Last Updated: March 2026 | LegalFund India β Pan India | ~5 min read
π Quick Answer An arbitral award is executed in India under Section 36 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 β by filing an execution petition before the appropriate court, which then treats the award as a civil court decree. The decree-holder can attach bank accounts, seize property, obtain garnishee orders, and pursue civil imprisonment of wilful defaulters. Execution must begin immediately β every day of delay gives the losing party time to move assets.
π Arbitral Award Execution β Quick Summary
- Executed under Section 36, Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996
- Award treated as court decree once enforceable
- Section 34 challenge does NOT auto-stay enforcement post 2019 Amendment
- File before Commercial Court for commercial disputes above βΉ1 crore
- Simultaneous attachment on Day 1 β most critical step
- Limitation: 12 years under Article 136, Limitation Act 1963
- Foreign awards executed under Part II β New York Convention
- Every fresh execution step restarts the 12-year clock
Three Awards. Three Ignored Orders. Three Lessons.
Vikram won a βΉ2.6 crore DIAC arbitral award against a Delhi developer who stopped paying after project completion. Award passed. No Section 34 challenge filed. Vikram waited three months assuming payment was coming. It wasn’t. By the time he filed for execution β the developer had transferred his primary property to his wife and emptied his ICICI account.
Meera runs an MSME textile unit in Surat. She won a βΉ1.2 crore arbitral award against a Mumbai distributor for unpaid invoices. She filed for execution correctly β but assumed the distributor’s Section 34 challenge automatically paused her enforcement. She waited 18 months for Section 34 proceedings to conclude. She didn’t know post the 2019 Amendment β enforcement runs simultaneously. Eighteen months of recoverable money β lost.
Suresh is a tech contractor from Hyderabad. He won a βΉ95 lakh arbitral award against a Bengaluru client. The client filed Section 34 β and simultaneously applied for a stay on enforcement. Suresh had no counsel experienced in resisting stay applications. An unconditional stay was granted. His enforcement was blocked for two years.
Three valid awards. Three preventable execution failures.
Winning arbitration is step one. Here is exactly how to complete step two.
Step 1 β Wait for Section 34 Window (or Don’t)
The losing party has 3 months from receiving the award to file a Section 34 challenge. If no challenge is filed β the award becomes immediately enforceable under Section 36 as a court decree.
Critical rule post 2019 Amendment: A Section 34 challenge does NOT automatically stay enforcement. You can enforce simultaneously while the challenge runs.
What this means in practice:
- File for execution the moment the award is passed β do not wait 3 months
- If Section 34 is filed β continue enforcement unless court specifically grants a stay
- Resist stay applications aggressively β court must apply balance of convenience test
Meera’s mistake: waiting 18 months for Section 34 to conclude. She could have enforced from Day 1 of the award.
Step 2 β Trace Assets Before Filing Anything
Before drafting a single document β identify every attachable asset the losing party holds:
| Asset Type | What to Investigate |
|---|---|
| Bank accounts | Account numbers, branch locations, FDs |
| Immovable property | Land, house, commercial premises β title deed details |
| Vehicles | RC book details from RTO |
| Business receivables | Known customers and third-party debtors |
| Shares and investments | Demat account, mutual funds |
| Movable assets | Stock, machinery, equipment |
File attachment before serving notice. The moment the losing party receives the execution notice β asset movement begins. Trace first. File and attach simultaneously. Serve notice last.
Vikram’s mistake: filing 3 months after the award β developer had already moved the property and emptied the bank account. Day 1 asset tracing would have caught both.
Step 3 β Identify the Right Execution Court
| Award Type | Correct Execution Court |
|---|---|
| Domestic β commercial above βΉ1 crore | Commercial Court / HC Commercial Division |
| Domestic β below βΉ1 crore | Principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction |
| International commercial β India seat | HC Commercial Division |
| DIAC / MCIA / institutional award | HC Commercial Division of seat city |
| Foreign award (New York Convention) | HC with original jurisdiction |
| Fast-track Section 29B award | Same court as above based on dispute value |
The seat rule β BGS SGS Soma JV vs NHPC (2019): The seat of arbitration determines which court executes the award β not the venue, not where the contract was performed. Delhi-seated award = Delhi courts. Mumbai-seated = Bombay HC.
Per Sundaram Finance vs Abdul Samad (2018): You can file execution directly before the court where assets are located β without starting at the seat court and applying for transfer. Saves months.
Step 4 β File Execution Petition Under Section 36
Your execution petition must comply with Order 21, Rule 11 of the CPC β the mandatory tabular format with 10 specific columns:
| Column | Required Content |
|---|---|
| 1 | Original arbitration case number |
| 2 | Names of all parties |
| 3 | Date of the arbitral award |
| 4 | Whether any Section 34 challenge filed |
| 5 | Previous execution attempts β full disclosure mandatory |
| 6 | Amount due with precise interest calculation |
| 7 | Costs awarded |
| 8 | Costs paid by award-holder |
| 9 | Mode of execution sought |
| 10 | Any other court-required information |
Documents to attach:
- β Certified copy of arbitral award
- β Certified copy of arbitration agreement
- β Affidavit confirming award remains unsatisfied
- β Schedule of losing party’s known assets
- β Vakalatnama β lawyer’s authorisation
- β Court fee receipt
Step 5 β File All Attachments Simultaneously on Day 1
Never file the petition first and attachments later. File everything together on the same day β before the losing party is served notice.
| Attachment Mode | What It Does | File When |
|---|---|---|
| Bank garnishee order | Freezes and transfers bank funds directly | Day 1 β fastest recovery |
| Immovable property attachment | Registers with Sub-Registrar β prevents transfer | Day 1 β critical for property |
| Movable property seizure | Bailiff takes physical possession | Day 1 β stock, vehicles, machinery |
| Receivables attachment | Freezes third-party payments to losing party | Day 1 β ongoing business |
Had Vikram filed a garnishee order on Day 1 β the ICICI account would have been frozen before the developer knew execution was coming. The property attachment filed simultaneously with the Sub-Registrar would have blocked the wife’s transfer.
Step 6 β Resist Stay Applications Under Section 36(3)
This is where Suresh failed.
When the losing party files Section 34 β they often simultaneously apply for a stay on enforcement. Post 2019 Amendment β courts cannot grant automatic or unconditional stays.
How courts decide stay applications:
- Does the Section 34 challenge have prima facie merit?
- Will the award-holder suffer irreparable harm from the stay?
- What is the balance of convenience?
- Is there evidence of fraud or corruption in the award (for unconditional stay)?
How to resist a stay application:
- File detailed affidavit opposing stay β argue Section 34 has no prima facie merit
- Demonstrate irreparable harm if enforcement is delayed β business impact evidence
- Propose conditional stay β opponent deposits award amount with court
- Cite BCCI vs Kochi Cricket (2018) β unconditional stays are exceptional, not routine
Suresh needed experienced counsel to oppose the stay application. An unconditional stay requires a very high threshold β most applications result in conditional stays (deposit of award amount) rather than full blocks on enforcement.
Step 7 β Handle Objections and Complete Recovery
Section 47 CPC objections β losing party challenges decree scope, jurisdiction, or attachment validity. Courts must decide these before proceeding. Push for expedited hearings β cite Rahul S Shah vs Jinendra Kumar Gandhi (2021) which directs courts to penalise frivolous objections with real costs.
Order 21, Rule 99 third-party claims β third parties claim attached assets are theirs. Counter with pre-filed ownership evidence and Sub-Registrar records showing attachment was registered before any transfer.
Civil imprisonment β Order 21, Rule 37 β for wilful defaulters who have means to pay but deliberately refuse. Court issues show cause notice first. Imprisonment if wilful default proved.
Complete Execution Roadmap
ARBITRAL AWARD PASSED
β
Day 1: Trace all assets β bank accounts, property, vehicles
β
Day 1: File Section 36 execution petition + ALL attachments simultaneously
β
Serve execution notice on losing party AFTER attachments registered
β
If Section 34 filed β Continue enforcement + Resist stay application
β
Handle Section 47 objections + Rule 99 third-party claims
β
Proceed to auction / garnishee transfer / possession delivery
β
RECOVERY COMPLETE
Common Execution Mistakes β And the Fix
| Mistake | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Waiting months before filing | Assets transferred and accounts emptied | File Day 1 after award |
| No asset tracing before filing | Attaching empty accounts | Trace assets before filing anything |
| Assuming Section 34 pauses enforcement | 18+ months of lost recovery | Enforce simultaneously β 2019 Amendment |
| Filing petition before attachments | Debtor moves assets on notice | File petition + attachments same day |
| Not resisting stay applications | Full enforcement blocked for years | Experienced counsel to oppose aggressively |
| Going silent during execution | 12-year limitation shrinks | Take fresh step every 6 months |
πΌ LegalFund β Pan India Arbitral Award Execution Funding
Executing an arbitral award properly costs βΉ8-25 lakhs β Section 36 petition, asset tracing, attachment applications, stay opposition, objection hearings, senior counsel. Most award-holders have already spent significantly on the arbitration itself.
LegalFund pays all your arbitral award execution costs β upfront and in full. You pay nothing unless you collect. 100% non-recourse.
How it works: Submit your award β Expert review in 10 days β Funding agreement β LegalFund funds everything β You recover β LegalFund takes pre-agreed share
β No upfront cost Β· No personal guarantee Β· No collateral Β· No repayment if execution fails
500+ cases evaluated Β· βΉ85Cr+ funded Β· 87% won or settled Β· Pan India
β Apply free at legalfund.in
Vikram recovered βΉ2.6 crore. Meera recovered βΉ1.2 crore. Suresh recovered βΉ95 lakhs.
All used LegalFund. All paid βΉ0 upfront.
People Also Ask
How is an arbitral award executed in India? File an execution petition under Section 36 of the Arbitration Act before the appropriate Commercial Court or HC Commercial Division. Simultaneously apply for bank garnishee orders and property attachment β on the same day, before serving notice on the losing party. The award is treated as a court decree and enforced through standard CPC execution machinery.
Does Section 34 challenge stop execution of arbitral award in India? No β post the 2019 Amendment. Filing Section 34 does not automatically stay enforcement under Section 36. The award-holder can enforce simultaneously while the challenge runs. The challenging party must separately apply for a stay and satisfy the balance of convenience test before enforcement is paused.
What is the time limit for executing an arbitral award in India? 12 years from the date the award becomes enforceable β under Article 136 of the Limitation Act. Act immediately β every month of delay gives the losing party time to move assets. Every fresh execution step restarts the 12-year clock.
Which court executes an arbitral award in India? For commercial disputes above βΉ1 crore β the Commercial Court or HC Commercial Division at the seat of arbitration. For disputes below βΉ1 crore β the Principal Civil Court. For foreign awards β the HC with original jurisdiction. Per Sundaram Finance (2018) β you can also file directly before the court where assets are located.
Can I attach the losing party’s bank account to execute an arbitral award? Yes β through a garnishee order under Order 21, Rule 46 CPC. This is the fastest recovery mechanism β the court orders the bank to transfer funds directly to the award-holder, bypassing the losing party entirely. File garnishee applications simultaneously with the execution petition on Day 1.
Can I get funding to execute an arbitral award in India? Yes. LegalFund finances arbitral award execution across India β Section 36 filing, asset tracing, attachment applications, stay opposition β zero upfront, non-recourse. Apply at legalfund