The Supreme Court of India set aside the interim order dated 02.09.2025 and the order dated 28.01.2026 passed by the Gauhati High Court, ruling that a Revision Petition under Article 227 of the Constitution is not maintainable against an Arbitral Tribunal’s decision rejecting a jurisdictional challenge under Section 16 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. The Court reaffirmed that the Act mandates minimal judicial interference and that jurisdictional objections should be addressed through the statutory remedy provided under Section 34 of the Act following the final award, unless a “patent lack of inherent jurisdiction” is evident.
Background
- Arbitration Genesis: Following a dispute over the management of a partnership firm (M/s Boloma Tea Company), the Supreme Court, in a prior consent order dated 21.11.2024, appointed a Sole Arbitrator to adjudicate disputes between the parties.
- Procedural Challenge: Respondent Nos. 1 to 3 (non-signatories to the partnership deed) challenged their inclusion in the arbitral proceedings before the Tribunal. The Tribunal rejected their application for deletion, citing the Supreme Court’s previous consent order for reference to arbitration.
- High Court Intervention: Respondent Nos. 1 to 3 filed a Revision Petition under Article 227 of the Constitution before the High Court, which stayed the arbitration notices and held the petition maintainable, claiming the Tribunal lacked inherent jurisdiction.
Key Findings of the Supreme Court
- Minimal Judicial Intervention: The Court emphasized that the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 is a self-contained code that strictly limits judicial intervention. Invoking Article 227 against every interim order of an Arbitral Tribunal defeats the legislative objective of expeditious dispute resolution.
- Doctrine of Kompetenz-Kompetenz: Under Section 16 of the Act, the Arbitral Tribunal is empowered to rule on its own jurisdiction. The Court clarified that the Tribunal must independently determine whether non-signatories are “veritable parties,” a complex factual inquiry not to be circumvented by preemptive writ petitions.
- Standard for High Court Interference: High Courts should exercise extreme circumspection and only interfere under Article 227 if there is a “patent lack of inherent jurisdiction”—a perversity so stark that it “stares one in the face”. The High Court erred in the present case by failing to record specific findings of such perversity while entertaining the revision.
- Litigation Conduct: The Court noted that Respondent Nos. 1 to 3 were served notice during the earlier Civil Appeal before the Supreme Court but failed to contest the matter at that time, and discouraged the subsequent “second round of litigation” that caused unnecessary delay.
Conclusion
- Orders Set Aside: Both High Court orders (dated 02.09.2025 and 28.01.2026) were set aside, and the Revision Petition was dismissed.
Direction to Tribunal: The Supreme Court directed the Arbitral Tribunal to independently determine the status of Respondent Nos. 1 to 3 regarding their non-signatory status, uninfluenced by the previous Supreme Court consent order, and to complete the proceedings expeditiously.
2026 INSC 701
Manash Kamal Bezboruah v. M/s Bokahola Tea Company Private Limited & Ors. (D.O.J. 14.07.2026)



