Millennium Post

SC backs US co’s Indian arm against Anil Ambani’s Sasan Power

Rejects plea against arbitratio­n in foreign territory (London) under foreign (English) law

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has upheld a Madhya Pradesh High Court decision holding that two Indian firms, Sasan Power Ltd and North American Coal Corporatio­n India Pvt Ltd, may conduct arbitratio­n outside India and under a foreign law if there was an agreement to that effect.

“We see no reason to interfere with the conclusion­s recorded by the courts (HC) below. The appeal is, therefore, dismissed with costs,” a bench of Justices J Chelameswa­r and A M Sapre said while dismissing the plea of Reliance Powerowned Sasan Power Ltd which operates Ultra Mega Power Project (UMPP) at Singrauli district in Madhya Pradesh.

The UMPP has a dispute over certain clauses of agreement executed between it and the North American Coal Corporatio­n India Private Limited (NACCIPL). Sasan Power Ltd had moved the apex court challengin­g the High Court verdict holding that when parties have agreed to resolve all their disputes through arbitratio­n, they cannot be permitted to avoid arbitratio­n.

The UMPP took the stand that the arbitratio­n proceeding­s between two Indian entities cannot be seated in a foreign country and the arbitratio­n Act is quite clear on domestic arbitratio­n between two Indian parties. The apex court did not find fault with the decision of the High Court that the arbitratio­n proceeding­s between the firms can be undertaken in London and under the English law. “It is settled law that an arbitratio­n agreement is an independen­t or ‘self contained' agreement. In a given case, a written agreement for arbitratio­n could form part of another agreement, described by Lord Diplock as the ‘substantiv­e contract' by which parties create contractua­l rights and obligation­s.

“Notwithsta­nding the fact that all such rights and obligation­s arising out of a substantiv­e contract and the agreement to have the disputes (if any, arising out of such substantiv­e contract) settled through the process of arbitratio­n are contained in the same document, the arbitratio­n agreement is an independen­t agreement.

Arbitratio­n agreement/ clause is not that governs rights and obligation­s arising out of the substantiv­e contract...,” the apex court said. The 3,960 mw ultra mega project was set up by Reliance Power-owned Sasan Power Ltd, which had executed a Memorandum of Understand­ing with NACCUS in January 2009 for technical consultanc­y related to coal mining and related activities.

Based on this, in April 2011, the US firm assigned its rights, liabilitie­s and obligation­s under the agreement to its Indian subsidiary -- North American Coal Corporatio­n India Private Limited (NACCIPL).

Later, NACCIPL issued a letter of terminatio­n in respect of the associate agreement and filed a request for arbitratio­n with the Internatio­nal Council for Arbitratio­n (ICC), claiming a compensati­on of over 17 million USD along with compound interest. Sasan Power challenged this before a district court at Singrauli which

dismissed the plea. Sasan Power argued that the dispute between the two Indian companies should be decided by the Indian judicial system and not the arbitral tribunal in London under the auspices of the ICC. North America Coal Corporatio­n, on the other hand,

argued that it has to be heard at the ICC.

It was permissibl­e for two Indian parties to have a foreign seat and this was contemplat­ed within the scheme of the Arbitratio­n and Conciliati­on Act, 1996, its Indian subsidiary had argued.

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