rule” under Section 16.

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The prima facie view on existence of the arbitration agreement
taken by the Referral Court does not bind either the Arbitral
Tribunal or the Court enforcing the arbitral award.

115. The aforesaid approach serves a twofold purpose — firstly, it
allows the Referral Court to weed out non-existent arbitration
agreements, and secondly, it protects the jurisdictional competence
of the Arbitral Tribunal to rule on the issue of existence of the
arbitration agreement in depth.

****

117. In view of the observations made by this Court in Interplay
Between Arbitration Agreements under the Arbitration Act, 1996
& the Stamp Act, 1899, In re, (2024) 6 SCC 1, it is clear that the
scope of enquiry at the stage of appointment of arbitrator is limited
to the scrutiny of prima facie existence of the arbitration
agreement, and nothing else. For this reason, we find it difficult to
hold that the observations made inVidya Drolia v. Durga Trading
Corpn.
, (2021) 2 SCC 1 and adopted inNTPC Ltd. v. SPML Infra
Ltd.
, (2023) 9 SCC 385 that the jurisdiction of the Referral Court
when dealing with the issue of “accord and satisfaction” under
Section 11 extends to weeding out ex facie non-arbitrable and
frivolous disputes would continue to apply despite the subsequent
decision inInterplay Between Arbitration Agreements under the
Arbitration Act, 1996 & the Stamp Act, 1899, In re, (2024) 6 SCC
1.
****

119. The question of “accord and satisfaction”, being a mixed
question of law and fact, comes within the exclusive jurisdiction of
the Arbitral Tribunal, if not otherwise agreed upon between the
parties. Thus, the negative effect of competence-competence would
require that the matter falling within the exclusive domain of the
Arbitral Tribunal, should not be looked into by the Referral Court,
even for a prima facie determination, before the Arbitral Tribunal
first has had the opportunity of looking into it.

120. By referring disputes to arbitration and appointing an
arbitrator by exercise of the powers under Section 11, the Referral
Court upholds and gives effect to the original understanding of the
contracting parties that the specified disputes shall be resolved by
arbitration. Mere appointment of the Arbitral Tribunal does not in
any way mean that the Referral Court is diluting the sanctity of
“accord and satisfaction” or is allowing the claimant to walk back
on its contractual undertaking. On the contrary, it ensures that the
principle of arbitral autonomy is upheld and the legislative intent of
minimum judicial interference in arbitral proceedings is given full
effect. Once the Arbitral Tribunal is constituted, it is always open
for the defendant to raise the issue of “accord and satisfaction”

before it, and only after such an objection is rejected by the

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Arbitral Tribunal, that the claims raised by the claimant can be
adjudicated.

121. Tests like the “eye of the needle” and “ex facie meritless”,
although try to minimise the extent of judicial interference, yet they
require the Referral Court to examine contested facts and
appreciate prima facie evidence (however limited the scope of
enquiry may be) and thus are not in conformity with the
principles of modern arbitration which place arbitral autonomy and
judicial non-interference on the highest pedestal.

122. Appointment of an Arbitral Tribunal at the stage of Section 11
petition also does not mean that the Referral Courts forego any
scope of judicial review of the adjudication done by the Arbitral
Tribunal. The 1996 Act clearly vests the national courts with the
power of subsequent review by which the award passed by an
arbitrator may be subjected to challenge by any of the parties to the
arbitration.

*****

126. The power available to the Referral Courts has to be construed
in the light of the fact that no right to appeal is available against
any order passed by the Referral Court under Section 11 for either
appointing or refusing to appoint an arbitrator. Thus, by delving
into the domain of the Arbitral Tribunal at the nascent stage of
Section 11, the Referral Courts also run the risk of leaving the
claimant in a situation wherein it does not have any forum to
approach for the adjudication of its claims, if its Section 11
application is rejected.

127. Section 11 also envisages a time-bound and expeditious
disposal of the application for appointment of arbitrator. One of the
reasons for this is also the fact that unlike Section 8, once an
application under Section 11 is filed, arbitration cannot commence
until the Arbitral Tribunal is constituted by the Referral Court. This
Court, on various occasions, has given directions to the High
Courts for expeditious disposal of pending Section 11 applications.
It has also directed the litigating parties to refrain from filing bulky
pleadings in matters pertaining to Section 11. Seen thus, if the
Referral Courts go into the details of issues pertaining to “accord
and satisfaction” and the like, then it would become rather difficult
to achieve the objective of expediency and simplification of
pleadings.

128. We are also of the view that ex facie frivolity and dishonesty
in litigation is an aspect which the Arbitral Tribunal is equally, if
not more, capable to decide upon the appreciation of the evidence
adduced by the parties. We say so because the Arbitral Tribunal
has the benefit of going through all the relevant evidence and
pleadings in much more detail than the Referral Court. If the
Referral Court is able to see the frivolity in the litigation on the
basis of bare minimum pleadings, then it would be incorrect to

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doubt that the Arbitral Tribunal would not be able to arrive at the
same inference, most likely in the first few hearings itself, with the
benefit of extensive pleadings and evidentiary material.”

(emphasis supplied)

6. The decision in Krish Spinning (supra) thus unequivocally
reiterates that the Referral Court, while exercising jurisdiction under
Section 11 of the Act, is required to confine itself to a prima facie
examination of the existence of an arbitration agreement and nothing
beyond. The Court’s role is facilitative and procedural, namely, to give
effect to the parties’ agreed mechanism of dispute resolution when it
has failed, without embarking upon an adjudication of contentious
factual or legal issues, which are reserved for the Arbitral Tribunal.

7. Since the learned counsel for the parties are ad idem that the
matter may be referred to arbitration for adjudication of disputes inter
se the parties, and in view of the Arbitration Clause as well as the
Section 21 notice, there is no impediment in referring the matter to
arbitration.

8. The value of the dispute/claims is stated to be approximately
Rs. 30 Lakhs.

9. Accordingly, Ms. Aaliya Waziri, Advocate, (Mob:

9971963729), is appointed as the learned Arbitrator, to enter into
reference as a Sole Arbitrator to adjudicate the disputes between the
parties.

10. The arbitration would take place under the aegis of the Delhi
International Arbitration Centre (DIAC) and would abide by its rules
and regulations. The learned Arbitrator shall be entitled to fees as per
the Schedule of Fees maintained by the DIAC.

11. The learned Arbitrator is also requested to file the requisite

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disclosure under Section 12 (2) of the Act within a week of entering of
reference.

12. The Registry is directed to send a receipt of this order to the
learned arbitrator through all permissible modes, including through e-
mail.

13. All rights and contentions of the parties in relation to the
claims/counter-claims are kept open, to be decided by the learned
Arbitrator on their merits, in accordance with law.

14. Needless to say, nothing in this order shall be construed as an
expression of opinion of this Court on the merits of the controversy
between the parties. Let a copy of the said order be sent to the
Arbitrator through the electronic mode as well.

15. Accordingly, the present Petition stands disposed of.

HARISH VAIDYANATHAN SHANKAR, J.

MARCH 25, 2026/tk/va

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