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Awarding Costs in Domestic Arbitration in India

Akin to adversarial dispute resolution, arbitration can prove to be a costly proposition.[i] The savings in the form of Court fee is often offset by other costs, some of which are peculiar to this method of alternate dispute resolution. The possibility of inflating arbitration costs justifies a need for certainty and transparency in computation and recovery of such costs.

The approaches to cost allocation accepted in recent years[ii]:

Legislative provisions:

The object of awarding cost is not to punish the unsuccessful litigant but to compensate the successful party.[v] Clause (a) of section 31(8) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 deals with costs. Clause (b) provides that unless otherwise agreed by parties, the arbitral tribunal shall specify

[i] “Emerging trends in arbitration in India, A study by Fraud Investigation & Dispute Services”, Ernst & Young LLP, available at: http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssets/EY-FIDS-Emerging-trends-in-arbitration-in-India/$FILE/EY-Emerging-trends-in-arbitration-in-India.pdf

[ii] “Best Practices in International Arbitration”, ASA Swiss Arbitration Association, Conference of January 27, 2006 in Zurich, Edited by Markus Wirth, available at:

:http://www.shearman.com/~/media/Files/NewsInsights/Publications/2006/07/Final%20Rulings%20on%20Costs%20Loser%20Pays%20All/Files/Publikation/FileAttachment/ASA%20Best%20Practices%20in%20International%20Arbitration.pdf

[iii] Draft Principles and Rules of Transnational Civil Procedures, UNIQROIT 2002, at p. 63

[iv] S.D. Myers v. Canada, Final Award (concerning the apportionment of costs between the disputing parties), December, 2002, available at: http://www.italaw.com/sites/default/files/case-documents/ita0754.pdf

[v] Ladega v. Akiyili, (1975) 2 S.C. 91

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