This appeal arose from a judgment and order of the Gauhati High Court dated 08.03.2019, which allowed an appeal under Section 37 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
The District Judge, Sivasagar, had previously allowed the judgment and order dated 15.11.2007 in Misc. Arb Case No.26 of 2005, under Section 34 of the 1996 Act, setting aside an arbitral award dated 21.11.2004.
The original arbitral award of 21.11.2004 passed a total amount of dollar 6,56,272.34 in favour of the claimant (M/S G & T BecKfield Drilling Services (P) Ltd) against the respondent (Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd.).
The arbitral tribunal also awarded interest at 12% per annum from 12.12.1998 on the total amount and an award for interest on the said amount made accordingly.
Costs of Rs.5 lakhs were awarded to the claimant, while counter-claims were dismissed.
The appellant (ONGC) was aggrieved by the award because the agreement did not allow payment of interest on the claim (Clause 18.1).
The District Judge allowed the application and set aside the award on two grounds: (a) it was non-reasoned, and (b) it violated Section 31(3) of the 1996 Act; and (b) the objection under Section 16(2) was neither rejected nor considered by the arbitral tribunal at the time of making the final award.
The High Court set aside the District Judge’s order, but limited the interest extent to 12% per cent per annum and affirmed the arbitral award in toto. A notice was issued regarding the extent of interest, stating that the amount was subject to payment by the respondent within a period of four weeks.
Law Involved
Section 31(7) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, which deals with the power of an arbitral tribunal to award interest.
Section 31(7) has two clauses:
Clause (a) deals with interest for the period between the date on which the cause of action arose and the date on which the award is made. It states that the arbitral tribunal may include interest at such rate as it deems reasonable, on the whole or any part of the money. However, the arbitral tribunal’s power to award interest is subject to the agreement between the parties.
Clause (b) deals with interest post-award and mandates an 18% per annum rate if the award does not direct otherwise.
The crucial aspect was Clause 18.1 of the agreement, which stated: “Corporation agrees to arrange remittance of payment under this contract within 30 days from the date of receipt of invoice from contractor duly certified by the authorized representative of the Corporation subject always to Corporation’s right to require contractor to furnish it with satisfactory evidence of the validity and prior payment by Contractor of all labor and material incurred by Contractor and charged to Corporation. Should corporation question any item or items of an invoice, it may withhold payment of the amount in dispute until such matter is resolved between the parties, but the amount not in dispute is to be paid within above period. No interest shall be payable by ONGC on any delayed payment / disputed claim”.
Previous judgments such as State of Orissa v. G.C. Roy, Union of India v. Ambica Construction, Ambica Construction v. Union of India, Reliance Cellulose Products Limited v. Oil And Natural Gas Corporation, Sayeed Ahmed & Co. (supra), THDC First (supra), Jaiprakash Associates Ltd. (THDC Second), and Ferro Concrete Construction (India) Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan, were referred to for interpreting the power to award interest, especially when there is a contractual bar.
Reasoning
The learned counsel for the appellant contended that Clause 18.1 prohibited payment of interest on any delayed or disputed claim, making the award of interest illegal.
The respondent argued that Clause 18.1 does not prohibit pendente lite interest, but rather the arbitral tribunal has discretion to award interest from the date the statement of claim is affirmed before it.
The Court observed that Clause 18.1 expressly states, “No interest shall be payable by ONGC on any delayed payment / disputed claim”.
The Court referenced previous judgments, particularly Sayeed Ahmed & Co. (supra), THDC First (supra), and THDC Second (supra), which established that if the agreement explicitly bars the grant of interest, the arbitral tribunal cannot award pendente lite interest.
The Supreme Court noted that where the agreement contains an express bar on interest, the tribunal lacks the power to grant interest for the pre-reference or pendente lite period.
The Court distinguished cases where the agreement is silent on interest from those where it explicitly prohibits it. If the agreement is silent, the tribunal can award interest. However, if the agreement stipulates that no interest is payable, the arbitral tribunal cannot award interest for the aforesaid period.
The Court found that Clause 18.1 constituted a clear and unambiguous bar on the payment of interest by ONGC on any delayed payment or disputed claim. Therefore, the arbitral tribunal, by awarding interest, had exceeded its jurisdiction because the agreement between the parties expressly prohibited the grant of pendente lite interest.
Holding
The Supreme Court found merit in the appeal.
The Court concluded that the arbitral tribunal erred in awarding pendente lite interest because Clause 18.1 of the agreement expressly barred such interest.
Consequently, the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal. This implies that the High Court’s decision to affirm the interest award in toto, despite the contractual bar, was overturned. The original setting aside of the interest award by the District Judge, based on the contractual prohibition, would effectively be upheld regarding the interest component.
The case was presided over by Justice Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and Justice Manoj Misra. The judgment was delivered on September 02, 2025.
Oil And Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. Vs M/s G & T Beckfield Drilling Service Pvt. Ltd.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1066: (DoJ 02-09-2025)




