In the case of D V Anand vs. Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL), the Delhi High Court partially allowed an intra-court appeal under Section 37 of the Arbitration Act against an arbitral award that had upheld a penalty of over ₹2 crores for alleged fake LPG connections. The Court distinguished between 446 connections that had been physically verified (where the distributor admitted to employee manipulation) and 380 connections that were penalized without any investigation or disclosure of identity. The Court ruled that holding a distributor liable for unverified connections—and shifting the burden of proof to them without identifying the specific accounts—constituted “patent illegality” and perversity. Consequently, the Court modified the award, slashing the recoverable penalty amount from the respondent’s counter-claim to approximately ₹25.45 lakhs.
- Background and Dispute
The appellant, an LPG distributor associated with HPCL since 1981, was penalized ₹2,24,89,020/- following a 2014 complaint alleging the existence of 826 fake LPG connections in his database. HPCL’s investigation, which involved random verification letters and physical inspections, led them to believe the entire list was fraudulent. While the appellant admitted to data manipulation by former employees, he challenged the penalty as being disproportionate and based on incomplete verification.
- Arbitral and Initial Judicial Findings
The Sole Arbitrator upheld HPCL’s counter-claim, directing the recovery of ₹2,03,12,102/- (after adjustments) plus interest. The Arbitrator reasoned that since some connections were proven fake, the burden shifted to the distributor to prove the genuineness of all 826 connections. A Single Judge of the High Court later dismissed the distributor’s Section 34 petition, finding the arbitrator’s view to be a “plausible” one based on the record.
- Eligibility of the Arbitrator
A primary legal challenge in the appeal was the eligibility of the arbitrator, who was an employee of HPCL. The appellant argued that under the 2015 Amendment Act, the arbitrator became ineligible to continue. However, the Court ruled that since the arbitral proceedings had commenced in 2014 (prior to the amendment’s effective date of October 23, 2015), the unamended Act applied. Therefore, the arbitrator’s mandate remained valid.
- Merits of the Penalty: The Two Categories
The Court categorized the 826 alleged fake connections into two distinct sets for analysis:
- Set I (446 Connections): This group was subject to investigation, verification letters, and physical visits. The appellant had access to these particulars and had admitted to discrepancies caused by his employees. The Court found the findings for this set were supported by evidence and refused to interfere with the penalty imposed for these established irregularities.
- Set II (380 Connections): For this group, no investigation was conducted, and their particulars were never disclosed to the appellant. The Court found it “totally absurd and unsustainable” to expect the appellant to prove the genuineness of connections whose identities were hidden from him. Shifting the burden of proof in this manner was deemed a clear flaw in the decision-making process and an act of patent illegality.
- Doctrine of Severability and Final Relief
Applying the principle of severability, the Court held it could set aside the “invalid” portion of an award while sustaining the “valid” part, provided they are not intertwined.
- The Court upheld the first penalty component (₹3,15,472/-) for critical irregularity.
- It proportionately reduced the second component (penalty per connection) to cover only the 446 established fake connections, amounting to ₹22,30,000/-.
- It completely set aside the third component (unaccounted sales/refills) because it was inseparably linked to all 826 connections without separate quantification.
Final Decision: The appeal was partly allowed . The counter-claim of HPCL was modified and sustained only to the extent of ₹25,45,472/-.
2026 DHC 5233
D V Anand V. Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (D.O.J. 01.07.2026)



