Whether property owners are entitled to contractual delay penalties without separate proof of actual damages after a builder abandons a project, and the extent to which courts can modify a patently illegal arbitral award under Sections 34 and 37 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
Appeals disposed of by exercising extraordinary powers under Article 142 of the Constitution to prevent a fresh round of litigation; the award was modified to grant the owners a reduced delay penalty of ₹6,30,000, leaving a net balance of ₹25,62,400 payable to the respondents (the builder’s legal representatives).
1. Factual Genesis
On April 9, 2010, the property owners (the Bhayanas) entered into a building reconstruction agreement with a builder (Vinod Seth). Under the agreement, the builder was to pay ₹64,00,000 in installments as earnest money and compensation, and in return, he was entitled to retain the second floor of the reconstructed building.
- Clause 7: Mandated project completion within 12 months (plus a 2-month grace period) after providing vacant land, failing which the builder had to pay a penalty of ₹10,000 per day for the delayed period.
- Clause 13: Stipulated that a breach by the builder would result in the forfeiture of the earnest money and compensation.
The builder paid ₹45,00,000 but abandoned the construction in August 2011 after completing only the basic underlying structures. Consequently, the owners terminated the agreement on November 11, 2011.
2. Procedural History & Lower Court Findings
The dispute was referred to a sole arbitrator, who issued an award on October 21, 2013.
- Arbitral Award: The Arbitrator found the builder in breach and awarded the owners a delay penalty of ₹72,000,000 (computed at ₹10,000 per day for an assumed 2-year completion timeline). However, the Arbitrator denied the owners’ right to forfeit the earnest money under Clause 13 to avoid double penalty, entitling the builder to a refund of ₹45,00,000 plus uncontested construction costs of ₹36,92,400. The net result required the owners to pay the builder ₹9,92,400. The owners accepted this award without a Section 34 challenge.
- Section 34 Modification: Aggrieved by the penalty, the builder moved the Delhi High Court. A Single Judge modified the award, shifting the penalty commencement date to August 9, 2011, and limiting it to October 2012 (when claims were filed), effectively reducing the owners’ penalty to ₹42,00,000.
- Section 37 Appeal: On cross-appeals, a Division Bench of the Delhi High Court completely set aside the owners’ penalty. The Bench ruled that since the owners did not adduce separate evidence showing actual damage or financial loss caused by the delay, they were entirely disentitled to damages under Clause 7. The builder’s counter-claims were upheld.
3. Supreme Court’s Analysis and Legal Observations
The Supreme Court reviewed the judgments and set aside the Division Bench’s reasoning on the following grounds:
- Proof of Damage Under Liquidated Penalty Clauses: The Court held that when a contract explicitly specifies timelines and daily financial penalties for delay, separate proof of actual damage is unnecessary. The harm caused by missing construction deadlines is implicit within the contract covenant itself. Thus, the Division Bench erred in completely erasing the penalty on a lack of independent evidence.
- Correction of Timelines: The Court noticed that both lower courts failed to correctly compute the timelines under Clause 7, which depended on when vacant land was provided. Uncontroverted evidence showed that demolition took three months, making the land vacant on July 9, 2010. The 14-month completion window (including grace period) expired on September 9, 2011. Because the owners terminated the contract on November 11, 2011, they could not claim delay penalties beyond that date. The penalty period was therefore restricted to 63 days (September 9, 2011, to November 11, 2011), totaling ₹6,30,000.
- Patent Illegality vs. Finality: The Court noted that the original arbitral award was patently illegal under Section 34(2A) because the Arbitrator wrongly forced the owners to choose between Clause 7 (delay) and Clause 13 (breach/forfeiture) when both were contractually distinct. However, since the owners never challenged the award under Section 34, that forfeiture denial had attained finality.
- Power to Modify under Article 142: Referencing Gayatri Balasamy v. ISG Novasoft Technologies Ltd., the Court observed that appellate courts have nuanced powers to modify awards to yield just outcomes and prevent severe hardships. Rather than voiding the award in toto and forcing the parties into a fresh round of arbitration after 14 years of litigation, the Court invoked Article 142 of the Constitution to bring a quietus to the dispute.
4. Final Conclusion & Monetary Adjustments
The Supreme Court modified the final allocations as follows:
- The respondents (builder’s estate) were entitled to ₹81,92,400 (earnest money refund + construction costs).
- The appellants (owners) were entitled to a contractual penalty of ₹6,30,000.
- Deducting the owners’ penalty left a net amount of ₹75,62,400 payable to the respondents.
- Since ₹50,00,000 had already been disbursed during the pendency of this appeal, the appellants were ordered to pay the remaining balance of ₹25,62,400 to the respondents. No interest was awarded to either party.
2026 INSC 546
Bhupesh Bhayana And Another V. Kunal Seth And Another (D.O.J. 26.05.2026)




