Arbitration law set for changes that check errors
NEWDELHI:Nearly two years after major amendments were made to it, the country’s 21-year-old arbitration law is likely to see more changes, which experts believe will be in line with best practices across the world.
The law ministry is ready with another draft amendment bill for the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996, officials said.
The cabinet is likely to take it up in the coming days for it to be tabled in Parliament’s winter session, ministry sources said.
The fresh changes were necessitated to remove the errors and ambiguities of the 2015 law, which was the outcome of a hurriedly put together ordinance, according to the justice (retd) BN Srikrishna committee that recommended the changes.
The last amendments came into effect on January 1, 2016.
Officials believe the changes will reduce pendency in courts for private commercial disputes and make enforcing contracts in India easier. This would pave the way for flagship programmes like Make in India to do better through better ease of doing business rankings.
“The recommendations by the committee make appropriate tweaks to the amendments and address the practical problems that users face if these changes are not taken on board,” Ganesh Chandru, who heads the International Arbitration Practice Group at New Delhi, said.
“The changes will bring the Indian arbitration landscape in line with the best practices around the world,” he said.
The committee, in its report, pointed to a number of typographical errors in the 2015 law.
Section 29A gives one year for finishing hearings, extendable by another six months with the court’s permission. The new bill proposes to change that to one year after “pleadings are closed”. Also, that would apply only to domestic and not international arbitration, reversing a 2015 amendment that sought to fast track arbitration. A committee member said the section had an adverse impact on arbitration and imposed an unrealistic deadline on proceedings. The proposed bill also reverses a retrospective clause brought in by the 2015 amendment.