In Rajeev Behl vs. Bhupesh Kumar Dhingra & Ors., the Delhi High Court granted interim protection to a petitioner seeking to safeguard a claimed 50% share in a real estate project known as Capitol City Mall (now Emaya Mall). Justice Mini Pushkarna restrained the respondents from creating any third-party rights or alienating 50% of the project’s saleable area pending the commencement of arbitral proceedings. The Court held that while the respondents challenged the petitioner’s ownership and raised objections regarding limitation and the status of non-signatory parties, these were complex issues for the Arbitral Tribunal to decide. At the Section 9 stage, the petitioner successfully established a prima facie case based on prior settlement agreements and an arbitral award, necessitating preservation of the subject matter to prevent irreparable injury.
1. Nature of the Petition
The petitioner filed this petition under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, seeking urgent interim protection. The core objective was to maintain the status quo regarding the petitioner’s asserted 50% interest in the development of a mall in Paschim Vihar, New Delhi, which was being developed through a Special Purpose Vehicle, SS Con-Build Private Limited (SSCBPL).
2. Factual Background
- The Promoters: The project was originally a joint venture between the Dhingra Group and the Realtech Group, with each holding a 50% stake.
- Separation Agreements: Following internal disputes within the Realtech Group, a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU-I) was signed in June 2011, allocating the subject project to the petitioner. This was followed by MOU-II in September 2011, which recognized the petitioner as the sole representative of the Realtech Group’s interests in the mall.
- The 2018 Arbitral Award: A previous arbitration concluded with an award dated January 28, 2018, which recognized MOU-I as valid and binding and recorded that the rights in the subject project stood vested in the petitioner.
- The Divestment Dispute: The petitioner alleged that the respondents executed a fraudulent and backdated “Divestment Agreement” in January 2018 to transfer the 50% stake to Suridhi Commercial Infra Pvt. Ltd. (Respondent No. 3), an entity controlled by Respondent No. 1 and his family.
3. Contentions of the Parties
- Petitioner: Argued that he has a crystallized interest in the project and that the respondents have consistently acted in breach of judicial orders to defeat his rights. He contended that the divestment to Respondent No. 3 was a sham transaction intended to place assets beyond his reach.
- Respondents: Contended that the petitioner was never a shareholder in his individual capacity and that the 2018 award did not declare him the successor-in-interest of the shares. They further argued the claims were barred by limitation and that Respondent No. 3, as a non-signatory to the arbitration agreement, could not be subjected to these proceedings.
4. Court’s Reasoning and Analysis
- Scope of Section 9: The Court emphasized that its role under Section 9 is to preserve the subject matter of arbitration and not to finally adjudicate the merits of the dispute.
- Prima Facie Case: The Court found that the petitioner’s claim was founded on a series of inter-connected documents, including MOU-I, MOU-II, and the 2018 award. This was sufficient to establish a prima facie case warranting preservation.
- Issue of Limitation: The Court ruled that limitation is a mixed question of law and fact. Citing Supreme Court precedents, it held that such jurisdictional objections should be decided by the Arbitral Tribunal after a full examination of evidence.
- Orders against Non-Signatories: Addressing the status of Respondent No. 3, the Court held that Section 9 allows interim directions against third parties if the purpose is to protect the subject matter of the arbitration. Since Respondent No. 3 is a family-owned company of Respondent No. 1, it fell within the ambit of the court’s protective jurisdiction.
- Irreparable Injury: The Court observed that allowing further alienation of the mall inventory would compound the complexity of the dispute and potentially render any future arbitral award ineffective.
5. Final Directions
The Court restrained the respondents, their directors, and agents from creating any third-party rights in respect of 50% of the total saleable area of the project. The Court clarified that these observations were made solely for the purpose of deciding the interim petition and should not be construed as an opinion on the final merits of the case, which will be decided independently by the Arbitral Tribunal.
2026 DHC 5342
Rajeev Behl vs. Bhupesh Kumar Dhingra & Ors.(D.O.J. 03.07.2026)




