
Supreme Court ruling on arbitration in Larsen & Toubro vs Puri Construction case.
SC DEFINES COURT’S ROLE IN ARBITRATION AWARD DISPUTES
| ASPECTS | DETAILS |
| Case Title | Larsen and Toubro Limited vs. Puri Construction Pvt. Ltd. and Others |
| Introduction | The case centers on disputes from a Development Agreement dated March 10, 1998, between L&T and PCL for the development of residential land in Gurgaon, Haryana. Termination of the contract, arbitration, and appeals followed. |
| Factual Background | Disputes arose when PCL terminated the Development Agreement citing L&T’s non-performance. Multiple agreements were in play including a Supplementary and Tripartite Agreement. Arbitration favored PCL; this was partly overturned on appeal. |
| Legal Issues |
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| Applicable Law |
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| Analysis | Arbitral Tribunal found L&T guilty of abandonment and breach.Found economic duress in the Supplementary Agreement.Damages awarded were questioned for adequacy and quantification.Higher courts split on monetary reliefs but upheld key contractual breach findings. |
| Conclusion | Tribunal’s findings on breach and coercion upheld.Monetary compensation partly overturned on appeal. Parties free to pursue further remedies.Highlighted judicial limits under Section 34 (no power to modify award). |
| Current Scenario | Supreme Court reiterated that courts cannot modify arbitral awards under Section 34. L&T’s appeal was dismissed. PCL’s partial appeal was allowed, re-opening doors to claim compensation through fresh proceedings. |
CASE SUMMARY – In Larsen & Toubro Ltd. vs. Puri Construction Pvt. Ltd., the Supreme Court addressed disputes arising from a Development Agreement for a residential project in Gurgaon. PCL terminated the agreement citing L&T’s non-performance. Arbitration upheld PCL’s claims, finding L&T guilty of contract breach and coercion in signing supplementary agreements. The High Court partially set aside monetary awards but upheld key findings. The Supreme Court affirmed that courts under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act cannot modify arbitral awards. The ruling clarified limits of judicial intervention, allowing PCL to seek fresh remedies while rejecting L&T’s appeal.
SOURCE – SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
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