The May 2026 cycle in Indian arbitration law has produced three doctrinal threads running in parallel — the first substantial post-Gayatri Balasamy applications of the Section 34 limited-modification corridor (Bhupesh Bhayana, Gujarat Water Supply, Paramount Learning), the continuing stamping discipline post-In Re Interplay (Tarini Prasad Mohanty), and the Section 9 reset for the unsuccessful party at the post-award stage (Home Care Retail Marts). Read alongside the Section 12(5) appointment discipline (PTC Techno, Andhra Pradesh v. Dataevolve), the Cox & Kings group-of-companies extension (ASF Buildtech, Ocean View Properties), the limitation question (West Bengal v. B.B.M.), and the institutional developments (CIAC launch, IIAC empanelment suspension, pending 2024 Amendment Bill), the cycle discloses the operational architecture within which Indian arbitration practice now operates.
On 26 November 2019 a two-judge bench of the Supreme Court, in Perkins Eastman Architects DPC v. HSCC (India) Ltd, extended TRF v. Energo from the narrow case of an ineligible MD nominating himself a substitute to the broader principle that a person who is himself statutorily ineligible by reason of interest in the dispute cannot — even where he does not appoint himself — be the unilateral appointing authority. The Court appointed an independent sole arbitrator under Section 11(6). A close reading of Justice Uday Umesh Lalit's judgment, the doctrinal architecture, and the recalibration by the Constitution Bench in Central Organisation for Railway Electrification (8 November 2024).
On 3 July 2017 a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court, in TRF Ltd v. Energo Engineering Projects Ltd, held that where an arbitration clause authorises the Managing Director of a party to act as sole arbitrator or to nominate one, and that MD is statutorily ineligible under Section 12(5) read with the Seventh Schedule of the Arbitration & Conciliation Act, 1996, the MD cannot act as arbitrator and equally cannot nominate a substitute — 'once the infrastructure collapses, the superstructure is bound to collapse.' A close reading of Justice Dipak Misra's judgment, the doctrinal architecture, the 2015 Amendment background and what the holding seeded for Perkins Eastman and Central Organisation for Railway Electrification.