In the case of The Learning Curve Educational Trust v. The Indian Institute of Technology, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed a petition for interim measures under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, following the termination of a contract to run a campus school.
Factual Background
- The Agreement: In November 2017, the Petitioner and IIT Mandi entered into an agreement for the Petitioner to establish and manage a school on the IIT campus.
- Termination Notice: On May 1, 2024, IIT Mandi issued a notice terminating the agreement and directing the Petitioner to vacate the premises within two years (by April 30, 2026), in accordance with the notice period required by Clause 14 of their contract.
- Procedural History: Just before the notice period expired in April 2026, the Petitioner unsuccessfully sought a stay via a writ petition. After interim relief was denied in that forum, the Petitioner withdrew the writ and filed this petition under the Arbitration Act.
Petitioner’s Contentions
The Petitioner argued that the 2024 termination notice was void ab initio because the Registrar lacked the legal authority to issue it. They further contended that a fresh cause of action arose only in April 2026, when the IIT Board of Governors formally ratified the termination, and argued they should be granted a new two-year period to vacate from that date.
The Court’s Findings
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel dismissed the petition, ruling that the Petitioner failed to satisfy the essential legal tests for interim relief:
- No Prima Facie Case: The Court found that the Petitioner had “slept over the matter” for nearly two years after receiving the termination notice . Challenging the notice only as the move-out deadline approached undermined the merit of the claim .
- Balance of Convenience: Because a clear two-year notice was provided and the Petitioner took no timely legal steps to challenge it, the balance of convenience did not favorthem .
- No Irreparable Loss: Since the Petitioner had clear knowledge of the obligation to vacate for two years, they could not claim that giving effect to the notice now would cause irreparable harm .
- Rejection of the “Fresh Cause of Action” Argument: The Court was “not impressed” by the claim that the Board of Governors’ recent ratification created a new dispute. It held that the grievance originated from the 2024 termination notice itself, not the subsequent administrative ratification.
Conclusion
The High Court dismissed the petition, clarifying that withdrawing a writ petition after a denial of interim relief does not revive a claim’s merit in arbitration proceedings. The Court emphasized that the Respondent’s actions were in contractual compliance with the agreed-upon termination procedures.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 206
The Learning Curve Educational Trust V. The Indian Institute of Technology(D.O.J. 28.04.2026)
Loading Viewer...





