The case originated from a dispute between M/S Gayatri Project Limited (Appellant) and Madhya Pradesh Road Development Corporation Limited (Respondent) concerning two “works contracts” for road rehabilitation and strengthening, entered into on 12 December 200513. These contracts contained an arbitration clause, specifying that disputes would be referred to a three-member tribunal under the Indian Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (the “Act, 1996”).
The Arbitral Tribunal, formed as per the agreement, issued a unanimous award on 8 July 2011, favouring the Appellant for Rs. 1,03,55,187 plus interest. The Respondent challenged this award under Section 34 of the Act, 1996, primarily on the ground that the Arbitral Tribunal lacked jurisdiction. Crucially, the Respondent had not raised this plea of lack of jurisdiction before the Arbitral Tribunal during the arbitration proceedings.
The initial challenge by the Respondent was dismissed by the Commercial Court and 19th Additional Sessions Judge, Bhopal. The High Court of Madhya Pradesh also dismissed the Respondent’s appeal on 7 January 2022, affirming the lower court’s decision. This current appeal was then brought before the Supreme Court.
Laws Involved The primary legal frameworks at the heart of this dispute are:
The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (referred to as “the Act, 1996”).
Section 34: Pertains to applications for setting aside arbitral awards.
Section 37: Governs appeals from orders made under Section 34.
Section 16(2): Stipulates that a plea concerning the arbitral tribunal’s lack of jurisdiction must be raised no later than the submission of the statement of defence. If not raised at this stage, the award may generally not be annulled on that ground.
Section 4: Deals with waiver of the right to object if a party proceeds with arbitration knowing of a non-compliance with a non-derogable provision, without stating its objection.
◦Section 2(4): Outlines the applicability of Part I of the Act, 1996, to arbitrations other than international commercial arbitration.
The M.P. Madhyastham Adhiniyam, 1983 (referred to as “the MP Act, 1983”). This Act provides a special statutory forum for adjudication of disputes arising out of “works contracts” in Madhya Pradesh.
Reasoning The Supreme Court primarily addressed two key questions:
1.Conflict of Precedents: Whether there was a conflict between its previous decisions in L.G. Chaudhary (II) and Lion Engineering concerning the maintainability of a jurisdictional plea under Section 34 of the 1996 Act, even if not raised before the Arbitral Tribunal.
2.Waiver of Objection: Whether a plea of lack of jurisdiction could be raised for the first time under Section 34 of the 1996 Act if no such objection was taken before the arbitral tribunal220.
The Court’s reasoning can be summarised as follows:
- No Conflict between Precedents: The Supreme Court explicitly stated that there is no conflict between L.G. Chaudhary (II) and Lion Engineering. Both judgments consistently hold that a plea of lack of jurisdiction, being a fundamental question of law, can be raised for the first time in proceedings under Section 34 of the Act, 1996, even if it was not raised before the arbitral tribunal. The High Court had erred in its observation of a conflict.
- The Nuance of Section 16(2) and Section 34: While Section 16(2) of the Act, 1996, requires a plea of lack of jurisdiction to be raised at the arbitration stage (no later than the submission of the statement of defence), the Court clarified that this does not preclude a party from raising it for the first time in a Section 34 challenge if no such objection was actually taken during the arbitration. The Court emphasized that consent cannot confer jurisdiction where none exists in law.
- Waiver under Section 4: The principle of waiver under Section 4 of the 1996 Act applies when a party, knowing of non-compliance with a provision from which they can derogate, proceeds without objection. However, the Court iterated that a jurisdictional defect, particularly when it goes to the root of the tribunal’s power to decide, may not be waived simply by participation if no express objection was formally raised and decided upon by the tribunal. The decisions in Pam Development and Gas Authority support the view that the plea of lack of jurisdiction can be raised for the first time under Section 34 if no such objection was raised before the arbitral tribunal.
- Applicability of MP Act, 1983 vs. Act, 1996: The Court acknowledged that the MP Act, 1983, is a special law for “works contracts”. However, it clarified that if the arbitration agreement exists, the Act, 1996, would apply. The MP Act, 1983, would only apply if there was no arbitration clause, or if the matter fell squarely within the specific provisions of the MP Act, 1983, and not the Act, 1996. The Court found that the High Court’s earlier judgment in VA Tech was based on an incorrect premise regarding the interplay of these Acts.
- Application to the Present Case: Given that the Respondent had not raised any objection regarding the tribunal’s jurisdiction before the arbitral tribunal, they were within their rights to raise this plea for the first time in their Section 34 petition. The High Court had made an “egregious error” in dismissing the Section 34 petition without considering all the issues, including jurisdiction.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal. It set aside the impugned judgment and order passed by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh.
The Court restored the proceedings in Arbitration Case No. 48 of 2011 to the Commercial Court and 19th Upper District Judge, Bhopal (M.P.). The Commercial Court is now directed to decide all other issues on merit that may have been raised by the Respondent in its Section 34 petition under the Act, 1996. This means the jurisdictional challenge, even if not raised during arbitration, must be properly considered by the Commercial Court.
M/S Gayatri Project Limited V. Madhya Pradesh Road Development Corporation Limited
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 698: (DoJ 15-05-2025)



