In the case of Home Care Retail Marts Pvt. Ltd. v. Haresh N. Sanghavi (2026), the Supreme Court of India addressed a significant conflict between various High Courts regarding the maintainability of a petition under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. The Court ruled that a party that has unsuccessfully participated in arbitral proceedings is still entitled to seek interim measures from a court at the post-award stage.
Substantial Question of Law
The core issue was whether a party who “lost” the arbitration and has no enforceable award in their favor can maintain a Section 9 petition after the award is rendered but before it is enforced.
Key Findings and Legal Reasoning
The Supreme Court reversed the position held by several High Courts (including Bombay, Delhi, and Madras), identifying the following principles:
- Definition of “A Party”: The Court noted that Section 9 uses the term “a party,” which Section 2(h) defines simply as “a party to an arbitration agreement”. The statute draws no distinction between successful and unsuccessful parties, and the Court held that it cannot “contextually modulate” this definition based on the outcome of the case.
- Literal Interpretation: Applying the literal rule of statutory interpretation, the Court stated that when the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, judges must give effect to the legislative intent without adding or subtracting words. The legislature intentionally provided a post-award stage for interim relief without restricting it to award-holders.
- Prevention of Remediless Situations: The Court observed that a party challenging an award under Section 34 must not be left remediless. If the award is eventually stayed or modified (as permitted under the Gayatri Balasamy precedent), a party may need interim protection to secure the “subject matter of arbitration” or the “amount in dispute”.
- Object of Section 9: The purpose of the provision is to ensure that parties retain the right to approach the court for interim protection until the entire judicial process, including challenges to the award, has reached its culmination.
Conclusion and High Threshold for Relief
The Supreme Court concluded that the judgments of the Bombay, Delhi, Madras, and Karnataka High Courts, which denied relief to unsuccessful parties, were incorrect and do not lay down good law.
However, the Court cautioned that while such petitions are maintainable, the threshold for granting relief to an unsuccessful party is significantly higher. Courts must exercise extreme care and circumspection, granting interim measures only in “rare and compelling cases” to prevent irreparable prejudice and ensure the efficacy of the challenge proceedings.
2026 INSC 415
Home Care Retail Marts Pvt. Ltd. V. Haresh N. Sanghavi (D.O.J. 24.04.2026)



