In the case of Er. Surinder Sharma v. H.P. Micro Small Enterprises Facilitation Council &Anr. (2026), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed an application to condone a significant delay in filing objections against an arbitral order, emphasizing that the timelines under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act are mandatory and strictly enforced.
The following is a summary of the judgment:
Case Background
The applicant sought to challenge an order dated August 21, 2024, passed by the Facilitation Council. Instead of filing objections under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act, the applicant initially filed a petition under Article 227 of the Constitution on December 17, 2024. The High Court dismissed that petition on July 1, 2025, ruling that Section 34 was the appropriate remedy. The applicant finally filed the Section 34 objections on August 14, 2025—nearly 11 months after the original order.
Key Legal Findings of the Court
The Court rejected the request for condonation based on the following legal principles:
- Absolute Statutory Limits: Under Section 34(3) of the Arbitration Act, a party has three months to file objections, with a further “window” of only 30 days if they can show sufficient cause. The Court clarified that Section 5 of the Limitation Act is excluded, meaning a court has no jurisdiction to condone any delay beyond this total 120-day period.
- Applicability of Section 14 (Exclusion of Time): The Court noted that Section 14 of the Limitation Act (which excludes time spent bona fide in a wrong forum) does apply to Section 34 proceedings. However, its application is conditional upon proving due diligence and good faith.
- Failure to Act Promptly: The Court performed a specific calculation of the remaining time:
- When the applicant filed the “wrong” petition on December 17, 2024, the initial three-month period had already expired, and 25 days of the 30-day grace period had already elapsed.
- To be within the legal limit, the applicant should have filed the correct objections within five days of the High Court’s dismissal of the earlier petition.
- Because the applicant waited 44 days after that dismissal to file, the objections were irrevocably barred by time.
- Legislative Intent: The Court emphasized that the Arbitration Act is a special statute designed for the expeditious resolution of commercial disputes. Allowing condonation beyond the prescribed 120 days would undermine this legislative intent.
Conclusion
The High Court concluded that the application lacked merit as the delay exceeded the non-condonable limit set by law. Consequently, both the application for condonation and the Section 34 objections were dismissed as time-barred.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 140
Er. Surinder Sharma V. H.P. Micro Small Enterprises Facilitation Council & Anr. (D. O. J. 22-04-2026)
Loading Viewer...





