Introduction
In the ever-evolving  landscape of Indian arbitration law, the line between procedural precision and  substantive fairness often defines the fate of a challenge to an arbitral  award. One such procedural conundrum is the commencement of limitation period  for challenging an award under Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation  Act, 1996 (“A&C Act”).1 The conundrum is more nuanced in cases wherein the aggrieved party has, before  challenging the award under Section 34,2 filed an application for modification/correction under Section 33.3 The jurisprudence on this proposition required clarity and the same has now  finally been put to rest by the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Geojit Financial  Services Ltd. v. Sandeep Gurav.4
This judgement  finally settles the principle that when a party files a timely and proper  application under Section 33, the limitation period under Section 34(3) begins  only from the date on which that application is disposed of by the arbitral  tribunal, irrespective of whether it is allowed, dismissed, or otherwise  disposed of.
					
						Factual  Background
The dispute in the  present casearose out of an arbitral award rendered under the aegis of  the National Stock Exchange (NSE). The respondent, Sandeep Gurav, had initiated  arbitration proceedings against Geojit Financial Services Ltd. (“Geojit”),  a stockbroking company, alleging deficiencies and irregularities in the  handling of his trading account. Upon conclusion of the arbitral proceedings,  the sole arbitrator passed an award dated July 13, 2016, against Geojit,  directing it to pay certain sums to Mr. Gurav.
Within thirty days of  receiving the award dated July 13, 2016,5 and  with notice to the opposing party, Geojit filed an application dated August 8,  2016, under Section 33(1) before the arbitral tribunal, seeking correction and  clarification of alleged errors apparent on the face of the award.  Subsequently, the arbitral tribunal vide order dated August 26, 2016,  considered and disposed of Geojit’s Section 33 application, not modifying or  amending the award, and effectively dismissing the request.
Following the  disposal of its Section 33 application, Geojit on November 15, 2016, filed a  petition under Section 34 of the A&C Act before the Bombay High Court,  challenging the arbitral award on merits. The petition was filed within three  months from the date of disposal of the Section 33 application, reckoning limitation  from that later date in accordance with the proviso to Section 34(3).6
The Bombay High  Court, however, dismissed Geojit’s Section 34 petition as being barred by  limitation, holding that the limitation period for filing the Section 34  petition commenced from the date of receipt of the original award, and not from  the date of disposal of the Section 33 application.
Thereafter, Geojit  filed an appeal before the Bombay High Court under Section 37 of the A&C  Act,7 however, the same was dismissed by a division bench of the Bombay High Court vide order dated February 12, 2021 (“Impugned Order”), upholding the Single  Judge’s order on the ground that the Section 34 Petition itself was barred by  limitation under Section 34(3). The Court also observed that Geojit’s Section  33 application did not fall within the scope of Section 33(1), as it  effectively sought a review of the merits of the award rather than a correction  or clarification. Aggrieved by this order, Geojit preferred a petition before  the Hon’ble Supreme Court.
					
						Interplay  Between Section 33 and Section 34
Before addressing the  issue of computation of limitation period, the Supreme Court revisited its  earlier judicial precedents interpreting Sections 33 and 34(3) of the A&C  Act, revealing a consistent judicial approach favouring certainty and fairness  in computing limitation periods.
The Supreme Court has  held in Ved Prakash Mithal & Sons v. Union of India8 that the phrase “disposed of” in Section 34(3) must be read to mean disposal by  the arbitral tribunal, and the limitation period would commence from the date  when the Section 33 request was disposed of by the tribunal. This judgement  clarified that “disposed of” cannot be read down to mean only where the  tribunal allows the request, i.e., produces a corrected/modified award, as even  a dismissal qualifies as disposal for the Section 34 clock if the twin  condition of Section 33 was met, i.e., a request under Section 33 shall be made  within thirty days from the receipt of the arbitral award and with notice to  the other party.
The ratio laid down  in Ved Prakash was reiterated by the Supreme Court in USS Alliance v.  State of U.P.,9 reaffirming the reasoning that where an award is amended/corrected under  Section 33, it is the corrected award which is to be challenged, and the  running of the limitation period must accommodate such correction, which is why  the corrected/disposed date is salient for Section 34(3).
In State of  Arunachal Pradesh v. Damani Construction Co.,10 the  Supreme Court confronted a situation wherein the party, instead of filing a  formal application under Section 33, had merely addressed a letter to the  arbitral tribunal seeking a review of the award on merits. The Court held that  such a communication could not be treated as a valid request under Section 33,  as it did not fall within the limited purposes contemplated by the provision  namely correction of computational, clerical or typographical errors, or  issuance of an additional award in respect of omitted claims. Consequently, the  Court ruled that since no proper Section 33 application had been made, the  limitation period for filing a petition under Section 34(3) could not be  extended. Therefore, the “disposal” contemplated under Section 34(3), presupposes  the existence of a valid and maintainable Section 33 request, complying with  the twin condition laid down therein.
					
						Decision  and Analysis
The Supreme Court in Geojit squarely adopted the reasoning in Ved Prakash and USS Alliance and held that where an application under Section 33(1) has been filed within  the thirty-day period and with notice to the other party, satisfying the twin  condition, the starting point for the three-month limitation under Section  34(3) is the date on which the Section 33 application was “disposed of” by the  arbitral tribunal, irrespective of whether the tribunal allowed the request or  dismissed it.
The Court explained  that Damani Construction Co. is distinguishable to the present case as  in Damani Construction Co. there was no formal and proper Section 33  application filed and instead only a letter seeking relief outside the scope of  Section 33 was addressed to the tribunal, and therefore, the communication  could not be treated as a valid application so as to extend the timeline  provided under the second part of Section 34(3).
The Supreme Court  emphasised on having an objective yardstick to determine the commencement and  termination of limitation period under the statutes. The term “disposed of”  used in Section 34(3) envisages both prospects, i.e., allowed or dismissed.  Merely because a validly filed application has been dismissed by the tribunal,  the court cannot go behind the dismissal order and render a qualitative  assessment on the Section 33 application thereby depriving an aggrieved party  of its complete entitlement of three months to challenge the award after  disposal of the Section 33 application.
The Court held that  unless and until a decision on the request under Section 33 is made, which may or  may not have culminated into any correction or interpretation or rendition of  an additional award, there can be no effective occasion for a party otherwise  aggrieved by the said award to apply for setting aside under Section 34.
The Court observed  that for the purpose of computation of limitation under Section 34(3), what is  material is not whether such request fell within the purview of the said  provision or not, but only that such request was made in the manner delineated  under Section 33, complying with the twin condition.
The Court reiterated  that the legislative intent underlying Section 33 is to enable the arbitral  tribunal to correct minor errors or omissions without resorting to court  proceedings. Therefore, once a party files an application under Section 33,  satisfying the twin condition, i.e., within statutory thirty-day period and  serving notice upon the opposite party, the arbitral process continues until  the tribunal finally disposes of that request. The Court further opined that if  the intention of the legislature was that the date of disposal of only those  applications under Section 33 which culminated into a correction or  interpretation of the award or rendition of an additional award, would be of  relevance for the purpose of computation of limitation under Section 34(3),  then it would not have used the word “disposed” therein, and would have  employed the word “allowed” instead.
Therefore, the  Supreme Court ultimately held that since Geojit had filed its Section 34  petition within three months from the date of disposal of its Section 33  application, the petition was within limitation. The Court accordingly set  aside the Impugned Order passed by the Bombay High Court and remitted the  matter for consideration on merits, while clarifying the legal position  governing the computation of limitation in such circumstances.
					
						Conclusion
The Supreme Court’s  decision in Geojit Financial Services Ltd. v. Sandeep Gurav reinforces  clarity and fairness in the computation of limitation for arbitral challenges.  By holding that the limitation period under Section 34(3) begins from the date  on which a duly filed and notified Section 33 application is disposed of,  irrespective of whether it is allowed or dismissed, the Court has ensured that  the running of limitation is governed by objective and ascertainable criteria.
That being said, this  approach does create a risk of abuse wherein parties may file a weak Section 33  application solely to buy time and delay the commencement of the Section 34  challenge period. Therefore, the tribunal must remain extremely vigilant  against sham filings, even though the same have been made following the twin  test laid. The object behind this decision is not to immunise abuse but to  offer procedural clarity while exercising one’s right to take recourse against  an award.
The judgement  harmonises procedural precision with substantive justice, aligning with the  broader legislative intent to prevent technicalities from undermining genuine  challenges. At the same time, by distinguishing Damani Construction Co.,  the Court cautioned that only bona fide and properly framed Section 33  applications attract this protection. Geojit thus establishes a workable  balance between preserving efficiency in arbitral proceedings while  safeguarding the litigant’s right to a fair and determinable opportunity to  seek judicial redress.
					
By - Arush Khanna and Gurdev Singh Tung
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