In the case of V.K. John v. S. Mukanchand Bothra and HUF (2026), the Supreme Court of India ruled that the appropriate legal remedy for a legal heir or representative to challenge an arbitral award is through Section 34 of the Arbitration & Conciliation Act, 1996, rather than through a revision petition under the Constitution.
The following is a summary of the judgment:
Case Background
The dispute originated from a ‘Deed of Agreement for Sale’ executed in 2007 between Mr. Appu John (the appellant’s alleged uncle) and Respondent No. 1. Following Mr. Appu John’s death later that year, Respondent No. 1 initiated arbitration in 2011 against a different individual (Respondent No. 2), alleging he was the legal representative of the deceased. An arbitral award was subsequently passed in February 2011 directing the execution of the sale deed.
The appellant, V.K. John, contended that he was the sole surviving legal heir and had been falsely excluded from the arbitration proceedings, which he only learned about in 2012. He had previously secured a preliminary decree in a partition suit for a 1/3rd share of the subject property.
Legal Issue
The central question before the Court was whether a legal representative aggrieved by an arbitral award—especially one who was not a party to the original proceedings—should seek relief under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act or via a revision petition under Article 227 of the Constitution or Section 115 of the CPC.
Key Findings and Reasoning
The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the High Court’s decision, establishing the following principles:
- Arbitration Act as a Complete Code: The Court reaffirmed that the Arbitration Act is a “complete Code in itself”. Judicial interference outside the scope of the Act (such as under Article 227) should be reserved for “exceptional rarity” where a party is left entirely remediless or there is clear bad faith.
- Rights of Legal Representatives: Under Section 40 of the Act, an arbitration agreement is not discharged by the death of a party and remains enforceable by or against their legal representatives.
- Step into the Shoes of the Deceased: The Court held that since legal representatives “step into the shoes of the deceased” and are bound by the award under Section 35, they must naturally possess the right to challenge that award using the statutory mechanisms provided to the original parties.
- Exclusion from Proceedings: The Court noted that even if a legal representative was not made a party to the arbitration, they are not remediless; they can invoke Section 34 to set aside the award. Denying this right would defeat the object of the Act as a self-contained dispute resolution framework.
Conclusion and Relief
The Supreme Court concluded that the High Court was correct in law to dismiss the revision petition. However, to ensure the appellant was not left without a forum, the Court issued the following orders:
- The appeal was dismissed, affirming the High Court’s order.
- The appellant is permitted to file a petition under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act to challenge the award on its merits.
- To protect the appellant’s right to be heard, the Court directed that the limitation period for filing such a petition shall run from the date of this judgment (April 20, 2026).
2026 INSC 393
V.K. John V. S. Mukanchand Bothra And Huf (Died) Represented By Lrs. & Ors. (D.O.J. 20.04.2026)




