The Supreme Court of India allowed the civil appeals filed by Hirani Developers (the Appellant), setting aside a common order of the Bombay High Court that had dismissed five applications for the appointment of an arbitrator. The core legal dispute centered on whether an arbitration clause from a primary contract can be validly incorporated into a subsequent agreement by general reference.
The Supreme Court held that under Section 7(5) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, an arbitration clause contained in an earlier document stands legally incorporated into a later contract if the later agreement displays a clear, unambiguous intention to import the parent document in its entirety. The Court found that because the subsequent accommodation agreements explicitly stated that all terms of the master agreement were “construed to form a part of” and were “binding on the parties,” the arbitration clause was successfully integrated. Consequently, the Court set aside the High Court’s order and formally appointed a Sole Arbitrator to resolve the disputes.
I. Factual Background
- The Master Agreement (2011): The appellant, Hirani Developers (a proprietary real estate concern), entered into a primary Development Agreement with Nehru Nagar Samruddhi Co-operative Housing Society Limited on December 10, 2011 (registered on July 4, 2012) for a project redevelopment. Clause 36 of this master agreement contained a dispute resolution mechanism mandating the appointment of a sole arbitrator.
- The Individual Agreements (2023–2024): Much later, the appellant executed separate, individual Permanent Alternate Accommodation Agreements with five society members: Narayan Haldankar, Malan Valkunde, Ravindra Walanju, Pradeep Govekar, and SuchitaPawar. These individual contracts were identical and contained Clause 14, which specified that all terms, conditions, and clauses of the 2012 Development Agreement were construed to form a part of the contract and were fully binding on the signatories.
- The Consumer Dispute: After the individual members filed consumer complaints against Hirani Developers under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, the developer issued individual legal notices under Section 21 of the Arbitration Act to invoke Clause 36. The members refused to participate in the arbitration, prompting the appellant to file Section 11 applications before the High Court.
II. High Court Interventions
The High Court of Judicature at Bombay dismissed the developer’s Section 11 applications on June 26, 2025. It ruled that individual members were not privy to the arbitration clause of the master Development Agreement. Under Section 7(5) of the Arbitration Act, the High Court opined that a mere generic reference in a later document is legally insufficient to bind individual consumers to an arbitration mechanism without demonstrating an explicit, independent commitment within the secondary document itself. The developer appealed this ruling by special leave under file “2026 INSC 484”.
III. Key Issues Considered by the Supreme Court
- Whether a generic contractual phrase stating that an earlier document forms a part of a later agreement satisfies the requirements of Section 7(5) of the Arbitration Act to constitute a valid arbitration agreement.
- The distinction between a mere contextual reference to an external document versus the holistic incorporation of a primary text “body and soul” into a later contract.
IV. Supreme Court’s Analysis and Legal Findings
A. Statutory Scope of Section 7(5)
The Court analyzed Section 7(5) of the Arbitration Act, which provides that a reference in a written contract to an external document containing an arbitration clause constitutes a valid arbitration agreement, provided the reference explicitly targets making that clause a part of the later contract.
B. The Doctrine of Incorporation by Reference
- The R. Engineers Framework: The Supreme Court relied extensively on the foundational rules of construction established in M.R. Engineers and Contractors Private Limited v. SomDatt Builders Limited. It highlighted that a contract can deal with an external document in two ways:
- Mere Reference: Where an external document is referred to in a limited context (e.g., to verify product specifications or payment terms), only that specific parameter is borrowed, leaving an external arbitration clause inactive.
- Incorporation: Where a contract provides that an external document shall form “part and parcel” of the agreement, or that its terms shall be read as a part of the contract, the text gets bodily lifted in its entirety. In such cases, any dispute resolution clause present in the primary document applies automatically.
- Intent to Assimilate: Citing NBCC (India) Limited v. Zillion Infraprojects Private Limited, the Court noted that a general contextual reference fails, but a reference that clearly evinces an intention to incorporate the parent contract “body and soul” will succeed.
C. Application to Clause 14
The Apex Court found that the High Court completely misapplied the legal standards. Clause 14 of the Permanent Alternate Accommodation Agreements explicitly recorded that all terms and conditions of the 2012 Development Agreement formed part of the document and that all clauses were fully binding. The Court declared that there could be no clearer indication of a mutual intent to fully assimilate and absorb the master agreement. Accordingly, the arbitration clause became a binding contractual realities for the individual society members.
V. Final Decision
The Supreme Court allowed the civil appeals on May 13, 2026, and delivered the following directives:
- The common order of the Bombay High Court dated June 26, 2025, is set aside.
- The Court recognized the existence of a valid arbitration agreement between the parties by incorporation.
- Vishal Kanade, Advocate, Bombay High Court, was formally appointed as the Sole Arbitrator to adjudicate the disputes and differences between Hirani Developers and the respondent members.
- The Arbitrator was directed to file his statutory declaration under Section 12 within 15 days, with fees structured in terms of the Fourth Schedule to the Arbitration Act.
2026 INSC 484
Hirani Developers V. Nehru Nagar SamruddhiChs Ltd. And Another Etc. (D.O.J. 13.05.2026)




