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Gandhian Justice and Alternative Dispute Resolution

About the Institution MATS University, Raipur, Chhattisgarh, is an A++ accredited and recognized institution committed to excellence in higher education, research, and interdisciplinary academic...
HomeHigh CourtOrissa High CourtCommissioner-Cum-Secretary vs Syed Mubarak on 30 January, 2026

Commissioner-Cum-Secretary vs Syed Mubarak on 30 January, 2026

Orissa High Court

Commissioner-Cum-Secretary vs Syed Mubarak on 30 January, 2026

Author: Sanjeeb K Panigrahi

Bench: Sanjeeb K Panigrahi

                                                                Signature Not Verified
                                                                Digitally Signed
                                                                Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
                                                                Reason: Authentication
                                                                Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
                                                                Date: 09-Feb-2026 19:48:34




        IN THE HIGH COURT OF ORISSA AT CUTTACK

                      ARBA No.12 & 13 of 2014

  (In the matters of Appeals under Section 37 of the Arbitration and
  Conciliation Act, 1996)

                       (In ARBA No.12 of 2014)

 Commissioner-cum-Secretary,        ....                    Appellant (s)
 Department of Water Resources,
 Government of Odisha & Ors.
                           -versus-
 Syed Mubarak                              ....            Respondent (s)


Advocates appeared in the case through Hybrid Mode:

 For Appellant (s)          :                   Mr. Debasish Nayak, AGA


 For Respondent (s)         :                    Ms. Pami Rath, Sr. Adv.
                                                   Along with associate.


                       (In ARBA No.13 of 2014)

 State of Odisha & Ors.                    ....             Appellant (s)
                                -versus-
 Syed Mubarak                              ....            Respondent (s)


Advocates appeared in the case through Hybrid Mode:

 For Appellant (s)          :                   Mr. Debasish Nayak, AGA


 For Respondent (s)         :                    Ms. Pami Rath, Sr. Adv.
                                                   Along with associate.



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                                                                  Signature Not Verified
                                                                 Digitally Signed
                                                                 Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
                                                                 Reason: Authentication
                                                                 Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
                                                                 Date: 09-Feb-2026 19:48:34




                CORAM:
                DR. JUSTICE SANJEEB K PANIGRAHI
                    DATE OF HEARING:-22.12.2025
                   DATE OF JUDGMENT:-30.01.2026
     Dr. Sanjeeb K Panigrahi, J.

1. The present Appeals have been preferred seeking setting aside of

judgment dated 23.9.2013, passed by the Ld. District Judge, Ganjam

in ARBP No. 1 of 2005 and judgment dated 16.9.2013 passed by the

Ld. District Judge, Ganjam in ARBP No.3 of 2005 whereby, the Ld.

District Judge has dismissed both the appeals.

2. Since both appeals arise out of arbitral awards relating to contracts

executed by the same parties under the Baghua Irrigation Project and

involve common questions concerning the scope of interference

under Sections 34 and 37 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act,

1996, they are taken up together and are being disposed of by this

common judgment..

I. FACTUAL MATRIX OF THE CASE:

3. In ARBA 12 of 2014

a. In this appeal, the dispute arises out of Agreement No.1

NCB/2001-2002 executed on 27.7.2001 between the Department of

Water Resources, Government of Odisha and the respondent, a

Super Class Contractor, for excavation and construction of

structures of minors and sub-minors off-taking from Baghua

Right Branch Canal from RD 13.15 km to 23.425 km and Baghua

Right Distributary from RD 23.425 km to about 30.375 km,

described as Package No.9. The contract price was Rs.2,17,96,172/-

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. The date of commencement was 27.7.2001 and the stipulated

date of completion was 26.7.2002.

b. According to the respondent, during execution of the work, large

portions of the site were not made available. It is stated that

initially only about 3.806 km of the site was available, out of

which portions were private land, scattered patches, and reserve

forest land. It is further stated that additional stretches were later

made available but remained fragmented and obstructed by legal

and physical constraints, and that objections were raised by

private landowners in certain portions. The respondent claims

that manpower and machinery had been mobilised but remained

idle due to non-availability of continuous workable site.

c. The departmental authorities, on the other hand, treated the delay

as attributable to the contractor and proceeded to foreclose the

contract. Communications regarding foreclosure and imposition

of penalty were issued around 30.10.2003 and 1.11.2003. A

proposal for closure of the contract with penalty was approved by

the Government and communicated to the Chief Engineer on

4.12.2003. The bank guarantee furnished by the contractor was

encashed and final bills were not released according to the

respondent.

d. Disputes having arisen, correspondence was exchanged regarding

appointment of arbitrator. By letter dated 6.2.2004, the Chief

Engineer and Basin Manager appointed Sri Naba Krushna

Mohapatra as sole arbitrator. The arbitral proceedings were
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conducted, during which the claimant filed statement of claims

and the respondents filed counter statement, followed by

rejoinder.

e. The claimant raised multiple claims including claim towards final

bill and deductions, claim towards idle man and machinery, claim

towards payment on account of revised minimum wages, claim

for refund of encashed bank guarantee, claim towards utilisation

of mobilisation advance, and claim for interest on blocked

amounts and future interest.

f. The sole arbitrator passed the award on 6.12.2004, allowing the

claims towards final bill, idle establishment, revised minimum

wages, refund of bank guarantee, mobilisation advance, and

interest on blocked amount, and also awarded future interest at

the rate of 12% per annum from the date of award.

g. Aggrieved by the award, the State filed an application under

Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 before the

Ld. District Judge, Ganjam, Berhampur on 2.3.2005, registered as

Arbitration Petition No.01 of 2005, seeking setting aside of the

arbitral award.

h. After hearing the parties, the Ld. District Judge, Ganjam,

Berhampur, by judgment dated 23.9.2013, dismissed the

application under Section 34 and upheld the arbitral award.

i. Challenging the said judgment dated 23.9.2013, the appellants

filed the present appeal under Section 37 of the Arbitration and

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Conciliation Act, 1996 before this Court in the year 2014, which

was registered as ARBA No.12 of 2014.

4. In ARBA 13 of 2014

i. In this appeal, the respondent was awarded the work under

Agreement No. NCB-1 of 2002-2003, Package No. 8A, of Baghua

Irrigation Division No. 1, Matajhari, Ganjam, for excavation of

minors and allied works, for a contract price of Rs. 1,00,88,605/-.

The stipulated date of commencement was 5.6.2002 and the

stipulated date of completion was 4.2.2003. Extension of time was

granted up to 4.8.2003. The work was completed within the

extended period and detailed final measurements were recorded

by about 3.8.2003.

ii. The respondent submitted running account bills during

execution of work. The 4th R/A bill and the 5th R/A bill along

with the final bill aggregated to Rs. 69,52,145/-. After statutory

deductions, the net payable amount was assessed at Rs.

63,51,867/-. The Executive Engineer prepared the 4th R/A bill

around 1.7.2003, but payment was not released on the ground

that higher authorities had issued instructions not to make

payment. The appellants stated that amounts were proposed to

be adjusted towards alleged excess payments and dues relating

to other packages executed by the respondent in different

divisions.

iii. On 15.3.2003, the respondent addressed a letter to the Chief

Engineer requesting that no recovery be made from bills of other
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works. On 30.8.2003, the respondent filed an application under

Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 before the

Ld. District Judge, Ganjam-Gajapati, Berhampur, seeking

protection against recovery, by which time an amount of about

Rs. 22,26,546/- had already been recovered. Vide order dated

30.8.2003, the Ld. District Judge directed that no further recovery

be made from other bills of the respondent till the dispute was

decided in arbitration. Despite this, the remaining amount from

the 4th R/A bill and the final bill was not released.

iv. The respondent accordingly issued a request on 10.1.2004 for

appointment of a sole arbitrator. On 6.2.2004, the Chief Engineer

appointed a sole arbitrator, namely a retired Chief Engineer Sri

N.C. Rout, in terms of the dispute resolution clause. Both parties

participated in the arbitral proceedings, filed statements of claim

and counter statements, produced documents, and addressed

arguments. The hearing concluded with the consent of both

sides.

v. Before the arbitrator, the respondent raised multiple claims.

Claim No. 1 related to non-payment of the 4th R/A bill, 5th R/A

bill and final bill, with net payable assessed at Rs. 63,51,867/-.

Claim No. 2 related to reimbursement of additional expenditure

incurred due to enhancement of minimum wages from Rs. 40/- to

Rs. 50/- with effect from 01.01.2002, based on Government of

Odisha notifications and departmental formula for labour

component. Claim No. 3 related to release of performance
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security amounting to Rs. 5,04,430/- after expiry of defect liability

period. Claim No. 4 related to refund of retention money of Rs.

1,62,177/- deducted from earlier R/A bills. Claim No. 5 related to

interest on delayed payment of bills in terms of Clause 43 of the

General Conditions of Contract.

vi. By award dated 5.3.2005, the learned arbitrator allowed Claim

No. 1 for Rs. 63,51,867/-, Claim No. 2 for Rs. 7,01,169.56, directed

release of performance security of Rs. 5,04,430/- under Claim No.

3 with interest, allowed refund of retention money of Rs.

1,62,177/- under Claim No. 4 with interest of Rs. 18,109/-, and

allowed interest on delayed payment of principal amount under

Claim No. 5 quantified at Rs. 11,43,336/-. The total monetary

award aggregated to Rs. 88,81,089.56, along with direction for

release of the bank guarantee towards performance security.

vii. The appellants filed an application under Section 34 of the Act on

20.6.2005 before the Ld. District Judge, challenging the award on

the grounds including alleged improper constitution of the

tribunal, deletion of price escalation clause, adjustment of dues

from other contracts, and alleged non-compliance with

contractual dispute procedure. By judgment dated 16.9.2013, the

Ld. District Judge dismissed the Section 34 application and

upheld the arbitral award. The present appeal under Section 37

arises from the said judgment dated 16.09.2013 of the Ld. District

Judge.

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5. This Court shall now endeavour to summarise the contentions of the

Parties and the broad grounds that have been raised.

II. APPELLANTS’ SUBMISSIONS:

6. In ARBA No. 12 of 2014, the appellants mainly contend that the

learned arbitrator travelled beyond the terms of the contract and

granted claims which were expressly barred thereunder. It is urged

that the escalation clause having been consciously deleted from the

agreement, no amount could have been awarded towards increase in

labour cost or wages, nor could any compensation be granted on

account of alleged idle labour and machinery. It is further contended

that the delay in execution of the work was attributable solely to the

contractor’s own defaults and not to any failure on the part of the

department in providing the site. According to the appellants,

sufficient site was made available and the departmental authorities

were ready to proceed, but the contractor failed to mobilise resources

and execute the work within the stipulated period, which eminently

justified the foreclosure of the contract and encashment of the bank

guarantee strictly in terms of the agreement.

7. The appellants further assail the evidentiary basis of the claims

allowed by the arbitrator, particularly in respect of idle

establishment, mobilisation advance and alleged blocked amounts,

contending that no strict proof of actual loss or expenditure was

produced and that the findings are based on assumptions rather than

cogent material. The direction for refund of the bank guarantee and

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grant of interest are also stated to be unsupported by the contract

and excessive in nature. It is additionally urged that the disputes

were not referred to arbitration within the time prescribed after the

Engineer’s decision and that the arbitral reference itself was not

maintainable. Objection is also taken to the manner of appointment

of the sole arbitrator, alleging non-compliance with the contractual

procedure, thereby vitiating the entire arbitral proceedings.

8. In ARBA No. 13, the appellants primarily contend that the arbitral

tribunal itself was not constituted in accordance with the contract. It

is their case that under the General Conditions of Contract, the

dispute was first required to be adjudicated by the named

Adjudicator and only thereafter could the matter proceed to

arbitration, and that in the event of failure to appoint an arbitrator by

mutual agreement, the appointing authority was an external body

and not the Chief Engineer. According to the appellants, the named

Adjudicator had not refused to act, and the respondent had declined

to accept him on the ground of alleged bias, which did not justify

bypassing the contractual procedure. Consequently, the appointment

of the sole arbitrator by the Chief Engineer on 6.2.2004 is asserted to

be contrary to the contract, rendering the arbitral proceedings void

ab initio.

9. On merits, the appellants further contend that the arbitrator erred in

allowing Claim No. 1 relating to payment of the 4th R/A bill and

final bill, despite substantial amounts being allegedly recoverable

from the respondent under other contracts executed in different
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divisions. It is argued that excess payments, unpaid mobilisation

advances and penalties in other packages entitled the department to

withhold payment under the present contract by way of adjustment

in order to safeguard public revenue, and that the arbitrator failed to

take these liabilities into account. With regard to Claim No. 2 relating

to minimum wages, it is contended that the contract did not contain

any escalation clause and that such clause had in fact been

consciously deleted; therefore, the respondent, having accepted the

contract rates without protest during execution, could not

subsequently seek reimbursement on account of wage revision. As

regards Claims No. 3, 4 and 5, it is urged that retention of

performance security and retention money was justified in view of

outstanding dues in other contracts and that award of interest and

direction to release the bank guarantee were beyond the arbitrator’s

jurisdiction and contrary to the contractual terms. The appellants

also contend that the award is against public policy, as it results in

payment to a contractor who was otherwise allegedly liable to make

good losses to the State.

10.On the aforesaid premises, the appellants submit that the learned

District Judge failed to exercise jurisdiction vested under Section 34

of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 by not examining

whether the arbitral tribunal was constituted in accordance with the

agreement, whether the arbitrator had exceeded the terms of the

contract, and whether the award dealt with claims expressly barred

by contractual stipulations. It is contended that patent illegality is
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apparent on the face of the award, both in assumption of jurisdiction

and in grant of claims contrary to the contract and without

evidentiary foundation, which warranted interference. The

appellants therefore assert that the refusal to set aside the award

suffers from material irregularity and non-consideration of vital

grounds available under Section 34(2) and Section 34(2A), thereby

justifying appellate interference with the impugned judgment.

III. RESPONDENT’S SUBMISSIONS:

11.Per contra, the counsel for the respondent contends in ARBA No. 12,

the respondent supports the arbitral award and the judgment of the

learned District Judge, Ganjam, Berhampur, contending that the

entire delay in execution and eventual foreclosure of the contract

occurred solely due to failure of the department to provide

continuous and lawful working site. It is stated that only small and

scattered portions of the site were initially made available and that

substantial stretches comprised private land and forest land where

execution could not legally proceed, despite mobilisation of

manpower and machinery by the contractor. Repeated requests for

handing over proper site and for supply of drawings are stated to

have been made, but no effective steps were taken by the

department. According to the respondent, the contractor remained

ready and willing to execute the work but was prevented by

circumstances wholly beyond his control, and therefore termination

of the contract and encashment of the bank guarantee were

unjustified and arbitrary.

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12.With regard to the claims allowed by the arbitrator, the respondent

submits that documentary and oral evidence was adduced showing

mobilisation of labour and machinery and the expenses incurred

during the subsistence of the contract, which were duly assessed by

the arbitrator while granting compensation. It is further contended

that payment of revised minimum wages is a statutory obligation

and cannot be avoided by deletion of a general escalation clause, and

therefore the amount awarded under that head was legally payable.

The respondent further submits that the objections now sought to be

raised were either not urged before the arbitrator or were already

considered and rejected by the learned District Judge while

exercising jurisdiction under Section 34, and that the present appeal

is in substance an attempt to seek reappreciation of evidence, which

is impermissible in proceedings under Section 37. It is also contended

that the arbitrator was appointed and participated in by both parties

without objection and that the award does not suffer from any

jurisdictional infirmity or patent illegality.

13.In ARBA No. 13, the respondent contends that the arbitral tribunal

was constituted strictly in accordance with the contractual

stipulations and with the consent of both parties. It is submitted that

since the value of the contract was below the prescribed monetary

threshold, the dispute was referable to a sole arbitrator, and upon the

respondent’s request dated 10.1.2004, the Chief Engineer appointed

the sole arbitrator on 6.2.2004 in terms of the applicable procedure.

The respondent emphasises that the appellants participated in the
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arbitral proceedings without demur, filed counter statements,

produced documents and argued the matter on merits, and therefore

any objection to jurisdiction or procedure stands waived and cannot

be permitted to be raised after suffering an adverse award.

14.On the issue of non-payment of the 4th R/A bill and final bill, the

respondent submits that there is no clause in the contract authorising

the department to withhold amounts payable under one contract for

the purpose of recovering alleged dues under other, independent

contracts executed in different divisions. It is argued that each

contract constitutes a separate legal relationship and cross-

adjustment is impermissible in the absence of express contractual

authority. The respondent further relies upon the order dated

30.8.2003 passed by the learned District Judge in proceedings under

Section 9 restraining further recovery from other bills, yet the

appellants continued to withhold payment, demonstrating that the

action was arbitrary and unsupported by law.

15.With respect to the claim towards minimum wages, the respondent

submits that payment of revised minimum wages was a statutory

mandate under the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 and also flowed from

contractual clauses requiring compliance with labour laws. It is

contended that deletion of a general price-escalation clause cannot

override statutory obligations, and once the respondent was legally

bound to pay enhanced wages, the corresponding financial burden

could not be thrust upon him alone. It is further submitted that the

arbitrator applied the departmental formula and relied upon
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measurement book entries and other contemporaneous records, and

therefore the computation is purely factual and beyond the scope of

interference in appeal.

16.As regards performance security, retention money and interest, the

respondent submits that the defect liability period had long expired,

the work had been accepted, and there was no contractual

justification for continued retention of security amounts. It is argued

that retention was being used merely as leverage for extraneous

disputes arising out of other contracts, which is impermissible. The

respondent further submits that interest was awarded in accordance

with contractual provisions governing delayed payments and that

once wrongful withholding of admitted dues was established, grant

of interest was a natural and lawful consequence.

17.On the above premises, the respondent submits that the scope of

interference under Section 37 is extremely limited and does not

permit reappreciation of evidence or substitution of the court’s view

for that of the arbitrator. It is contended that the learned District

Judge has already examined the objections within the parameters of

Section 34 and found no patent illegality, jurisdictional error or

violation of public policy. The respondent therefore asserts that the

present appeals seek a second round of factual adjudication, which is

impermissible in appellate proceedings arising out of arbitral

awards, and that no ground is made out for interference with either

the award or the impugned judgment.

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IV. ISSUE FOR CONSIDERATION:

18.Having heard the parties and perused the materials available on

record, this court here has identified the following issue to be

determined:

A. Whether the order of the Ld. District Judge warrants interference

keeping in mind the limitations of this court’s powers under

Section 37 of the A&C Act?

V. ISSUE A: WHETHER THE ORDER OF THE LD. DISTRICT
JUDGE WARRANTS INTERFERENCE KEEPING IN MIND THE
LIMITATIONS OF THIS COURT’S POWERS UNDER SECTION
37 OF THE A&C ACT?

19.Before going into the merits of the contentions, it is necessary to

outline the ambit and scope of Section 37(2)(b) of the 1996 Act. The

said section is extracted below:

“37. Appealable orders.–(1)[Notwithstanding anything
contained in any other law for the time being in force, an
appeal] shall lie from the following orders (and from no
others) to the court authorised by law to hear appeals
from original decrees of the court passing the order,
namely:

∗∗∗
(2) Appeal shall also lie to a court from an order of the
Arbitral Tribunal–

(a) accepting the plea referred to in sub-section (2) or
sub-section (3) of Section 16; or

(b) granting or refusing to grant an interim measure
under Section 17.”

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20.The Supreme Court and this Court in catena of judgments have held

that the powers of appellate court while exercising jurisdiction under

Section 37(2)(b) of the 1996 Act against orders passed by the Arbitral

Tribunal is very restricted and narrow and the same should be

exercised when the orders seems to be perverse, arbitrary and

contrary to law. The judgment of Wander Ltd. v. Antox India (P)

Ltd.1 passed by the Apex Court, elaborates the ambit and scope of

the appeals. Although the aforesaid judgment is not dealing with the

arbitration proceedings but the same deals with the power of

appellate court in the Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC). Operative

paragraphs of the aforesaid judgment are extracted below:

“13. On a consideration of the matter, we are afraid, the
Appellate Bench fell into error on two important
propositions. The first is a misdirection in regard to the
very scope and nature of the appeals before it and the
limitations on the powers of the appellate court to
substitute its own discretion in an appeal preferred
against a discretionary order. The second pertains to the
infirmities in the ratiocination as to the quality of antox’s
alleged user of the trade mark on which the passing-off
action is founded. We shall deal with these two
separately.

14. The appeals before the Division Bench were against
the exercise of discretion by the Single Judge. In such
appeals, the appellate court will not interfere with the
exercise of discretion of the court of first instance and
substitute its own discretion except where the discretion
has been shown to have been exercised arbitrarily, or
capriciously or perversely or where the court had ignored

1990 Supp SCC 727
1

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the settled principles of law regulating grant or refusal of
interlocutory injunctions. An appeal against exercise of
discretion is said to be an appeal on principle. Appellate
court will not reassess the material and seek to reach a
conclusion different from the one reached by the court
below if the one reached by that court was reasonably
possible on the material. The appellate court would
normally not be justified in interfering with the exercise
of discretion under appeal solely on the ground that if it
had considered the matter at the trial stage it would have
come to a contrary conclusion. If the discretion has been
exercised by the trial court reasonably and in a judicial
manner the fact that the appellate court would have taken
a different view may not justify interference with the
trial court’s exercise of discretion. After referring to these
principles Gajendragadkar, J. in Printers (Mysore) (P)
Ltd. v. Pothan Joseph
(SCC OnLine SC para 9)
‘9. …These principles are well established, but as
has been observed by Viscount Simon in Charles
Osenton & Co. v. Johnston “the law as to the
reversal by a court of appeal of an order made by a
Judge below in the exercise of his discretion is well
established and any difficulty that arises is due only
to the application of well-settled principles in an
individual case.”‘
The appellate judgment does not seem to defer to this
principle.”

21.The said judgment is consistently followed in adjudicating petitions

pertaining to the A&C Act by Courts across the Country in Green

Infra Wind Energy Ltd. v. Regen Powertech (P) Ltd.2; Sona Corpn.

India (P) Ltd. v. Ingram Micro India (P) Ltd.3; Manish Aggarwal

2018 SCC OnLine Del 8273
2

2020 SCC OnLine Del 300
3

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v. RCI Industries & Technologies Ltd.4; Tahal Consulting Engineers

India (P) Ltd. v. Promax Power Ltd.5 and Handicraft & Handlooms

Exports Co. of India v. SMC Comtrade Ltd.6.

22.In Reliance Infrastructure Ltd. v. State of Goa7, the Apex Court

noticing its previous decision in MMTC Ltd. v. Vedanta Ltd.8 has

noted the limited scope of interference under Section 34 and further

narrower scope of appeal under Section 37 of the Act particularly

when dealing with the concurrent findings of the arbitrator and that

of the Court. Relevant paragraph ’14’ of MMTC Ltd.(supra) as noted

in paragraph ’26’ in Reliance Infrastructure Ltd.(supra) is to be

extracted hereinunder:–

“14. As far as interference with an order made
under Section 34, as per Section 37, is concerned, it
cannot be disputed that such interference
under Section 37 cannot travel beyond the restrictions
laid down under Section 34. In other words, the court
cannot undertake an independent assessment of the
merits of the award, and must only ascertain that the
exercise of power by the court under Section34 has not
exceeded the scope of the provision. Thus, it is evident
that in case an arbitral award has been confirmed by the
court under Section 34 and by the court in an appeal
under Section 37, this Court must be extremely
cautious and slow to disturb such concurrent findings.”

(2022) 3 HCC (Del) 289
4

2023 SCC OnLine Del 2069
5

2023 SCC OnLine Del 3981
6

(2024) 1 SCC 479
7

(2019) 4 SCC 163
8

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Date: 09-Feb-2026 19:48:34

23.The same view has been expressed in UHL Power Company

Ltd. v. State of Himachal Pradesh9 in paragraph ’16’ while noticing

paragraph ’11’ in MMTC Ltd.(supra):–

“16. As it is, the jurisdiction conferred on courts
under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act is fairly narrow,
when it comes to the scope of an appeal
under Section 37 of the Arbitration Act, the jurisdiction
of an appellate court in examining an order, setting aside
or refusing to set aside an award, is all the more
circumscribed. In MMTC Ltd. v. Vedanta Ltd. [MMTC
Ltd.
v. Vedanta Ltd., (2019) 4 SCC 163 : (2019) 2 SCC
(Civ) 293], the reasons for vesting such a limited
jurisdiction on the High Court in exercise of powers
under Section 34 of the ArbitrationAct have been
explained in the following words : (SCC pp. 166-67, para

11)
“11. As far as Section 34 is concerned, the position
is well-settled by now that the Court does not sit
in appeal over the arbitral award and may interfere
on merits on the limited ground provided
under Section 34(2)(b)(ii) i.e. if the award is
against the public policy of India. As per the legal
position clarified through decisions of this Court
prior to the amendments to the 1996 Act in 2015,
a violation of Indian public policy, in turn,
includes a violation of the fundamental policy of
Indian law, a violation of the interest of India,
conflict with justice or morality, and the existence
of patent illegality in the arbitral award.

Additionally, the concept of the “fundamental
policy of Indian law” would cover compliance with
statutes and judicial precedents, adopting a
judicial approach, compliance with the principles

(2022) 4 SCC 116
9

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of natural justice, and Wednesbury [Associated
Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. v. Wednesbury
Corpn., [1948] 1 K.B. 223(CA)] reasonableness.
Furthermore, “patent illegality” itself has been
held to mean contravention of the substantive law
of India, contravention of
the 1996 Act, and contravention of the terms of the
contract.”

24.In Haryana Tourism Ltd. v. Kandhari Beverages Ltd.10 as noted in

paragraph ’30’ in Reliance Infrastructure Ltd.(supra), it was held on

the scope of interference under Sections 34 and 37 of the Act’ 1996 as

under:–

“30. In Haryana Tourism [Haryana Tourism
Ltd. v. Kandhari Beverages Ltd.
, (2022) 3 SCC
237 : (2022) 2 SCC (Civ) 87], this Court yet again
pointed out the limited scope of interference
under Sections 34 and37 of the Act; and disapproved
interference by the High Court under Section 37 of
the Act while entering into merits of the claim in the
following words : (SCC p. 240, paras 8-9)
“8.
So far as the impugned
judgment and order [Kandhari Beverages
Ltd. v. Haryana Tourism Ltd., 2018 SCC OnLine
P&H 3233] passed by the High Court
quashing and setting aside the
award and the order passed by the Additional
District Judge under Section 34 of
the Arbitration Act are concerned, it is required to
be noted that in an appeal under Section 37 of
the Arbitration Act, the High Court has entered
into the merits of the claim, which is not

2022) 3 SCC 237
10

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permissible in exercise of powers
under Section 37 of the Arbitration Act.

9. As per settled position of law laid down by this
Court in a catena of decisions, an award can be set
aside only if the award is against the public policy
of India. The award can be set aside
under Sections 34/37 of the Arbitration Act, if the
award is found to be contrary to : (a) fundamental
policy of Indian Law; or (b) the interest of India; or

(c) justice or morality; or (d) if it is patently
illegal. None of the aforesaid exceptions shall be
applicable to the facts of the case on hand. The
High Court has entered into the merits of the
claim and has decided the appeal
under Section 37 of the Arbitration Act as if the
High Court was deciding the appeal against the
judgment and decree passed by the learned trial
court. Thus, the High Court has exercised the
jurisdiction not vested in it under Section 37 of
the Arbitration Act. The impugned
judgment andorder [Kandhari Beverages
Ltd. v. Haryana Tourism Ltd., 2018 SCC OnLine
P&H 3233] passed by the High Court is hence not
sustainable.”

25.It was, thus, observed in paragraph ’33’ of Reliance Infrastructure

Ltd.(supra) as under:–

“33. Keeping in view the aforementioned
principles enunciated by this Court with regard to
the limited scope of interference in an arbitral
award by a Court in the exercise of its jurisdiction
under Section34 of the Act, which is all the more
circumscribed in an appeal under Section 37, we
may examine the rival submissions of the parties
in relation to the matters dealt with by the High
Court.”

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26.It is observed in Punjab State Civil Supplies Corpn. Ltd. v. Sanman

Rice Mills11 that:

“9. The object of the Act is to provide for a speedy and
inexpensive alternative mode of settlement of dispute
with the minimum of intervention of the courts. Section
5
of the Act is implicit in this regard and prohibits
interference by the judicial authority with the arbitration
proceedings except where so provided in Part-I of the
Act
. The judicial interference, if any, is provided inter-
alia only by means of Sections 34 and 37 of the Act
respectively.

10. Section 34 of the Act provides for getting an arbitral
award set aside by moving an application in accordance
with sub-Section (2) andsub-Section (3) of Section 34 of
the Act which inter-alia provide for the grounds on which
an arbitral award is liable to be set aside. One of the main
grounds for interference or setting aside an award is
where the arbitral award is in conflict with the public
policy of India i.e. if the award is induced or affected by
fraud or corruption or is in contravention with the
fundamental policy of Indian law or it is in conflict with
most basic notions of morality and justice. A plain
reading of Section 34 reveals that the scope of
interference by the court with the arbitral award under
Section 34 is very limited and the court is not supposed
to travel beyond the aforesaid scope to find out if the
award is good or bad.

11. Section 37 of the Act provides for a forum of appeal
inter-alia against the order setting aside or refusing to set
aside an arbitral award under Section 34 of the Act. The
scope of appeal is naturally akin to andlimited to the
grounds enumerated under Section 34 of the Act.

11

2024 SCC OnLine SC 2632

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12. It is pertinent to note that an arbitral award is not
liable to be interfered with only on the ground that the
award is illegal or is erroneous in law that too upon
reappraisal of the evidence adduced before the arbitral
trial. Even an award which may not be reasonable or is
non-speaking to some extent cannot ordinarily be
interfered with by the courts. It is also well settled that
even if two views are possible there is no scope for the
court to reappraise the evidence and to take the different
view other than that has been taken by the arbitrator. The
view taken by the arbitrator is normally acceptable and
ought to be allowed to prevail.

xxxxxx

14. It is equally settled law that the appellate power
under Section 37of the Act is not akin to the normal
appellate jurisdiction vested in the civil courts for the
reason that the scope of interference of the courts with
arbitral proceedings or award is very limited, confined to
the ambit of Section 34 of the Act only and even that
power cannot be exercised in a casual and a cavalier
manner.

xxxxxx

16. It is seen that the scope of interference in an appeal
under Section37 of the Act is restricted and subject to the
same grounds on which an award can be challenged
under Section 34 of the Act. In other words, the powers
under Section 37 vested in the court of appeal are not
beyond the scope of interference provided
under Section 34 of the Act.”

Here, the Supreme Court has once again reiterated that even an

award which may not be reasonable or is nonspeaking to some

extent cannot ordinarily be interfered with by the courts. It is also

well settled that even if two views are possible there is no scope for

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the court to reappraise the evidence and to take the different view

other than that has been taken by the arbitrator. The view taken by

the arbitrator is normally acceptable and ought to be allowed to

prevail.

27.In Konkan Railway Corpn. Ltd. v. Chenab Bridge Project12 referring

to MMTC Limited (supra) it has been held that:

“19….The scope of jurisdiction
under Section 34 and Section 37 of the Act is not akin to
normal appellate jurisdiction. It is well-settled that
courts ought not to interfere with the arbitral award in a
casual and cavalier manner. The mere possibility of an
alternative view on facts or interpretation of the contract
does not entitle courts to reverse the findings of the
arbitral tribunal…”

28.In Dyna Technology Private Limited v. Crompton Greaves Limited13,

the Apex Court observed as under:

“24. There is no dispute that Section 34 of the
Arbitration Act limits a challenge to an award only on
the grounds provided therein or as interpreted by various
courts. We need to be cognizant of the fact that arbitral
awards should not be interfered with in a casual and
cavalier manner, unless the court comes to a conclusion
that the perversity of the award goes to the root of the
matter without there being a possibility of alternative
interpretation which may sustain the arbitral award.
Section 34 is different in its approach and cannot be
equated with a normal appellate jurisdiction. The
mandate under Section 34 is to respect the finality of the

(2023) 9 SCC 85
12

13
(2019) 20 SCC 1
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arbitral award and the party autonomy to get their
dispute adjudicated by an alternative forum as provided
under the law. If the courts were to interfere with the
arbitral award in the usual course on factual aspects,
then the commercial wisdom behind opting for alternate
dispute resolution would stand frustrated.

25. Moreover, umpteen number of judgments of this
Court have categorically held that the courts should not
interfere with an award merely because an alternative
view on facts and interpretation of contract exists. The
courts need to be cautious and should defer to the view
taken by the Arbitral Tribunal even if the reasoning
provided in the award is implied unless such award
portrays perversity unpardonable under Section 34 of the
Arbitration Act.”

29.Judicial scrutiny of arbitral awards is stringently limited under

Indian law. Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996,

provides the exclusive grounds upon which an arbitral award can be

challenged. Courts, therefore, are not empowered to interfere merely

because another interpretation or outcome may seem more

reasonable. The jurisdiction under Section 34 is confined to

procedural and legal infirmities such as lack of jurisdiction, violation

of natural justice, or patent illegality. Consequently, appellate

jurisdiction under Section 37 is even narrower in its scope. Its

purpose is to evaluate whether the court adjudicating under Section

34 has remained within the permissible statutory boundaries. The

appeal court cannot re-evaluate evidence or reconsider the factual

matrix afresh. The statutory framework thus reflects an overarching

legislative intent to insulate arbitral decisions from excessive judicial

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intervention. The entire architecture of Sections 34 and 37 reinforces

the finality and autonomy of arbitral proceedings. Arbitration is

designed to offer an efficient, expert-led, and expedited alternative to

litigation. Courts must therefore resist the temptation to intervene

unless the decision by the court under Section 34 itself amounts to a

significant transgression of legal boundaries.

30.Judicial restraint under Section 37 also reflects respect for

institutional competence of arbitral tribunals in resolving technical

and commercial disputes. Courts are cautious not to intrude into

operational or industry-specific assessments unless such assessments

are manifestly disconnected from evidence or contractual terms.

Arbitration is valued precisely because it permits specialized

adjudication, and appellate courts must avoid substituting judicial

perceptions for commercial judgment, unless the latter is

demonstrably arbitrary or legally unsound.

31.The balance, therefore, lies between two competing imperatives:

preserving arbitral autonomy and ensuring legal accountability.

Excessive deference risks validating legally flawed awards, while

excessive interference undermines arbitration as an effective dispute

resolution mechanism. Section 37 embodies this balance by allowing

interference only when legal thresholds are crossed. Courts must

carefully calibrate intervention to correct illegality without re-

opening factual controversy, thereby preserving both rule of law and

arbitral efficiency.

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32.Now this Court shall endeavour to answer the main question framed

herein bearing in mind that this Court is not sitting as a court of first

appeal over the arbitral award, nor can it re-appreciate evidence or

substitute its own view merely because another view is possible.

33.The principal issue for consideration before this Court is whether the

arbitral award suffers from such illegality, perversity or

jurisdictional defect as would justify interference in an appeal under

Section 37 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, particularly

when the award has already been upheld by the Ld. District Judge,

Ganjam, Berhampur under Section 34.

34.In ARBA 12 of 2014, the first objection raised by the appellants

relates to non-availability of site and delay in execution of work. The

arbitrator has recorded detailed findings that only fragmented

portions of the site were initially handed over and that even

subsequent availability remained discontinuous and legally

obstructed due to private ownership and forest restrictions. The

arbitrator has referred to departmental correspondence, progress

reports and site conditions while arriving at the conclusion that

workable site was not made available in reasonable measure. These

findings are not based on conjecture but on documents placed on

record. The Ld. District Judge has also examined this aspect and has

found that the arbitrator’s conclusion is supported by evidence. This

Court does not find that such findings are so unreasonable or

unsupported as to warrant interference.

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35.The appellants have argued that the contractor was himself

responsible for delay and that departmental action in foreclosing the

contract and encashing the bank guarantee was justified. However,

the arbitrator has found that stoppage of work and termination were

not preceded by adequate handover of site and that the contractor

could not be blamed for non-execution in such circumstances.

Whether termination was justified or not was a matter squarely

within the arbitral domain, and once the arbitrator has examined

facts and contractual clauses to reach a conclusion, this Court cannot

re-adjudicate that question in appeal.

36.The next issue relates to claims towards idle labour, machinery and

mobilisation advance. These claims are founded on the assertion that

manpower and equipment were mobilised in anticipation of work

but remained idle due to site constraints. The arbitrator has

examined statements of deployment, duration of idling, and

supporting materials and thereafter quantified compensation. This is

essentially an assessment of factual loss arising out of breach. This

Court finds no material to suggest that the arbitrator ignored vital

evidence or relied on no evidence. The appellants’ grievance is

primarily about the sufficiency and correctness of proof, which

cannot be revisited under Section 37.

37.The appellants have also challenged the award of revised minimum

wages, stating that deletion of escalation clause barred such claim.

This Court finds that the arbitrator has treated the issue as one of

statutory compliance rather than contractual escalation. Payment of
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minimum wages flows from law and not merely from contract. A

contractual clause cannot override statutory wage obligations. The

arbitrator has relied on legal principles and relevant precedents

while allowing this claim. This approach does not disclose any legal

infirmity.

38.The challenge to refund of bank guarantee is also linked to the

finding regarding wrongful termination. Once the arbitrator found

that failure to execute work was not attributable to the contractor,

invocation of the bank guarantee lost its contractual basis. The

arbitrator has therefore directed refund of the encashed amount. This

follows logically from the factual findings and does not amount to

grant beyond jurisdiction.

39.With regard to interest on blocked amounts and future interest, the

arbitrator has exercised discretion after considering that money was

withheld without justification. Interest is compensatory in nature

and intended to offset deprivation of use of money. The rate

awarded cannot be said to be shockingly high or prohibited under

law. This Court finds no reason to interfere with such discretionary

relief.

40.Another set of objections raised by the appellants pertains to

limitation and appointment of arbitrator. It is seen that these

objections were not pressed before the arbitrator by invoking Section

16 of the Act. The parties participated in the proceedings without

raising jurisdictional challenge at the appropriate stage. The Act

clearly provides that objections to jurisdiction must be raised before
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the Tribunal at the earliest opportunity, failing which such objections

are deemed to be waived. Raising such grounds for the first time in

appellate proceedings is not permissible.

41.It is also relevant that many of the grounds now urged were not part

of the Section 34 application in substance or were not pursued

seriously before the Ld. District Judge. An appeal under Section 37

cannot be used to enlarge the scope of challenge beyond what was

available under Section 34, nor can it serve as a forum for

introducing fresh objections or reshaping the case.

42.Therefore, the judgment of the Ld. District Judge dated 23.9.2013

shows that the scope of Section 34 was correctly appreciated and that

each head of claim was examined with reference to the arbitral

findings and contractual provisions. This Court does not find that the

Ld. District Judge ignored any material issue or applied incorrect

legal principles.

43.In ARBA 13 of 2014, at the outset, this Court notes that the execution

of work by the respondent is not in dispute. The contract, the period

of execution, the grant of extension up to 4.8.2003, the completion of

work within the extended period, and the recording of final

measurements by early August, 2003, all stand admitted. There is

also no dispute that the 4th R/A bill and the final bill were prepared,

that the gross amount stood at about Rs. 69.86 lakhs, and that after

statutory deductions the net payable was Rs. 63,51,867/-. Thus, the

foundational fact that money became due and payable to the

respondent under the very contract in question is not contested.

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44.The only justification offered by the appellants for non-payment is

that the respondent had alleged dues or excess payments in respect

of other contracts executed under different packages and divisions,

and therefore the amount payable under the present contract was

retained for adjustment. This Court finds that the arbitrator has dealt

with this issue in a detailed and reasoned manner. The General

Conditions of Contract were examined, particularly Clause 43.1,

which mandates payment within 28 days of preparation of the bill

and provides for interest in case of delay. Significantly, no clause was

shown which authorises the employer to withhold payments under

one contract to recover alleged dues under another, independent

contract. Contracts are separate legal engagements. Rights and

liabilities under one cannot be mechanically transplanted into

another in the absence of express contractual authority. Permitting

such adjustment would amount to rewriting the contract by judicial

fiat, which neither the arbitrator nor this Court is empowered to do.

45.This Court also finds force in the arbitrator’s observation that even if

the alleged amount to be recovered from other packages was about

Rs. 34.25 lakhs, the entire sum of about Rs. 70 lakhs was withheld.

Such blanket withholding, despite completion of work and

certification of measurements, cannot be justified on any rational

contractual basis. The arbitrator’s conclusion that this amounted to

financial harassment is not an emotional or rhetorical remark, but a

factual inference drawn from prolonged deprivation of payment for

completed work.

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46.Further, the record shows that the respondent had approached the

Ld. District Judge under Section 9 on 30.8.2003, and an order was

passed restraining further recovery from other bills till arbitration

was decided. The appellants were parties to that proceeding. Yet,

payment of the bills under the present contract was still not released,

on the plea of instructions from higher authorities. This Court is

constrained to observe that once a judicial order is in force,

administrative instructions cannot override it. Continued non-

payment despite such order only reinforces the finding that the

respondent was deprived of money lawfully due, without legal

justification.

47.On Claim No. 2 relating to minimum wages, this Court finds that the

arbitrator approached the issue correctly in law and in fact. Payment

of minimum wages under the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 is not

optional, nor is it dependent on contractual clauses. It is a statutory

mandate. The contract itself required compliance with labour laws.

The wage revision notification enhancing wages from Rs. 40/- to Rs.

50/- came into effect on 1.1.2002, prior to commencement of work on

5.6.2002. The respondent, therefore, had no choice but to pay the

enhanced wages. The deletion of a general price escalation clause

cannot nullify a statutory obligation, nor can it absolve the employer

of financial consequences flowing from compliance with mandatory

labour laws.

48.The arbitrator did not award any notional or speculative amount. He

applied the Works Department formula for calculation of increased
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labour cost, identified the labour components for different categories

of work based on measurement book entries, and then computed the

additional amount payable. This is a factual and technical exercise,

well within the domain of the arbitral tribunal. This Court does not

find any perversity or patent illegality in this computation. The

award on this head is rooted in statutory obligation, contractual

stipulations regarding labour law compliance, and departmental

methodology for calculation.

49.With respect to Claim No. 3 concerning performance security, the

factual position is that the defect liability period had expired and the

work stood accepted. Performance security is meant to secure

performance during execution and defect liability. It is not meant to

be retained indefinitely as leverage for unrelated claims. The

arbitrator directed release of the bank guarantee amount and

awarded interest for delayed release. This Court finds that such

direction flows directly from the contract and from basic principles

of fairness in commercial dealings. Retention beyond contractual

period without cause is not defensible.

50.On Claim No. 4 regarding retention money, the contract itself

provides that part of the retention is to be released on completion

and the balance after expiry of defect liability period. Both stages had

admittedly passed. The arbitrator relied on measurement book

deductions to ascertain the amount retained and ordered refund

with interest. This again is a straight application of contractual terms

to admitted facts. No perversity or illegality is shown.

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51.On Claim No. 5 relating to interest on delayed payment of the

principal amount, Clause 43 of the GCC expressly provides for

interest on delayed payments. Once the principal amount was found

to be wrongfully withheld, interest necessarily follows. The

arbitrator quantified interest based on contractual rate and period of

delay. Award of interest in such circumstances cannot be

characterised as punitive or contrary to law. It is compensatory in

nature.

52.The appellants have also raised objections regarding the constitution

of the tribunal and alleged violation of dispute resolution procedure.

This Court finds that the arbitrator has recorded a clear factual

finding that Clause 25.3(f) applied, that the respondent requested

appointment of sole arbitrator, and that the Chief Engineer

appointed the arbitrator on 6.2.2004. The appellants participated in

the proceedings fully, filed pleadings, produced documents, and

argued on merits. No objection under Section 16 was raised before

the tribunal. No application under Sections 12 to 15 was pursued. In

such circumstances, Section 4 of the Act squarely applies, and any

objection to procedure or composition stands waived. A party cannot

approbate and reprobate, participate in proceedings, and after

suffering an adverse award, question the very forum it had accepted.

53.The plea that disputes were not raised within 28 days of the

Engineer’s decision is also devoid of merit. Limitation in arbitration

is governed by the Limitation Act by virtue of Section 43. Contractual

clauses cannot curtail statutory limitation periods. Moreover, such
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objections are jurisdictional in nature and ought to have been raised

before the tribunal at the threshold. Raising them for the first time in

Section 34 or Section 37 proceedings is impermissible.

54.This Court also notes that the Section 34 application did not plead

precise grounds falling within Section 34(2) with necessary

particulars. What was placed before the Ld. District Judge was

largely a repetition of defences taken before the arbitrator. The Ld.

District Judge rightly declined to re-appreciate evidence or revisit

contractual interpretation. The judgment dated 16.09.2013 reflects

correct appreciation of the limited scope of interference.

55.In sum, this Court finds that the arbitral award impugned in ARBA

13 of 2014 is based on contractual clauses, statutory mandates,

admitted facts, and reasoned appreciation of evidence. It does not

suffer from perversity. It does not violate public policy. It does not

disclose patent illegality on the face of the award. The conclusions

reached by the arbitrator are plausible, coherent, and legally

sustainable. Even if another view were theoretically possible, that by

itself is no ground for interference under Section 37.

56.Overall, this Court finds that the arbitral awards are reasoned

awards based on contractual interpretation and factual appreciation,

and the supervisory court under Section 34 has already found no

ground for interference. The present appeal essentially seeks a

rehearing on facts and merits, which is not permissible within the

narrow confines of Section 37 jurisdiction.

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57.Accordingly, this Court finds no illegality, perversity or

jurisdictional error in the arbitral awards dated 6.12.2004 or 5.3.2005

respectively and in the judgments dated 23.9.2013 or

16.9.2013 passed by the Ld. District Judge, Ganjam, Berhampur,

warranting interference by this Court.

VI. CONCLUSION:

58.In this backdrop, this Court finds that the appellants’ challenge

essentially seeks reappreciation of evidence and substitution of

factual conclusions, which is impermissible in appellate jurisdiction

under Section 37. The arbitral awards and the judgments of the Ld.

District Judge reflect due consideration of the contractual framework

and evidentiary materials, and no ground is made out to hold that

the award is in conflict with law or public policy. Consequently, the

challenge does not merit acceptance.

59.In view of the foregoing discussion and findings, this Court holds

that the appeals are devoid of merit and, accordingly, ARBA No.12

of 2014 and ARBA No.13 of 2014 are dismissed. The judgments

dated 23.9.2013 and 16.9.2013 passed by the Ld. District Judge,

Ganjam, Berhampur in Arbitration Petition No.01 of 2005 and

Arbitration Petition No.03 of 2005 are hereby affirmed, and the

same stand upheld.

60.Any interim orders, if any, passed during pendency of the aforesaid

appeals shall stand vacated. Pending interlocutory applications, if

any, shall also stand disposed of.

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61.There shall be no order as to costs.

(Dr.Sanjeeb K Panigrahi)
Judge
Orissa High Court, Cuttack,
Dated the 30th Jan., 2026/

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