2025 01 22T11 03 2025 170 Taxmann Com 453 SC 10 01 2025 My Preferred Transformation Hospitality P LTD Vs
2025 01 22T11 03 2025 170 Taxmann Com 453 SC 10 01 2025 My Preferred Transformation Hospitality P LTD Vs
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Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, read with section 4 of the Limitation
Act, 1963 and section 10 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 - Application for setting aside
arbitral award - Appellant entered into lease agreement with respondent - Certain disputes
arose between parties and respondent invoked arbitration clause - An arbitral award was
passed in favour of respondent which was received by appellant on 14-2-2022 - Three month
limitation period for filing application under Section 34(3) expired on 29-05-2022, on which
date Court was functioning, but closed after five days for vacation commencing from 04-06-
2022 to 03-07-2022 - Application under Section 34 to set aside arbitral award was filed by
appellant immediately on Court’s reopening, i.e. 04-07-2022 - High Court by impugned order
dismissed said application as barred by limitation - Whether section 4 of the Limitation Act
does not come to aid of party when 3-month limitation period expires on a day when Court
was working - Held, yes - Whether 30-day condonable period under section 34(3) expiring
during Court holidays, will not survive and neither section 4, nor any other provision of
Limitation Act, will inure to benefit of party to enable filing of section 34 application
immediately after reopening - Held, yes - Whether therefore, application preferred by
appellant under section 34 stood dismissed as it was filed beyond condonable period of 30
days,which conclusively and absolutely expired on 28-06-2022 - Held, yes [Paras 35.3 and
37]
FACTS
■ The appellants entered into lease agreements with the respondent, who was the owner of the property.
Pursuant to certain disputes, the respondent invoked arbitration and an arbitral award dated 4-2-2022 was
made in its favour.
■ The appellants received a scanned copy of the award by email on 4-2-2022 itself, and later received a
signed hard copy of the award on 14-2-2022, from which day limitation must be calculated. The 3-month
limitation period under section 34(3), after considering the extension of limitation by operation of this
Court''s order dated 10-1-2022 on account of the COVID-19 pandemic, expired on 29-5-2022. The further
30-day condonable period expired on 28-6-2022. This fell during the High Court''s summer vacation
between 4-6-2022 and 3-7-2022.
■ The appellants filed the section 34 petition along with an application for condonation of delay on the date
when the Court reopened, i.e., 4-7-2022. The Section 34 application was dismissed by the Single Judge by
order dated 7-2-2023 as being barred by limitation.
■ The appellants preferred an appeal under section 37, which was dismissed by the Division Bench by order
dated 3-4-2024.
■ On appeal to the Supreme Court, the issue for consideration was as to whether the benefit of the additional
30 days under the proviso to Section 34(3), which expired during the vacation, can be given when the
petition is filed immediately after reopening in exercise of power under Section 4 of the Limitation Act,
1963.
HELD
■ Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to section 34(3) of the ACA. [Para 35.1]
■ Section 4 of the Limitation Act benefits a party only when the “prescribed period”, i.e., the 3-month
limitation period under section 34(3) expires on a court holiday. In such a situation, the application under
section 34 will be considered as having been filed within the limitation period if it is filed on the next
working day of the court. [Para 35.2]
■ Section 4 of the Limitation Act does not come to the aid of the party when the 3-month limitation period
expires on a day when the court was working. The 30-day condonable period expiring during the court
holidays will not survive and neither section 4, nor any other provision of the Limitation Act, will inure to
the benefit of the party to enable filing of the section 34 application immediately after reopening. [Para
35.3]
■ Since section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to proceedings under section 34 of the ACA, the
applicability of section 10 of the GCA stands excluded in view of the express wording of its proviso that
excludes the applicability of the provision when the Limitation Act applies. [Para 35.4]
■ There are certain difficulties with the current position of law. The above construction of limitation statutes
is quite stringent and unduly curtails a remedy available to arbitrating parties to challenge the validity of
an arbitral award. This must be addressed by the Parliament. [Para 36]
■ The purpose of reading the Limitation Act alongside the ACA is not to restrict the special remedy under
the ACA, but to enable exercise of such remedy in circumstances as contemplated under the Limitation
Act. In this context, section 29(2) of the Limitation Act becomes relevant as it incorporates sections 4 to
24 of the Limitation Act in special statutes, including the ACA, to the extent that its provisions are not
expressly excluded. [Para 36.1]
■ The language of section 34(3) read with its proviso does not expressly or impliedly exclude section 4 of
the Limitation Act and this interpretation is in consonance with the important principle contemplated
under section 29(2) to protect rights and remedies. The Court has already recognised the applicability of
section 4 of the Limitation Act. [Para 36.2]
■ The substantive remedies available under sections 34 and 37 of the ACA are, by their very nature, limited
in their scope due to statutory prescription. It is therefore necessary to interpret the limitation provisions
liberally, or else even the limited window available to parties to challenge an arbitral award will be lost.
The remedy under section 34 is precious, and courts will keep in mind the need to secure and protect such
remedy while applying limitation provisions. If this limited remedy is denied on stringent principles of
limitation, it will cause great prejudice and has the effect of (a) denying the remedy, and (b) in the long
run, it will have the effect of dissuading contracting parties from seeking resolution of disputes through
arbitration. This is against public policy. [Para 36.3]
■ However, the difficulty arises as the judgments affirming the applicability of section 4 of the Limitation
Act equate the expression ‘prescribed’ in that section and section 29(2) of the Limitation Act only with the
main period of limitation (3 months). The problem with this construction is that the special law, i.e.,
section 34(3) of the ACA, along with its proviso does not prescribe the period of limitation in the manner
that a period is specified in the Schedule of the Limitation Act. The statutorily prescribed period under
section 34(3) of the ACA is 3 months, and an additional 30 days. It will be wrong to confine the period of
limitation to just 3 months by interpreting it as the “prescribed period” and excluding the balance 30 days
under the proviso to section 34(3) as not being the prescribed period through a process of interpretation.
[Para 36.4]
■ The purpose of applying the Limitation Act to special laws is to vest in the court the power to exercise
discretion or to grant the benefit of exclusion. In such cases, when the Limitation Act applies, the
discretion of the court as contemplated under its provisions, commencing from sections 4 to 24, must be
given full effect. In this light, the additional period of 30 days specifically provided under the ACA loses
its efficacy and purpose, and becomes untenable due to the current position of law. This takes to a
fundamental question as to the meaning of “express exclusion” of certain provisions of the Limitation Act
by the ACA. [Para 36.5]
■ Once the Court commenced disapplying provisions of the Limitation Act to the ACA on the ground of
implied exclusions, it is only a matter of interpretation to include or exclude provisions from sections 4 to
24 of the Limitation Act on a case-to-case basis. Thus, for example, while the Court held that sections 5
and 17 of the Limitation Act are excluded from section 34(3), it came to the conclusion that sections 4, 12,
and 14 of the Limitation Act are applicable. In a way, the applicability of provisions from sections 4 to 24
of the Limitation Act and the manner in which they apply are at the doorstep of the court, rather than
being determined by a clear and categorical statutory prescription. This is perhaps the reason why the
Parliament has used the expression “express exclusion” in section 29(2) of the Limitation Act. It is too
late in the day to hold that “express exclusion” will not include implied exclusion. It is for the legislature
to take note of this position and bring about clarity and certainty. The overbearing intellectualisation of the
Act by courts has become the bane of Indian arbitration. [Para 36.6]
■ Thus, the application preferred by the appellant under section 34 of the ACA stands dismissed as it was
filed beyond the condonable period of 30 days, which conclusively and absolutely expired on 28-6-2022.
[Para 37]
■ For the reasons stated above, the judgment and order passed by the High Court in FAO (OS) (COMM)
No. 67/2023 dated 3-4-2024 is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed. [Para 38]
Opinion as per Pankaj Mithal, J.
■ As the period of limitation prescribed for filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act expired on a
working day and not on a day on which the court was closed, the appellants were not entitled to file it on
the re-opening of the court after the summer vacation and as such the petition so filed was patently barred
by limitation. [Para 16]
■ Admittedly, as the period of limitation prescribed for filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act
expired on 29.05.2022 whereas the petition was preferred on 04.07.2022 much beyond the period of
limitation prescribed and the condonable period of 30 days stipulated under the proviso to Section 34(3)
of the A & C Act, the petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act was beyond time and the delay could
not have been condoned. Accordingly, there is no error or illegality on part of the High Court in
dismissing the petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act as barred by limitation. [Para 17]
■ It would not be out of context for me to mention on the basis of my experience that practically all
new/recent enactments are deviating from the prescribed period of limitation as per the Schedule of the
Limitation Act and are generally prescribing its own period of limitation as under the A & C Act itself. At
the same time, statutes further provide that the delay beyond a certain period cannot be condoned by the
court. This is obviously in deviation to what is prescribed by Section 5 of the Limitation Act. [Para 18]
■ The statutes ought not to provide different period of limitation for instituting suit, preferring appeal and
making an application, rather all statutes should stick to a uniform period of limitation say 90 days for
preferring Special Leave Petition/Appeal to the Supreme Court of India. The courts should also be
empowered to condone the delay if sufficient cause is shown for not filing within the time prescribed
rather than restricting the condonable period to a fix period of 15 days or 30 days as provided in some of
the statutes. [Para 19]
■ This deviation and restriction create confusion and ordinarily even a lawyer at times fails to notice that a
different period of limitation has been prescribed for preferring an appeal under a particular statute.
Moreover, there may be genuine cases where the litigant may not be able to approach the court in time for
cogent reasons beyond his control. For example, in arbitration matters where an award is passed on a
particular date and a copy of it is also served upon the litigating party but that party happens to be
seriously ill and hospitalised for months together and as such is unable to prefer a petition under Section
34 within the period of limitation prescribed. If the delay in challenging the award is not condoned beyond
the period of 30 days, he would suffer great prejudice and may lose the remedy on a technical ground even
though he may be having a good case on merit. There may also be a situation where a litigant is facing
proceedings by the law enforcement agencies like the Enforcement Directorate, Central Bureau of
Investigation, etc., and is taken into custody and as such is unable to take the legal remedy within the
period of limitation prescribed. He avails the remedy only after he is out of custody; months after the
service of the order. In such circumstances, in my opinion, the legislature ought not to confine condoning
the delay only for a prescribed period and not beyond it. Rather it should follow the principle of
condoning the delay as enshrined under Section 5 of the Limitation Act. This would not only avoid a good
case to be thrown out on the ground of limitation but at the same time would bring about uniformity in
law. [Para 20]
■ Therefore, it is suggested to the law makers to keep this in mind while enacting new Acts and ensure that
uniform system is applied in all enactments, be it present or future. [Para 21]
CASE REVIEW
Order passed by the High Court in FAO (OS) (COMM) No. 67/2023, dated 03.04.2024 [Para 38]; affirmed.
CASES REFERRED TO
Assam Urban Water Supply & Sewerage Board v. Subhash Projects & Marketing Limited (2012) 2 SCC 624
(para 3.2), Bhimashankar Sahakari Sakkare Karkhane Niyamita v. Walchandnagar Industries Limited (2023)
8 SCC 453 (para 3.4), Union of India v. Popular Construction (2001) 8 SCC 470 (para 5.1), Sridevi Datla v.
Union of India (2021) 5 SCC 321 (para 5.2), Sagufa Ahmed v. Upper Assam Polywood Products Pvt Ltd
(2021) 2 SCC 317 (para 5.3), State of West Bengal v. Rajpath Contractors and Engineers Ltd (2024) 7 SCC
257 (para 6), Consolidated Engineering Enterprises v. Principal Secretary, Irrigation Department (2008) 7
SCC 169 (para 6.1), Mukri Gopalan v. Cheppilat Puthanpurayil Aboobacker, (1995) 5 SCC 5 (para 9), Bhakra
Beas Management Board v. Excise & Taxation Officer (2020) 17 SCC 692 (para 9), State of Himachal
Pradesh v. Himachal Techno Engineers (2010) 12 SCC 210 (para 19) and P. Radha Bai v. P. Ashok Kumar
(2019) 13 SCC 445 (para 22).
JUDGMENT
Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha, J. - Introduction: Leave granted. Facts, to the extent that they are relevant
for determining the issue of limitation for filing an application challenging an arbitral award under Section 34
of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 19961 are as follows. The appellants received the arbitral award on
14.02.2022. The 3-month limitation period for filing the application under Section 34(3) of the ACA expired
on 29.05.2022, on which date the court was functioning, but closed after five days for vacation commencing
from 04.06.2022 to 03.07.2022. The application under Section 34 was filed immediately on the court's
reopening, i.e. 04.07.2022. The High Court single judge under Section 34 and the High Court division bench
under Section 37 dismissed the petition as barred by limitation. Under these circumstances, the issue before us
is whether the benefit of the additional 30 days under the proviso to Section 34(3), which expired during the 1
vacation, can be given when the petition is filed immediately after reopening in exercise of power under
Section 4 of the Limitation Act, 19632.
1.1 After considering Sections 34(3) and 43(1) of the ACA, Sections 4 and 29(2) of the Limitation Act and
Section 10 of the General Clauses Act, 18973, as well as precedents of this Court, we have answered the
question in the negative and have dismissed the present appeal. While we have expressed certain concerns
regarding the curtailment of a precious remedy to challenge an arbitral award due to a stringent construction
of Section 4 of the Limitation Act vis-a-vis Section 34(3), we have held that in light of the current position of
law, the Section 34 application preferred by the appellant is barred by limitation based on the following
conclusions:
(i) There is no wholesale exclusion of Sections 4 to 24 of the Limitation Act when calculating the
limitation period under Section 34(3) of the ACA.
(ii) Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to Section 34(3) of the ACA only to the extent when the 3-
month period expires on a court holiday. It does not aid the applicant when the 30-day condonable
period expires on a court holiday.
(iii) In view of the applicability of Section 4 of the Limitation Act to Section 34 proceedings, Section 10
of the GCA does not apply and will not benefit the applicant when the 30-day condonable period
expires on a court holiday.
2. Facts: The detailed facts leading up to the present appeal are as follows. The appellants entered into lease
agreements with the respondent, who is the owner of the property. Pursuant to certain disputes, the respondent
invoked arbitration and an arbitral award dated 04.02.2022 was made in its favour. The appellants received a
scanned copy of the award by email on 04.02.2022 itself, and later received a signed hard copy of the award
on 14.02.2022, from which day limitation must be calculated. The 3-month limitation period under Section
34(3), after considering the extension of limitation by operation of this Court's order dated 10.01.2022 on
account of the COVID-19 pandemic,4 expired on 29.05.2022. The further 30-day condonable period expired
on 28.06.2022. This fell during the High Court's summer vacation between 04.06.2022 and 03.07.2022. The
appellants filed the Section 34 petition along with an application for condonation of delay on the date when
the court reopened, i.e., 04.07.2022. It would also be relevant to note the notification dated 20.05.2022 of the
Registrar General of the Delhi High Court as per which 04.07.2022 would be considered the date of reopening
for calculating limitation. In the meanwhile, the respondent filed for execution of the award.
3. Decision of the High Court under Section 34 and Section 37 of the ACA: The Section 34 application was
dismissed by the single judge by order dated 07.02.2023 as being barred by limitation. The appellants
preferred an appeal under Section 37, which was dismissed by the division bench by order dated 03.04.2024
that is impugned before us. The reasoning of the High Court proceeds as follows:
3.1 The limitation period commenced from 14.02.2022, when the appellants received a signed copy of the
award. Under Section 34(3), an application to set aside the award must be made within a period of 3 months
from the receipt of the award, which comes up to 14.05.2022. However, the High Court referred to this
Court's order dated 10.01.20225, which extended the period of limitation in cases where the limitation expired
between 15.03.2020 and 28.02.2022. The extended period of limitation was 90 days from 01.03.2022, which
expired on 29.05.2022. The condonable period of 30 days expired on 28.06.2022, which fell during the
summer vacation. The application was filed on the first date of reopening of the court, i.e., on 04.07.2022.
3.2 The High Court referred to this Court's decision in Assam Urban Water Supply & Sewerage Board v.
Subhash Projects & Marketing Limited (2012) 2 SCC 624, where it was held that Section 4 of the Limitation
Act applies only to cases where the "prescribed period" of limitation expires on a date when the court is
closed. However, it does not apply when the 30-day condonable period expires on a court holiday.
3.3 It further held that the notification dated 20.05.2022, which permitted filing between 27.06.2022 to
02.07.2022 would not impact the applicability of Section 10 of the GCA, as 04.07.2022 would be considered
as the date of court reopening for the purpose of limitation.
3.4 Finally, the High Court referred to this Court's decision in Bhimashankar Sahakari Sakkare Karkhane
Niyamita v. Walchandnagar Industries Limited (2023) 8 SCC 453, which held that Section 10 of the GCA is
inapplicable to the condonable period stipulated in the proviso to Section 34(3) of the ACA. While noting the
submission of the learned counsel on an inconsistency in Bhimashankar (supra) regarding the applicability of
the Limitation Act to Section 34(3), it held that nevertheless, the decision is binding and unambiguous.
Therefore, the High Court held that it does not have the power to condone the delay in the present case and
dismissed the Section 37 appeal.
4. This Court, by its order dated 10.05.2024 issued notice on the condition that the appellants must deposit Rs.
2 crores with the Executing Court and also stayed the execution proceedings. The deposit condition has been
complied with by the appellants.
5. Submissions: We have heard Mr. Neeraj Kishan Kaul, learned senior counsel for the appellants, and Mr.
Syed Ahmed Naqvi, learned counsel for the respondent. Mr. Kaul's submissions proceed as follows:
5.1 First, referring to Union of India v. Popular Construction (2001) 8 SCC 470 and its reliance in Assam
Urban (supra), he submitted that the Limitation Act, including Section 4, does not apply to Section 34(3).
Hence, he submitted that there was no occasion for the Court in Assam Urban (supra) to interpret Section 4 of
the Limitation Act and delve into the difference between the ''prescribed period'' and the condonable period
under Section 34(3).
5.2 Second, since the Limitation Act is excluded, Section 10 of the GCA applies to Section 34(3), including
when the condonable period expires on a holiday. He relied on Sridevi Datla v. Union of India (2021) 5 SCC
321, where the benefit of Section 10 of the GCA was extended to the party when the condonable period under
Section 16 of the NGT Act expired on a holiday and the appeal was filed on the next working day.
Additionally, he submitted that the term ''certain day'' in Section 10 of the GCA gives it wider import than
Section 4 of the Limitation Act, and extends its applicability to when the condonable period expires on a court
holiday.
5.3 Third, Mr. Kaul expressed doubt regarding the correctness of Bhimashankar (supra), where Section 10 of
the GCA was held to be inapplicable to Section 34(3) as the Limitation Act applies. He sought to highlight
certain contradictions in the judgment by referring to paras 54, 55 and 57. He submitted that while paras 54
and 55 hold the Limitation Act to be inapplicable to Section 34(3), the Court rejected the benefit of Section 10
of the GCA in para 57 on the basis that the Limitation Act applies. In this manner, the Court distinguished
Sridevi Datla (supra) and did not sufficiently deal with the reasoning there. Instead, the Court relied on Assam
Urban (supra), which did not consider Section 10 of the GCA, and Sagufa Ahmed v. Upper Assam Polywood
Products Pvt Ltd, (2021) 2 SCC 317, which did not interpret Section 10 of the GCA sufficiently. He also
submitted that the observations of the Court in Bhimashankar (supra) doubting Sridevi Datla (supra) on the
ground that it did not deal with Assam Urban (supra) are untenable as Section 10 of the GCA was not under
consideration in Assam Urban (supra).
5.4 The written submissions filed by the appellants adopt a slightly different line of argumentation. It is
submitted that Section 4 of the Limitation Act does not apply to the proviso of Section 34(3), since that is not
the ''prescribed period''. Hence, relying on Sridevi Datla (supra) and considering that Section 10 of the GCA is
a beneficial legislation,6 it is submitted that Section 10 of the GCA must apply to the proviso. Its
inapplicability would be oppressive and would render the 30-day condonable period under Section 34(3)
otiose when it expires on a court holiday, leaving the party remediless.
6. Mr. Naqvi, learned counsel for the respondent, first referred to this Court's recent decision in State of West
Bengal v. Rajpath Contractors and Engineers Ltd. (2024) 7 SCC 257 to submit that in identical facts, this
Court followed Assam Urban (supra) and held that Section 4 of the Limitation Act only applies to the 3-
month limitation period and not to the 30-day condonable period under Section 34(3). These judgments, along
with Bhimashankar (supra), determine the issue.
6.1 Second, Mr. Naqvi submitted that the entirety of Sections 4 to 24 of the Limitation Act are not excluded
from applying to Section 34 proceedings. He took us through certain portions of Consolidated Engineering
Enterprises v. Principal Secretary, Irrigation Department (2008) 7 SCC 169, which is a 3-judge bench
decision, to submit that Popular Construction (supra) only deals with the exclusion of Section 5 of the
Limitation Act. In this case, Section 14 of the Limitation Act was held to be applicable. Similarly, he
submitted that other decisions also apply Section 12 of the Limitation Act to Section 34(3). In the same vein,
Section 4 of the Limitation Act also applies.
6.2 Third, regarding the manner in which Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to Section 34(3), he
submitted that Sagufa Ahmed (supra) clearly distinguishes the prescribed period and condonable period. The
wording of Section 4 only makes it applicable to the 3-month period and not the 30-day condonable period,
which cannot be extended any further. He also submitted that Sridevi Datla (supra) did not notice the
distinction drawn in Sagufa Ahmed (supra) when applying Section 10 of the GCA.
6.3 Fourth, he submitted that Section 10 of the GCA does not apply to Section 34(3) as the Limitation Act
applies. He also responded to Mr. Kaul's reliance on the words ''certain day'' in Section 10 of the GCA by
submitting that they apply when a statute fixes a particular day or date for performing some act, which is not
the case here. Therefore, the Section 34 application, which was filed on the 126th day, was barred by
limitation and the High Court could not have condoned the delay through reference to Section 10 of the GCA.
6.4 In the written submissions, the respondent has further submitted that once Section 4 of the Limitation Act
applies to Section 34(3), the provision cannot be further split into individual sections, sub-sections, and
provisos to make Section 10 of the GCA applicable. Moreover, Section 10 of the GCA cannot be applied to
the condonable period as that would amount to reading the expression ''prescribed period'' in Section 10 as
including the condonable 30-day period, which is contrary to various judgments of this Court. Lastly, that
Sridevi Datla (supra) was decided in the context of Section 16 of the NGT Act, while Assam Urban (supra),
Bhimashankar (supra), and Rajpath Contractors (supra) are specifically in the context of Section 34(3).
7. Issues: Before proceeding with our analysis, it is necessary to frame issues to systematically address the
submissions of the learned counsels and the questions of law arising in this case regarding the applicability of
Section 4 of the Limitation Act and Section 10 of the GCA to the condonable period under Section 34(3):
i. Do the provisions of the Limitation Act apply to Section 34 proceedings, and to what extent?
ii. Does Section 4 of the Limitation Act apply to Section 34(3) as per an analysis of the statutory
scheme as well as precedents of this Court on the issue? If Section 4 applies, does it apply only to
the 3-month limitation period or also the 30-day condonable period?
iii. In light of the answer in (ii), will Section 10 of the GCA apply to Section 34(3), and if so, in what
manner?
The answers to these issues will determine whether the Section 34 application in the present case was filed
within the condonable period of 30 days.
8. Applicability of the Limitation Act to ACA: Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act stipulates that where any
special or local law prescribes a period of limitation that is different from the Schedule, Section 3 of the
Limitation Act7 shall apply as if such period is the one prescribed in the Schedule. Further, Section 4 to 24
shall apply insofar as, and to the extent to which, they are not expressly excluded by such special or local law.
Therefore, Section 29(2) imports the provisions of the Limitation Act to special and local laws that prescribe a
different period of limitation, unless there is an express exclusion contained in such law. Section 29(2) reads:
"29. Savings.—
(2) Where any special or local law prescribes for any suit, appeal or application a period of limitation
different from the period prescribed by the Schedule, the provisions of section 3 shall apply as if such
period were the period prescribed by the Schedule and for the purpose of determining any period of
limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by any special or local law, the provisions
contained in sections 4 to 24 (inclusive) shall apply only in so far as, and to the extent to which, they are
not expressly excluded by such special or local law."
9. The effect of Section 29(2) has been summarised by this Court in Mukri Gopalan v. Cheppilat
Puthanpurayil Aboobacker, (1995) 5 SCC 5, as affirmed in Bhakra Beas Management Board v. Excise &
Taxation Officer, (2020) 17 SCC 692, paras 13 and 14 as follows:
"8....A mere look at the aforesaid provision shows for its applicability to the facts of a given case and for
importing the machinery of the provisions containing Sections 4 to 24 of the Limitation Act the following
two requirements have to be satisfied by the authority invoking the said provision.
(i) There must be a provision for period of limitation under any special or local law in connection with
any suit, appeal or application.
(ii) The said prescription of period of limitation under such special or local law should be different
from the period prescribed by the Schedule to the Limitation Act.
9. If the aforesaid two requirements are satisfied the consequences contemplated by Section 29(2) would
automatically follow. These consequences are as under:
(i) In such a case Section 3 of the Limitation Act would apply as if the period prescribed by the special
or local law was the period prescribed by the Schedule.
(ii) For determining any period of limitation prescribed by such special or local law for a suit, appeal or
application all the provisions containing Sections 4 to 24 (inclusive) would apply insofar as and to
the extent to which they are not expressly excluded by such special or local law."
10. Section 43(1) of the ACA fortifies the applicability of the Limitation Act not only to court proceedings
under the ACA but also to arbitrations. It reads:
"43. Limitations.—(1) The Limitation Act, 1963 (36 of 1963), shall apply to arbitrations as it applies to
proceedings in Court."
11. This Court in Consolidated Engineering Enterprises (supra) considered the necessity of a provision in the
nature of Section 43(1), when Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act already makes Sections 4 to 24 of the
Limitation Act applicable to special statutes, including the ACA. It held that the ACA does not prescribe the
period of limitation for various proceedings under the Act, and deviates from the Limitation Act in specific
instances like Section 34(3) and Sections 43(2) to (4).8 By virtue of Section 29(2), the Limitation Act applies
to court proceedings under the ACA. The purpose of Section 43(1) of the ACA is to extend the applicability
of the Limitation Act to arbitrations also, as these are private tribunals and not courts. Since the Limitation
Act is only applicable to court proceedings, Section 43(1) is necessary to make it applicable to arbitrations in
the same manner as it applies to court proceedings.9
12. Applicability of the Limitation Act to Section 34(3): Once it is clear that the Limitation Act generally
applies to arbitrations and court proceedings under the ACA, it is necessary to consider its applicability to
Section 34 proceedings. Section 34(3) provides the limitation period and condonable period to file a Section
34 application, and it reads:
"34. Application for setting aside arbitral award.—
(3) An application for setting aside may not be made after three months have elapsed from the date on
which the party making that application had received the arbitral award or, if a request had been made
under section 33, from the date on which that request had been disposed of by the arbitral tribunal:
Provided that if the Court is satisfied that the applicant was prevented by sufficient cause from making
the application within the said period of three months it may entertain the application within a further
period of thirty days, but not thereafter."
13. From reading the provision, it is clear that an application to set aside an arbitral award under Section 34
must be within 3 months from the receipt of the award or the date of disposal of a request under Section 33.
This is the period of limitation.10 Further, the court may exercise discretion to entertain the application, within
a further period of 30 days, if sufficient cause is shown, but not thereafter.11
14. As per Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act, the effect of there being a different limitation period under
Section 34(3) is that: Section 3 of the Limitation Act applies to proceedings under Section 34 of the ACA as if
the 3-month limitation period is the period prescribed in the Schedule to the Limitation Act. Further, Sections
4 to 24 of the Limitation Act apply to determine whether the application is within the period of limitation,
"insofar as, and to the extent to which, they are not expressly excluded.".
15. There are two aspects necessary for our consideration at this point: first, the interpretation of "express
exclusion"; and second, the extent of such exclusion.
16. The mere prescription of a period of limitation that is different from the Limitation Act, even if mandatory
and compulsory, is not sufficient to displace the applicability of the Limitation Act's provisions.12 However,
an exclusion of the Limitation Act's provisions can be inferred if the nature and language of the provisions,
and the scheme of the special law necessarily exclude the applicability of one or more of the provisions
contained in Sections 4 to 24 of the Limitation Act.13 Thus, as per settled caselaw, an express reference to an
exclusion is not essential and the court can examine the language of the special law and its scheme to arrive at
a conclusion that certain provisions of the Limitation Act are impliedly excluded.
17. The applicability of Sections 4 to 24, and the extent of their applicability and exclusion under Section
34(3), has been considered by this Court in several cases. It is useful to categorise these cases based on the
provision of the Limitation Act under consideration therein.
18. Section 5 of the Limitation Act14: In the leading judgment of Popular Construction (supra), this Court
considered whether a court can condone delay beyond 30 days, as specified in the proviso to Section 34(3), by
relying on Section 5 of the Limitation Act. It considered the expression ''but not thereafter'' in the proviso to
Section 34(3), which it held would amount to an express exclusion within the meaning of Section 29(2) of the
Limitation Act. Hence, Section 5 would not apply as it would render this phrase redundant if a further period
was allowed to be condoned through reference to Section 5 of the Limitation Act.15
18.1 The Court further considered the scheme and object of the ACA and held that Section 34(1) provides for
recourse against the arbitral award "in accordance with" sub-sections (2) and (3), which set out the grounds
and the time period for challenging the arbitral award. Reading the provision as a whole, the Court held that
an application beyond 3 months and 30 days would not be "in accordance with" Section 34(3), and hence the
recourse under Section 34(1) cannot be availed.16
18.2 Further, the Court also considered the enforceability of the award under Section 36 of the ACA once the
time to make an application under Section 34 expires.17 Thus, it held that the scheme of the ACA would result
in an exclusion of Section 5 of the Limitation Act, and therefore, a delay beyond 30 days cannot be condoned
by recourse to Section 5.
19. Section 12 of the Limitation Act18: This Court in State of Himachal Pradesh v. Himachal Techno
Engineers (2010) 12 SCC 210 held that Section 12 of the Limitation Act applies for the purpose of calculating
limitation under Section 34(3), and the same is not excluded by the provisions of the ACA. It held that the day
from which the 3-month limitation period is to be reckoned must be excluded as per Section 12(1).19
20. Section 14 of the Limitation Act20: In State of Goa v. Western Builders (supra), a division bench of this
Court held that nothing in the ACA or in the language of Section 34 excludes the applicability of Section 14
of the Limitation Act. Hence, the time spent by a party who was bona fide prosecuting his remedy before a
court that did not have jurisdiction must be excluded while calculating the prescribed period under Section
34(3). It held that when the special law is silent and there is no specific prohibition, it must be interpreted in a
manner that advances justice. While the object of the ACA is to ensure expeditious decisions in commercial
matters through arbitration, Section 43 makes the entirety of the Limitation Act applicable. The Limitation
Act is excluded only to that extent of the area which is covered under the ACA, and hence Section 5 is
excluded by virtue of the stipulation of the mandatory 30-day condonable period under Section 34(3).21
21. A three-judge bench of this Court in Consolidated Engineering Enterprises (supra) also held that Section
14 of the Limitation Act applies to Section 34(3). Merely because Section 5 of the Limitation Act stands
excluded, does not lead to a conclusion that other provisions are also excluded.22 Adopting a similar
reasoning as Western Builders (supra), the Court held that there is no provision in the ACA that excludes the
applicability of Section 14 of the Limitation Act to Section 34 proceedings.23 Further, the Court held that
there is a fundamental distinction between Sections 5 and 14 of the Limitation Act. Section 5 allows the court
to exercise discretion to condone delay, and thereby extends the period of limitation.24 However, under
Section 14, the exclusion of time is mandatory if certain conditions are satisfied. Exercise of power under
Section 5 is therefore broader than Section 14, as a wide range of reasons can be put forth to show sufficient
cause for delay.25 Hence, it held that the decision in Popular Construction (supra) does not mean that Section
14 of the Limitation Act is also inapplicable to Section 34(3) of the ACA. This decision has been
subsequently followed by this Court in other cases.26
22. Section 17 of the Limitation Act27: In P. Radha Bai v. P. Ashok Kumar (2019) 13 SCC 445, this Court
held that Section 17 of the Limitation Act does not enable condonation of delay in a Section 34 application
beyond the 30-day period when such delay is caused due to fraud played on the applicant party. The Court
took note of the applicability of Sections 12 and 14 of the Limitation Act (discussed above). It held that
Section 17 only defers the commencement of the limitation period, but does not extend or break the limitation
period.28 However, it held Section 17 to be inapplicable for the following reasons.
22.1 Under Section 34(3) of the ACA, the limitation period commences on the date of receipt of award or the
date of disposal of request under Section 33 for correction or an additional award. However, if Section 17 of
the Limitation Act were to apply, the limitation would commence on the date of discovery of the alleged fraud
or mistake, and the outer limit to challenge the award would go beyond the mandatory 3 months plus 30 days
period.29 Based on these inconsistencies between Section 17 of the Limitation Act and the language of
Section 34(3), the Court held that there is an "express exclusion".
22.2 It also considered the object of the ACA to ensure speedy dispute resolution and finality to the award;
enforceability of the award under Section 36 of the ACA, once the time to challenge the award expires; and
"unbreakability" of the time limit under Section 34(3), to hold that Section 17 of the Limitation Act is
inapplicable.30
23. Section 4 of the Limitation Act: We found it necessary to deal with the case-law, categorised as per the
provisions of the Limitation Act, due to a certain view at the bar that the provisions of the Limitation Act are
entirely inapplicable to Section 34(3). Such a view was put forth before the High Court as well as before us.
Through the above discussion, it is amply clear that there is no wholesale exclusion of the provisions of the
Limitation Act in calculating the period of limitation under Section 34(3). Rather, each provision's
applicability/exclusion has been individually tested by this Court, on a case-to-case basis, based on the
language and purpose of the specific provision in the Limitation Act, the language of Section 34(3) of the
ACA, and the scheme and object of the ACA. It is in this light that we must consider whether Section 4 of the
Limitation Act applies to Section 34(3), and in what manner. The above context is also necessary to appreciate
the precedents on this issue.
24. Before analysing the case-law, it is relevant to extract Section 4 of the Limitation Act:
"Section 4. Expiry of prescribed period when court is closed.—Where the prescribed period for any suit,
appeal or application expires on a day when the court is closed, the suit, appeal or application may be
instituted, preferred or made on the day when the court re-opens.
Explanation.—A court shall be deemed to be closed on any day within the meaning of this section if
during any part of its normal working hours it remains closed on that day."
We will also extract Section 10 of the GCA to juxtapose these provisions:
"Section 10. Computation of time.—(1) Where, by any Central Act or Regulation made after the
commencement of this Act, any act or proceeding is directed or allowed to be done or taken in any Court
or office on a certain day or within a prescribed period, then, if the Court or office is closed on that day or
the last day of the prescribed period, the act or proceeding shall be considered as done or taken in due
time if it is done or taken on the next day afterwards on which the Court or office is open:
Provided that nothing in this section shall apply to any act or proceeding to which the Indian Limitation
Act, 1877 (15 of 1877), applies.
(2) This section applies also to all Central Acts and Regulations made on or after the fourteenth day of
January, 1887."
(emphasis supplied)
25. As per Section 4, if the ''prescribed period'', which is defined in Section 2(j) of the Limitation Act as the
period of limitation computed in accordance with its provisions31, expires on a day when the court is closed,
the application may be made on the day when the court reopens.
26. This Court in Assam Urban (supra) considered the applicability of Section 4 of the Limitation Act in a
situation when the condonable period of 30 days expired on a court holiday. The brief facts are that the
appellants received the arbitral awards on 26.08.2003, the 3-month limitation period expired on 26.11.2003,
on which date the court was open. The further condonable period of 30 days expired during court vacation
between 25.12.2003 to 01.01.2004. The application under Section 34 was filed on 02.01.2004, on the date of
court reopening. This Court upheld the dismissal of the Section 34 application on the ground of delay, as the
same could not be condoned.
26.1 First, the Court held that by virtue of Section 43(1), the Limitation Act applies to matters of arbitration,
"save and except to the extent its applicability has been excluded by virtue of the express provision contained
in Section 34(3) of the 1996 Act".32
26.2 It then considered the meaning of the expression ''prescribed period'' in Section 4, to determine whether
the appellants in this case would be entitled to an extension of time. Reading Section 2(j) of the Limitation
Act in the context of Section 34(3) of the ACA, it held that the "prescribed period'' for an application to set
aside the arbitral award is 3 months. The 30-day period is not the period of limitation, but the condonable
period, and is therefore not the "prescribed period''. Hence, it held that Section 4 was not attracted to the facts
of the case.33
27. Contrary to the interpretation of the judgment put forth by Mr. Kaul during the hearings, a reading of the
entire judgment does not indicate that the Court in Assam Urban (supra) held Section 4 of the Limitation Act
to be inapplicable. The wording of para 9 of the judgment makes it clear that the Limitation Act does not
apply only to the extent that its applicability is excluded by an express provision in Section 34(3). While the
Court did not explicitly deal with whether Section 4 of the Limitation Act was excluded, a reading of the
entire judgment makes it clear that the Court proceeded on the basis that Section 4 applies. Therefore, we find
it difficult to accept Mr. Kaul's submission that Section 4 was held to be excluded in Assam Urban (supra).
His further submission that once the Limitation Act is inapplicable, there was no occasion for the Court to
decide on the applicability of Section 4 only to the prescribed period of 3 months, must also be rejected for the
same reason.
28. The position of law after Assam Urban (supra) is that while Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to
Section 34(3) of the ACA, it only applies in relation to the prescribed period of 3 months. It does not apply
when the condonable period of 30 days expires on a day when the court is not working.
29. This position of law was subsequently considered and reiterated in Bhimashankar (supra) as well. Here,
the arbitral award was made on 24.08.2016, the 3-month period of limitation expired on 24.11.2016, and
further 30 days came upto 24.12.2016, which fell during the court's winter/Christmas vacation. The Court
here considered the applicability of Section 4 of the Limitation Act and Section 10 of the GCA.
29.1 On the issue of Section 4 of the Limitation, it held that the issue is covered by Assam Urban (supra),
where it was held that the benefit of exclusion of the period when the court is closed is only available with
respect to the "prescribed period of limitation" and not the period extendable by the court in exercise of its
discretion.34
29.2 To determine the applicability of Section 10 of the GCA, it considered whether the Limitation Act
applies to the ACA. It specifically rejected the submission that the Limitation Act does not apply. It further
referred to Assam Urban (supra) on the extent of exclusion and held as follows in para 54:
"54. Now, so far as the submission on behalf of the appellant that the Limitation Act shall not be
applicable to the proceedings under the Arbitration Act is concerned, the aforesaid has no substance.
Section 43(1) of the Arbitration Act specifically provides that the Limitation Act, 1963 shall apply to
arbitrations as it applies to proceeding in Court. However, as observed and held by this Court in Assam
Urban, the Limitation Act, 1963 shall be applicable to the matters of arbitration covered by the 1996 Act
save and except to the extent its applicability has been excluded by virtue of express provision contained
in Section 34(3) of the Arbitration Act."
(emphasis supplied)
In paras 55 and 56, it discussed Popular Construction (supra) and Hindustan Construction (supra) on the
inapplicability of Section 5 of the Limitation Act and the mandatory nature of the 30-day time limit for
condonation of delay, respectively.
29.3 Finally, in paras 57 and 58, in light of the proviso to Section 10 of the GCA which specifically excludes
its applicability to any act or proceeding to which the Limitation Act applies, the Court rejected the
applicability of Section 10 of the GCA to Section 34(3).
30. The logic of the above reasoning in Bhimashankar (supra), like in Assam Urban (supra), proceeds on the
basis that Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to Section 34(3), as the same is not expressly or impliedly
excluded. Reading paragraphs 54 to 58 together, it is clear that any apparent contradiction within them, which
was raised by Mr. Kaul, does not in fact exist. The judgment is consistent throughout, in that it necessarily
affirms the applicability of Section 4 of the Limitation Act while calculating limitation under Section 34(3),
and consequently, relies on the proviso of Section 10 of the GCA to hold that Section 10 of the GCA does not
apply.
31. The applicability of Section 4 of the Limitation Act is also implicit in the recent decision in State of West
Bengal v. Rajpath Contractors (supra). Here, the award was served on the appellant on 30.06.2022. The 3-
month limitation was reckoned from 01.07.2022, which came upto 30.09.2022. The court vacation started
from 01.10.2022. The further 30-day period ended on 30.10.2022, which was during the court vacation. The
application was filed on 31.10.2022. The Court held that the prescribed limitation period ended on
30.09.2022, when the court was working. Hence, by referring to Assam Urban (supra), it held that the
appellant could not benefit from Section 4 of the Limitation Act as only the 30-day period expired on a court
holiday. Hence, it held that the application was filed beyond the time under Section 34(3) and the delay could
not be condoned.35
32. Applicability of Section 10 of the GCA: In view of this legal position, the final issue for our consideration
is whether the appellant can claim the benefit of Section 10 of the GCA. This issue is also answered against
the appellant by virtue of the clear and express language of the proviso to Section 10 of the GCA.
33. This Court in Bhimashankar (supra) has already considered this issue and has clearly held that since the
Limitation Act applies to Section 34(3), Section 10 of the GCA is not applicable.36 The argument put forth by
the appellant in its written submissions that Section 10 of the GCA must apply to the 30-day period stipulated
in the proviso to Section 34(3) also warrants rejection due to the statutory language of the proviso to Section
10 of the GCA, which states that it does not apply to "any act or proceeding" to which the Limitation Act
applies. Considering that Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to a Section 34 proceeding, the appellant
cannot simultaneously claim benefit of Section 10 of the GCA.
34. Since the applicability of Section 10 of the GCA is rejected at the very threshold, it is no longer necessary
to consider the interpretation of "prescribed period'' under Section 10 of the GCA as including the condonable
period, as put forth by this Court in Sridevi Datla (supra) in the context of Section 16 of the NGT Act. The
position of law in the context of Section 34(3) of the ACA has been clearly enunciated in Assam Urban
(supra), Bhimashankar (supra), and Rajpath Contractors (supra). Hence, Sridevi Datla (supra) can be
differentiated on this ground as well.
35. Summarising the Current Position of Law: From the reasoning and decisions in the above cases, the
following conclusions evidently follow:
35.1 First, Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to Section 34(3) of the ACA.
35.2 Second, Section 4 of the Limitation Act benefits a party only when the "prescribed period'', i.e. the 3-
month limitation period under Section 34(3) expires on a court holiday. In such a situation, the application
under Section 34 will be considered as having been filed within the limitation period if it is filed on the next
working day of the court.
35.3 Third, Section 4 of the Limitation Act does not come to the aid of the party when the 3-month limitation
period expires on a day when the court was working. The 30-day condonable period expiring during the court
holidays will not survive and neither Section 4, nor any other provision of the Limitation Act, will inure to the
benefit of the party to enable filing of the Section 34 application immediately after reopening.
35.4 Fourth, since Section 4 of the Limitation Act applies to proceedings under Section 34 of the ACA, the
applicability of Section 10 of the GCA stands excluded in view of the express wording of its proviso that
excludes the applicability of the provision when the Limitation Act applies.
36. Highlighting Certain Concerns with the Current Legal Position: Before parting with this judgment, we
find it necessary to express certain difficulties with the current position of law. In our view, the above
construction of limitation statutes is quite stringent and unduly curtails a remedy available to arbitrating
parties to challenge the validity of an arbitral award. This must be addressed by the Parliament.
36.1 The purpose of reading the Limitation Act alongside the ACA is not to restrict the special remedy under
the ACA, but to enable exercise of such remedy in circumstances as contemplated under the Limitation Act.
In this context, Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act becomes relevant as it incorporates Sections 4 to 24 of the
Limitation Act in special statutes, including the ACA, to the extent that its provisions are not expressly
excluded.
36.2 The language of Section 34(3) read with its proviso does not expressly or impliedly exclude Section 4 of
the Limitation Act and this interpretation is in consonance with the important principle contemplated under
Section 29(2) to protect rights and remedies. This Court has already recognised the applicability of Section 4
of the Limitation Act.
36.3 The substantive remedies available under Sections 34 and 37 of the ACA are, by their very nature,
limited in their scope due to statutory prescription. It is therefore necessary to interpret the limitation
provisions liberally, or else even the limited window available to parties to challenge an arbitral award will be
lost. The remedy under Section 34 is precious, and courts will keep in mind the need to secure and protect
such remedy while applying limitation provisions.37 If this limited remedy is denied on stringent principles of
limitation, it will cause great prejudice and has the effect of (a) denying the remedy, and (b) in the long run, it
will have the effect of dissuading contracting parties from seeking resolution of disputes through arbitration.
This is against public policy.
36.4 However, the difficulty arises as the judgments affirming the applicability of Section 4 of the Limitation
Act equate the expression ''prescribed'' in that section and Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act only with the
main period of limitation (3 months). The problem with this construction is that the special law, i.e., Section
34(3) of the ACA, along with its proviso does not prescribe the period of limitation in the manner that a
period is specified in the Schedule of the Limitation Act. The statutorily prescribed period under Section 34(3)
of the ACA is 3 months, and an additional 30 days. In our opinion, it will be wrong to confine the period of
limitation to just 3 months by interpreting it as the "prescribed period" and excluding the balance 30 days
under the proviso to Section 34(3) as not being the prescribed period through a process of interpretation.
36.5 The purpose of applying the Limitation Act to special laws is to vest in the court the power to exercise
discretion or to grant the benefit of exclusion. In such cases, when the Limitation Act applies, the discretion of
the court as contemplated under its provisions, commencing from Sections 4 to 24, must be given full effect.
In this light, the additional period of 30 days specifically provided under the ACA loses its efficacy and
purpose, and becomes untenable due to the current position of law. This takes us to a fundamental question as
to the meaning of "express exclusion" of certain provisions of the Limitation Act by the ACA. In Popular
Construction (supra), the Court came to the conclusion that Section 34(3) proviso "impliedly" - as against the
specific expression "expressly" in Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act -excludes Section 5 of the Limitation
Act.
36.6 Once the Court commenced disapplying provisions of the Limitation Act to the ACA on the ground of
implied exclusions, it is only a matter of interpretation to include or exclude provisions from Sections 4 to 24
of the Limitation Act on a case-to-case basis. Thus, for example, while the Court held that Sections 5 and 17
of the Limitation Act are excluded from Section 34(3), it came to the conclusion that Sections 4, 12, and 14 of
the Limitation Act are applicable. In a way, the applicability of provisions from Sections 4 to 24 of the
Limitation Act and the manner in which they apply are at the doorstep of the court, rather than being
determined by a clear and categorical statutory prescription. This is perhaps the reason why the Parliament has
used the expression "express exclusion" in Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act. We are conscious of the fact
that it is too late in the day to hold that "express exclusion" will not include implied exclusion. It is for the
legislature to take note of this position and bring about clarity and certainty. We say no more, for the
overbearing intellectualisation of the Act by courts has become the bane of Indian arbitration.
37. Conclusion: For the reasons set forth above, the application preferred by the appellant under Section 34 of
the ACA stands dismissed as it was filed beyond the condonable period of 30 days, which conclusively and
absolutely expired on 28.06.2022.
38. For the reasons stated above, we affirm the judgment and order passed by the High Court in FAO (OS)
(COMM) No. 67/2023 dated 03.04.2024 and dismiss the appeal.
39. There shall be no order as to costs.
40. Pending applications, if any, stand disposed of.
JUDGMENT
Pankaj Mithal, J. - The sole issue arising in this appeal for our consideration is whether the High Court was
justified in dismissing the petition filed by the appellants herein under Section 34 of the Arbitration and
Conciliation Act, 199638 as barred by time.
2. My esteemed brother, in his opinion expressed on the above issue, has clearly concluded that the petition
filed by the appellants under Section 34 of the A & C Act was beyond limitation and was rightly dismissed as
barred by time. I fully agree with the said opinion expressed by my brother on the basis of the legal
interpretation of the various relevant provisions and the conclusions drawn on its basis. However, I would like
to write a supporting opinion in my own way based upon the facts of the case at hand.
3. On account of lease agreements entered into between the appellants and the respondent, certain disputes
arose between them. Therefore, respondent invoked the arbitration clause whereupon the disputes were
referred to arbitration. An arbitral award was passed on 04.02.2022, a soft copy of which was supplied to the
appellants on the very same day by e-mail. A signed hard copy of the award dated 04.02.2022 was made
available to the appellants on 14.02.2022.
4. The prescribed period of time for filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act is 3 months from the
date on which the party, filing the petition, had received the arbitral award or if a request had been made under
Section 33 of the A & C Act, from the date on which the request has been disposed of by the Arbitral
Tribunal. Here, we are not concerned with the second part of Sub-Section (3) of Section 34 of the A & C Act
but only with the first part of it which provides for a limitation of 3 months from the date on which the party,
filing the petition, had received the arbitral award. Since the appellants in the present case received the arbitral
award on 14.02.2022, the 3 months period prescribed for filing a petition as per sub-Section (3) of Section 34
expired on 14.05.2022. By operation of this Court's order dated 10.01.2022 on account of COVID-19
pandemic, the said period of limitation stood extended upto 29.05.2022.
5. The day on which the limitation expired for filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act after giving
the benefit of the COVID-19 pandemic i.e., 29.05.2022, as mentioned above, happened to be a working day.
However, the appellants filed the petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act, not on the last day of limitation
i.e. 29.05.2022 but on 04.07.2022 when the Courts re-opened after the summer vacation which were notified
between 04.06.2022 and 03.07.2022. The petition filed by the appellants under Section 34 of the A & C Act
was accompanied by an application for condonation of delay.
6. The High Court rejected the delay condonation application and accordingly dismissed the petition filed by
the appellants under Section 34 of the A & C Act vide order dated 07.02.2023 as barred by limitation. The
appeal preferred by the appellants under Section 37 of the A & C Act before the Division Bench also met the
same fate.
7. The submission is that, though, the period of limitation for filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C
Act is 3 months but the court, on being satisfied that the appellants were prevented by sufficient cause from
filing the petition within the aforesaid 3 months, could have entertained it within a further period of 30 days.
Therefore, the maximum period in which the petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act, after condoning the
delay, could be entertained is 90+30 days i.e., 120 days. The said period expired on 28.06.2022 which fell
during the summer vacation of the Court. Therefore, the petition filed by the appellants on the first day of re-
opening of the Court after summer vacation was within time.
8. In order to appreciate the above submission, it may be pertinent to refer to Section 43 of the A & C Act
which provides for the applicability of the Limitation Act, 1963 which in unequivocal terms states that the
Limitation Act shall apply to Arbitrations as it applies to proceedings in court. In view of the above provision
and the case law on the subject as discussed by my brother, there remains no doubt that the Limitation Act is
applicable to the arbitration proceedings as also to court proceedings under the A & C Act.
9. The Limitation Act is based on public policy to bring to an end the life of a dispute for which appropriate
remedy has not been availed within a time bound period.
10. Section 3 of the Limitation Act, 1963 clearly lays down that every suit instituted, appeal preferred and
application made to the court after the prescribed period shall be dismissed even though limitation has not
been setup as a defence.
11. Section 2(j) of the Limitation Act defines "period of limitation" to mean the period of limitation prescribed
for any suit, appeal or application under the Schedule. The Schedule to the Limitation Act lays down the
limitation prescribed inter alia for any suit, appeal or application. However, by virtue of Section 29(2) of the
Limitation Act, the period of limitation for any suit, appeal or application as contained in the Schedule of the
Limitation Act stands substituted by the period prescribed in Section 34(3) of the A & C Act for the purposes
of filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act.
12. Section 4 of the Limitation Act provides that if the prescribed period of limitation of any suit, appeal or
application expires on a day when the court is closed, the suit, appeal or application can be
submitted/presented or made to the court on the day when the court reopens which on such presentation would
be treated as within time.
13. The period of limitation prescribed for filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act is 3 months i.e.,
90 days. In the present case, the said period of limitation prescribed by extending the benefit of COVID-19,
expired on 29.05.2022 when the courts were working. Therefore, the appellants were not entitled to the
benefit of Section 4 of the Limitation Act to permit them to prefer the petition on the re-opening of the court
as the period of limitation prescribed had not expired on the day when the court was closed.
14. The appellants are not entitled even to any benefit as per Section 10 of the General Clauses Act39, 1897
which also permits the filing of a petition on the re-opening of the court where the last day of prescribed
period for filing it falls or expires on the day on which the court is closed. The proviso to Section 10 in no
uncertain terms states that the provisions of Section 10 of the GC Act shall not apply to any Act or
proceedings to which the Limitation Act applies. In the case at hand, admittedly in proceedings of arbitration
as also to court proceedings under the A & C Act, the Limitation Act squarely applies. Therefore, by proviso
to Section 10 of GC Act, Section 10 of the GC Act stands excluded and would not be attracted to accord any
benefit to the appellants.
15. The period of limitation prescribed for instituting a suit or filing an appeal or making an application has to
be distinguished from a condonable period which cannot be made part of the period of limitation prescribed.
16. In view of the above discussion, as the period of limitation prescribed for filing a petition under Section 34
of the A & C Act expired on a working day and not on a day on which the court was closed, the appellants
were not entitled to file it on the re-opening of the court after the summer vacation and as such the petition so
filed was patently barred by limitation.
17. Admittedly, as the period of limitation prescribed for filing a petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act
expired on 29.05.2022 whereas the petition was preferred on 04.07.2022 much beyond the period of limitation
prescribed and the condonable period of 30 days stipulated under the proviso to Section 34(3) of the A & C
Act, the petition under Section 34 of the A & C Act was beyond time and the delay could not have been
condoned. Accordingly, there is no error or illegality on part of the High Court in dismissing the petition
under Section 34 of the A & C Act as barred by limitation.
18. It would not be out of context for me to mention on the basis of my experience that practically all
new/recent enactments are deviating from the prescribed period of limitation as per the Schedule of the
Limitation Act and are generally prescribing its own period of limitation as under the A & C Act itself. At the
same time, statutes further provide that the delay beyond a certain period cannot be condoned by the court.
This is obviously in deviation to what is prescribed by Section 5 of the Limitation Act.
19. In my personal opinion, the statutes ought not to provide different period of limitation for instituting suit,
preferring appeal and making an application, rather all statutes should stick to a uniform period of limitation
say 90 days for preferring Special Leave Petition/Appeal to the Supreme Court of India. The courts should
also be empowered to condone the delay if sufficient cause is shown for not filing it within the time
prescribed rather than restricting the condonable period to a fix period of 15 days or 30 days as provided in
some of the statutes.
20. This deviation and restriction create confusion and ordinarily even a lawyer at times fails to notice that a
different period of limitation has been prescribed for preferring an appeal under a particular statute. Moreover,
there may be genuine cases where the litigant may not be able to approach the court in time for cogent reasons
beyond his control. For example, in arbitration matters where an award is passed on a particular date and a
copy of it is also served upon the litigating party but that party happens to be seriously ill and hospitalised for
months together and as such is unable to prefer a petition under Section 34 within the period of limitation
prescribed. If the delay in challenging the award is not condoned beyond the period of 30 days, he would
suffer great prejudice and may lose the remedy on a technical ground even though he may be having a good
case on merit. There may also be a situation where a litigant is facing proceedings by the law enforcement
agencies like the Enforcement Directorate, Central Bureau of Investigation, etc., and is taken into custody and
as such is unable to take the legal remedy within the period of limitation prescribed. He avails the remedy
only after he is out of custody; months after the service of the order. In such circumstances, in my opinion, the
legislature ought not to confine condoning the delay only for a prescribed period and not beyond it. Rather it
should follow the principle of condoning the delay as enshrined under Section 5 of the Limitation Act. This
would not only avoid a good case to be thrown out on the ground of limitation but at the same time would
bring about uniformity in law.
21. I, therefore, suggest to the law makers to keep this in mind while enacting new Acts and ensure that
uniform system is applied in all enactments, be it present or future.
■■
† Arising out of order passed by the High Court in FAO (OS) (COMM) No. 67/2023, dated 03.04.2024.
1. Hereinafter "ACA".
2. Hereinafter "Limitation Act".
3. Hereinafter "GCA".
4. In Re: Cognizance of Extension of Limitation, Suo Motu Writ Petition (C) No 3 of 2020.
5. ibid.
6. Relied on H.H. Raja Harinder Singh v. S. Karnail Singh, 1956 SCC OnLine SC 111; Manohar Joshi v.
Nitin Bhaurao Patil, (1996) 1 SCC 169; and Consolidated Engineering Enterprises v. Principal
Secretary, Irrigation Department, (2008) 7 SCC 169.
7. Section 3 of the Limitation Act reads:
"3. Bar of limitation.—(1) Subject to the provisions contained in sections 4 to 24 (inclusive), every
suit instituted, appeal preferred, and application made after the prescribed period shall be
dismissed, although limitation has not been set up as a defence.
(2) For the purposes of this Act,—
(a) a suit is instituted,—
(i) in an ordinary case, when the plaint is presented to the proper officer;
(ii) in the case of a pauper, when his application for leave to sue as a pauper is made; and
(iii) in the case of a claim against a company which is being wound up by the court, when
the claimant first sends in his claim to the official liquidator;
(b) any claim by way of a set off or a counter claim, shall be treated as a separate suit and shall
be deemed to have been instituted—
(i) in the case of a set off, on the same date as the suit in which the set off is pleaded;
(ii) in the case of a counter claim, on the date on which the counter claim is made in
court;
(c) an application by notice of motion in a High Court is made when the application is
presented to the proper officer of that court."
8. Consolidated Engineering (supra), para 42.
9. ibid, para 45.
10. State of Goa v. Western Builders, (2006) 6 SCC 239, para 10; Consolidated Engineering Enterprises
(supra), para 19.
11. See State of Maharashtra v. Hindustan Construction Co. Ltd., (2010) 4 SCC 518, para 29.
12. Mangu Ram v. Municipal Corporation of Delhi, (1976) 1 SCC 392, para 7.
13. Hukumdev Narain Yadav v. Lalit Narain Mishra, (1974) 2 SCC 133, para 17; Popular Construction
(supra), paras 8-11; Commissioner of Customs and Central Excise v. Hongo India Pvt Ltd, (2009) 5
SCC 791, para 35.
14. Section 5 of the Limitation Act reads:
"5. Extension of prescribed period in certain cases.—Any appeal or any application, other than
an application under any of the provisions of Order XXI of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
(5 of 1908), may be admitted after the prescribed period, if the appellant or the applicant
satisfies the court that he had sufficient cause for not preferring the appeal or making the
application within such period.
Explanation.—The fact that the appellant or the applicant was misled by any order, practice or
judgment of the High Court in ascertaining or computing the prescribed period may be
sufficient cause within the meaning of this section."
15. Popular Construction (supra), para 12.
16. ibid, para 16.
17. ibid.
18. The relevant portion of Section 12 of the Limitation Act reads:
"12. Exclusion of time in legal proceedings.—(1) In computing the period of limitation for any
suit, appeal or application, the day from which such period is to be reckoned, shall be
excluded... "
19. ibid, paras 12, 19.
20. The relevant portion of Section 14 of the Limitation Act reads:
"14. Exclusion of time of proceeding bona fide in court without jurisdiction.—(1) In
computing the period of limitation for any suit the time during which the plaintiff has been
prosecuting with due diligence another civil proceeding, whether in a court offirst instance or
of appeal or revision, against the defendant shall be excluded, where the proceeding relates to
the same matter in issue and is prosecuted in goodfaith in a court which, from defect
ofjurisdiction or other cause of a like nature, is unable to entertain it.
(2) In computing the period of limitation for any application, the time during which the
applicant has been prosecuting with due diligence another civil proceeding, whether in a court
of first instance or ofappeal or revision, against the same partyfor the same reliefshall be
excluded, where such proceeding is prosecuted in good faith in a court which, from defect of
jurisdiction or other cause of a like nature, is unable to entertain it.
21. Western Builders (supra), paras 16-25. Followed in Gulbarga University v. Mallikarjun S. Kodagali,
(2008) 13 SCC 539.
22. Consolidated Engineering Enterprises (supra), para 20.
23. ibid, paras 23, 27.
24. ibid, paras 28, 54.
25. ibid, para 28.
26. Coal India Limited v. Ujjal Transport Agency, (2011) 1 SCC 117; Commissioner, Madhya Pradesh
Housing Board v. Mohanlal and Company, (2016) 14 SCC 199.
27. The relevant portion of Section 17 of the Limitation Act reads:
"17. Effect of fraud or mistake.—(1) Where, in the case of any suit or application for which a
period of limitation is prescribed by this Act,—
(a) the suit or application is based upon the fraud of the defendant or respondent or his agent;
or
(b) the knowledge of the right or title on which a suit or application is founded is concealed by
the fraud of any such person as aforesaid; or
(c) the suit or application is for relief from the consequences of a mistake; or
(d) where any document necessary to establish the right of the plaintiff or applicant has been
fraudulently concealed from him, the period of limitation shall not begin to run until plaintiff
or applicant has discovered the fraud or the mistake or could, with reasonable diligence, have
discovered it; or in the case of a concealed document, until the plaintiff or the applicant first
had the means of producing the concealed document or compelling its production... "
28. ibid, para 30.
29. ibid, paras 31.1-31.2.
30. ibid, paras 36-37.
31. Section 2(j) of the Limitation Act reads:
"2. Definitions.—In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,—
(j) "period of limitation" means the period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or
application by the Schedule, and "prescribed period" means the period of limitation computed
in accordance with the, provisions of this Act;" (emphasis supplied)
32. Assam Urban (supra), para 9.
33. ibid, paras 11-14.
34. Bhimashankar (supra), paras 50-53.
35. Rajpath Contractors (supra), paras 10-12.
36. Bhimashankar (supra), paras 57 and 58.
37. Kirpal Singh v. Government of India, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 3814, para 10.
38. Hereinafter referred to as 'the A & C Act'
39. Hereinafter referred to as 'the GC Act'