In the case of VPS Healthcare Private Limited and Another v. Prabhat Kumar Srivastava and Another (2026), the Supreme Court of India set aside a High Court judgment that had deferred the enforcement of a Consent Award, ruling that the Respondents (the Promoters) had an immediate obligation to insulate the Appellants (VPS/Medoor) from financial liability.
Case Background
Disputes arose following a 2016 Share Purchase Agreement where VPS acquired Rockland Hospitals (renamed Medoor) from the Promoters. Simultaneously, a third party, Ernst and Young (EY), claimed ₹10 Crores against the hospital for professional services. In 2019, VPS/Medoor and the Promoters entered into a Deed of Compromise, which was transformed into a Consent Award by the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC).
A key provision in this award—Paragraph 32(a)—stipulated that the Promoters would defend all specified litigations (including the EY claim) at their own cost and “ensure that no liability in regard to the said litigation is recovered from [VPS/Medoor] by the Forum”.
The Legal Conflict
In 2021, an Arbitral Tribunal awarded EY ₹10 Crores plus interest against Medoor. To stay the execution of this award while challenging it, the High Court of Delhi required Medoor to deposit ₹15,86,17,808. VPS/Medoor then sought to enforce the 2019 Consent Award to compel the Promoters to pay this amount.
The High Court initially dismissed this enforcement petition as “premature,” interpreting the contract to mean that the Promoters’ liability only triggered after the dispute was confirmed by the “Highest Court of Appeal”.
Key Findings of the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court reversed the High Court’s decision based on the following principles:
- Holistic Contractual Construction: The Court held that a contract must be read as a whole. The High Court erred by focusing only on the “fifth limb” of the clause (final appeal confirmation) while ignoring the “fourth limb,” which mandated that the Promoters ensure no liability is recovered from VPS/Medoor by any “Forum”.
- Definition of “Forum”: The “Forum” was contractually defined to include any Court, Authority, or Tribunal. The Arbitral Tribunal and the High Court (which ordered the deposit) both qualified as such forums.
- Absolute vs. Contingent Obligation: The Court clarified that the obligation to “ensure” no recovery takes place created an immediate and absolute obligation, not a contingent one that matures only after years of appeals. Treating the final appeal as the only trigger would render the rest of the agreement meaningless.
- Protection of the Indemnity Holder: The purpose of the clause was to insulate VPS/Medoor from the exigencies of litigation. The Court noted that requiring Medoor to deposit nearly ₹16 Crores constituted a “recovery of liability” that the Promoters were contractually bound to prevent or satisfy.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and directed that the Enforcement Petition be allowed. The Promoters were granted 30 days to pay or deposit the ₹15,86,17,808 for the benefit of VPS/Medoor.
2026 INSC 361
VPS Healthcare Private Limited and Another V. Prabhat Kumar Srivastava and Another(D.O. J. 13.04.2026)




