The core issue referred to a five-Judge Bench of the Supreme Court was whether Indian courts, when dealing with challenges to arbitral awards under Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (“1996 Act”), possess the power to modify an arbitral award, or if their power is limited solely to setting it aside. This reference was prompted by conflicting judicial opinions, notably following the 2021 judgment in Project Director NHAI v. M. Hakeem, which had held that courts do not have the power to modify an arbitral award1…. The present case, Gayatri Balasamy v. ISG Novasoft Technologies Limited, was the first specific case to be referred after the Hakeem decision.
Law Involved:
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (A&C Act): Primarily Section 34, which outlines the grounds and process for challenging and setting aside arbitral awards. Section 34(4) allows courts to adjourn proceedings and give the tribunal an opportunity to resume proceedings to eliminate grounds for setting aside the award.
Article 142 of the Constitution of India: Pertains to the Supreme Court’s extraordinary power to pass orders to do “complete justice” in any cause or matter.
UNCITRAL Model Law: The 1996 Act is largely based on this international model, which typically does not provide for judicial modification of arbitral awards.
Judicial Precedent: The judgment extensively refers to previous Supreme Court decisions, most notably Project Director NHAI v. M. Hakeem and Another (2021).
Reasoning: The Supreme Court’s reasoning was rooted in a strict interpretation of the 1996 Act and the principles of arbitration law:
“Recourse” Means “Set Aside”: The Court emphasised that Section 34 of the 1996 Act provides for “recourse” to a court for “setting aside” an arbitral award. The term “recourse” implies annulment or quashing, not modification. To “set aside” is to render an award void, while to “modify” is to alter it, and these are distinct legal concepts.
Legislative Intent for Minimal Intervention: The 1996 Act was intentionally designed to limit judicial intervention in arbitral proceedings, aligning with the UNCITRAL Model Law’s philosophy. Expanding court powers to include modification would contradict this fundamental legislative intent.
Scope of Section 34(4): The Court clarified that Section 34(4) only allows a court to remit an award to the arbitral tribunal to give the tribunal an opportunity to cure defects or remove the grounds for setting aside the award (e.g., computational errors), not to empower the court itself to modify the award.
Affirmation of Hakeem: The Court unequivocally affirmed that the Hakeem judgment was correctly decided. It held that Hakeem was not per incuriam (decided in ignorance of law) and correctly interpreted that Section 34 does not grant courts the power to modify an arbitral award.
Limits on Article 142: While Article 142 grants the Supreme Court extensive powers to do “complete justice,” these powers cannot be used to override or contradict express statutory provisions, especially where a specific legislative scheme (like the Arbitration Act) deliberately limits judicial intervention.
Severability Distinction: The Court drew a clear distinction between “modification” and “severability.” It held that courts can “sever” (separate) an invalid or illegal part of an award from a valid, independent part, if the two are distinct. This act of severance, however, is not considered “modification” of the award.
Holding: The Supreme Court definitively held that:
Courts exercising powers under Section 34 or Section 37 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, do not have the power to modify an arbitral award.
The power to “set aside” an award does not include a lesser power to “modify“ it, as these are distinct statutory concepts.
The Supreme Court’s power under Article 142 of the Constitution cannot be invoked to modify an arbitral award in contravention of the Arbitration Act’s statutory scheme.
Courts are permitted to sever an invalid portion of an arbitral award if it is clearly distinct and independent from the valid portion, but this is not considered a modification.
Gayatri Balasamy V. M/S Isg Novasoft Technologies Limited
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 605: (DoJ 30-04-2025)




