Supreme Courtappeal concerning an arbitration dispute between a stockbroker and a married couple, Jatin Pratap Desai and his wife. The central issues revolved around whether the husband could be held jointly and severally liable for the debit balance in his wife’s trading account based on an oral agreement, and if the High Court had properly exercised its appellate jurisdiction in setting aside the arbitral award against the husband. The Court ultimately upheld the arbitral tribunal’s findings that the husband was indeed jointly and severally liable and that the High Court’s interference was improper.
(A) Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, Section 34 and 37 – Bombay Stock Exchange Bye- laws, 1957, Bye-law 248(a) – Arbitration award – Challenge as to – Whether respondent no. 1, who is the husband of respondent no. 2, could have been made a party to the arbitration that was invoked by the appellant, who is a registered stock broker, and held to be jointly and severally liable for the debit balance that had accrued in the wife’s (respondent no. 2’s) account with the appellant? – Held that under Bye-law 248(a), the arbitral tribunal could have exercised jurisdiction over respondent no. 1 on the basis of an oral contract that he would be jointly and severally liable for the transactions undertaken in respondent no. 2’s account – Such oral contract would not amount to a “private” transaction that falls outside the scope of arbitration.
(Para 1 and 32)
(B) Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, Section 34 and 37 – Arbitration award – Judicial intervention – The arbitral tribunal found that both respondents were jointly and severally liable for repaying the debit balance in respondent no. 2’s account, and the respondents’ applications under Section 34 of the Act, 1996 to set aside the arbitral award were dismissed by the learned single judge of the High Court – However, the division bench of the High Court allowed the Section 37 appeal preferred by respondent no. 1 and set aside the arbitral award only against him, which is impugned in the present appeal – Held that the High Court did not correctly exercise jurisdiction under Section 37 as it re-appreciated evidence and examined the merits of the award – Upon examination of the findings of the arbitral tribunal, it is clear that the award is not liable to be set aside on the grounds of perversity or patent illegality – Settled jurisprudence on the scope of judicial intervention under Section 34 and Section 37 of the Act, is that the arbitral tribunal arrived at a reasonable conclusion, based on evidence, as to the joint and several nature of the respondents’ liability – Impugned order of the High Court liable to be set aside – As a consequence, the arbitral award upheld in its entirety – Respondent no. 1 is jointly and severally liable, along with respondent no. 2, to pay the appellant the arbitral sum of Rs. 1,18,48,069/- along with 9% interest p.a. from 01.05.2001 till date of repayment as has been directed by the arbitral tribunal.
(Para 1, 32 and 33)
Ac Chokshi Share Broker Private Limited V. Jatin Pratap Desai
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 174: (DoJ 10-02-2025)




