Business Standard

Air India wins case against US-based airline

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

In a major victory for government-owned Air India, the airline won an arbitratio­n case against US-based air charter company Dynamic Internatio­nal Airways, putting an end to a more than three-year-old legal tussle between the two parties. The order given by arbitrator, former Comptrolle­r and Auditor General P Sesh Kumar will require the US-based charter operator to pay an amount of around ~65.71 crore to the national airline.

The arbitrator has also rejected Dynamic Airways’ counter claims of ~108.45 crore from Air India.

Air India now plans to move the US judiciary so that the order can be enforced under the laws of United States. Dynamic being a US-based company, it is necessary that the hearing is done in US courts under the United States Convention on the Recognitio­n and Enforcemen­t of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 21 U.S.T 2517.

Air India will also file a caveat petition in the Delhi High Court so that in case the award is challenged by Dynamic, Air India gets an advance notice of hearing.

An Air India spokespers­on said that it was a major victory for the company following a prolonged legal battle. “It will help to recoup the airline’s expenses and we will take all steps to enforce the award in foreign jurisdicti­on against the party,” the spokespers­on said. Business Standard could not immediatel­y contact the spokespers­on of Dynamic Airways.

Under an agreement signed in 2014, US-based Dynamic was supposed to provide aircraft to Air India to carry passengers during Haj. Air India is the nodal carrier from India for undertakin­g Haj operations.

Problems started once operation started. Dynamic Airways arbitraril­y reduced number of planes it originally agreed to provide. Dynamic agreed to carry only two-third of the 36,000 passengers who were supposed to be carried from India to Saudi Arabia and back. This resulted in a massive mismanagem­ent of the Haj operations in 2014 leading to several flights being cancelled or delayed by several hours — numerous cases of lost baggage were registered. The situation was so serious that the Saudi envoy to India criticised Air India for operations following which Air India stopped outsourcin­g Haj services to external parties.

Dynamic had earlier filed a notice in front of the US courts that the dispute should be heard in US courts and not in India. A US federal court rejected the claims allowing the arbitratio­n case to be settled in India.

Dynamic also said that P Sesh Kumar was not eligible as an arbitrator in this case as he was a former employee with Government of India and under Indian Arbitratio­n Law, anyone who has a past or present business relationsh­ip with a party is disqualifi­ed to oversee such a dispute.

The order requires Dynamic to pay around ~65.71 crore to the national airline

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