Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • The Supreme Court of India has upheld a decision to set aside an International Chamber of Commerce arbitration award amounting to US$1.3 billion (including interest) on the basis of an earlier finding of fraud.
  • This recent decision affirms the notion that a commercial relationship that is tainted by a finding of fraud will have negative consequences for any contract or dispute that arises from that relationship.
  • Additionally, this decision reinforces an internationally recognised principle that a product of fraud is by its nature in conflict with the public policy of any country, in this case India.

In the latest development in an ongoing series of global disputes between two Indian based entities, the Supreme Court of India (the “Supreme Court”) has upheld a decision to set aside an International Chamber of Commerce (the “ICC”) arbitration award amounting to US$1.3 billion (including interest) on the basis of an earlier finding of fraud.

Background to the Supreme Court decision

The underlying ICC arbitration proceedings arose out of a 2005 contract between Devas Multimedia Private Limited ("Devas"), an Indian company whose majority shares were held by entities based in Mauritius and the United States, and Antrix Corporation Limited ("Antrix"), a company wholly owned by the Government of India and the commercial arm of India’s national space agency, ISRO (the "Contract"). Under the Contract, Antrix agreed to build, launch, and operate two satellites and lease spectrum capacity on those satellites to Devas, which Devas planned to use to provide digital multimedia broadcasting services across India. In February 2011, Antrix invoked force majeure and terminated the Contract on the basis that India's military needed to use the spectrum that had been leased to Devas.

In September 2015, a Delhi-seated ICC tribunal awarded Devas US$562 million in repudiatory damages, plus interest, following what was found to be the unlawful termination by Antrix of the Contract (the "ICC Award"). The termination of the contract also led Devas’ shareholders to initiate two bilateral investment treaty ("BIT") arbitrations under both the India-Mauritius BIT (CC/Devas v. India) and the India-Germany BIT (Deutsche Telekom v. India).