M/S Jindal Steel and Power Ltd. (appellants) had issued a work order to M/S Bansal Infra Projects Pvt. Ltd. (Respondent No. 1) for a project valued at over Rs. 43 crore, including an advance payment and a bank guarantee as security [3.1, 15]. Due to alleged continuous failures, missed deadlines, and non-compliance with contractual obligations by Respondent No. 1, the appellants sought to terminate the work order and encash the bank guarantee [3.3, 3.6, 15]. Respondent No. 1 filed an Arbitration Petition under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, before the Commercial Court, Cuttack, seeking interim relief to restrain the bank guarantee’s encashment [3.7, 5.7].
The Commercial Court rejected the ex parte interim injunction and issued notice to the opposite parties [2, 3.8]. Challenging this, Respondent No. 1 filed a writ petition under Article 227 of the Constitution before the High Court of Orissa [1, 2, 3.8, 5.8]. The High Court, as an interim measure, granted an order of status quo regarding the bank guarantee’s encashment [2, 3.8, 3.9, 5.8]. The bank guarantee was set to expire on 05.09.2024 but was subsequently extended until 31.12.2024 [3.9, 4.2, 14]. The appellants then challenged the High Court’s order before the Supreme Court [1, 3.9].
Law Involved
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996: Specifically, Section 9 (interim measures by court) and Section 37(1)(b) (appealability of orders granting or refusing interim measures) [2, 5.7, 6, 8, 11, 14].
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC): Order XXXIX Rule 3 (procedure for granting injunction without notice) and Section 151 (inherent powers of court) [2, 5.7].
Article 227 of the Constitution of India: Supervisory jurisdiction of High Courts over subordinate courts and tribunals.
The principle that invocation of an unconditional bank guarantee should only be interfered with in cases of egregious fraud or irretrievable injustice.
Reasoning The Supreme Court noted that the Commercial Court’s order was an interim order under Section 9 of the Arbitration Act, which denied an ex parte injunction and merely issued notice. Such an order, not being a final order, is generally not appealable under Section 37(1)(b) of the Arbitration Act. The Court found that the High Court erred by entertaining a writ petition under Article 227 of the Constitution against an unappealable interim order. The High Court’s supervisory jurisdiction under Article 227 is limited and should not be invoked to overstep the limits of jurisdiction, especially when an equally efficacious alternative remedy is available or when it amounts to interfering with a discretionary order that does not show perversity or infirmity. Furthermore, the Court reiterated the established legal principle that interference with the invocation of a bank guarantee is permissible only in cases of clear fraud or irretrievable injustice, neither of which was sufficiently demonstrated by Respondent No.1. The ongoing arbitration proceedings under Section 9 were considered the appropriate forum for the parties to present their arguments regarding the bank guarantee.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, thereby setting aside the High Court’s order dated 20.08.2024. The Court directed that the bank guarantee should be kept alive and remain subject to the final outcome of the Section 9 arbitration petition, which is now ripe for arguments before the Commercial Court. The appeal stood disposed of with no costs.
M/S Jindal Steel And Power Ltd. And Another V. M/S Bansal Infra Projects Pvt. Ltd. And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 640: (DoJ 07-05-2025)




