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How to Recover Money Through Arbitration and Civil Litigation in Indore

Home Article How to Recover Money Through Arbitration and Civil Litigation in Indore
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arbitration lawyer indore

How to Recover Money Through Arbitration and Civil Litigation in Indore

By Raghvendra Singh Raghuvanshi | Article, Legal Articles | 0 comment | 16 May, 2026 | 0

Money recovery is among the most practically important categories of legal work for businesses — and among the most underserved in terms of specialist knowledge. When a customer does not pay, a borrower defaults, or a party walks away from a contract, the path from legal right to actual money in hand requires navigating multiple overlapping forums: civil courts, arbitration tribunals, Debt Recovery Tribunals, MSME Facilitation Councils, and insolvency proceedings. Choosing the wrong forum wastes years.

Raghuvanshi Vaidya & Partners has conducted arbitration proceedings and money recovery suits for commercial clients in Indore for over 19 years. We advise on forum selection, draft arbitration clauses that actually work, appear before the Court in Section 9 (pre-arbitration interim relief) and Section 34 (challenge to award) proceedings, and pursue enforcement of domestic and foreign arbitral awards.

Arbitration under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996


Key sections of the A&C Act 1996 every business should know
Section 9:Interim measures by court — before arbitration begins or during proceedings. Used to freeze the other party’s bank accounts or property while arbitration is pending, preventing dissipation of assets before an award can be enforced.Section 11:Appointment of arbitrator — if the other party is not cooperating with the constitution of the tribunal, the Chief Justice of the MP High Court appoints an arbitrator on application.Section 17:Interim measures by the arbitral tribunal itself — after it is constituted, the tribunal can issue interim orders similar to Section 9 without going back to court.Section 29A:The award must be made within 12 months of the arbitral tribunal being constituted (extendable by 6 months by party consent; beyond that, court approval needed). Introduced by the 2015 amendment to reduce arbitration delays.Section 34:Challenge to the award in court — only on specified grounds (arbitrator exceeded scope, violation of natural justice, conflict with public policy). A court cannot re-hear the merits.Section 36:Enforcement of award as a court decree — after the challenge period (3 months from receipt of award) expires without a Section 34 challenge, the award is enforced as if it were a court decree.

Money Recovery — Choosing the Right Forum

Situation

Forum

Time Expectation

Key Feature

Contract has arbitration clause

Arbitration (ICC, DIAC, ad hoc)

12-18 months (ideal)

Confidential; award usually final

Bank/NBFC recovering from borrower (debt > ₹20L)

Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT)

1-3 years

Specialized forum for banks; can attach property

Supplier recovering from buyer (MSME supplier)

MSME Facilitation Council (Samadhaan portal)

90 days (conciliation) + arbitration

Free; interest @3x bank rate on delayed payments (MSME Act Section 16)

General commercial debt (no arbitration clause)

Summary Suit (Order XXXVII CPC)

6-18 months

Defendant must get leave to defend; burden reversed

Cheque bounce

Magistrate Court (Section 138 NI Act)

1-3 years

Criminal route; compoundable; good settlement pressure

MSME Dispute Resolution — The Samadhaan Mechanism

The MSME Development Act 2006 provides a powerful but underused mechanism for micro, small, and medium enterprises to recover dues from large buyers. Under Section 16, if a buyer fails to pay within 45 days (or the agreed credit period, whichever is shorter), interest accrues at three times the bank rate notified by RBI. Disputes are resolved by the MSME Facilitation Council — first through conciliation, and if that fails, through arbitration — at zero cost to the MSME. We have filed multiple such applications for Indore-based MSMEs and typically achieve settlement at the conciliation stage.

Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards in India

India is a signatory to the New York Convention (1958). Foreign arbitral awards (from New York Convention countries) are enforceable in India under Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996 (Sections 44-52). The court can refuse enforcement only on limited grounds — the party was not given proper notice, the award deals with a dispute not falling within the arbitration agreement, or enforcement would be contrary to Indian public policy. We have experience in enforcement applications before the MP High Court for foreign awards involving Indian parties.

Related Reading:  Related Reading: Corporate and Contract Law in Indore  ·  Cheque Bounce Cases Under Section 138 NI Act

Frequently Asked Questions

The other party says they will delay arbitration forever — what can I do?

File a Section 11 application before the MP High Court seeking court-appointed arbitrator. Once constituted, Section 29A’s 12-month deadline applies. In the meantime, apply under Section 9 to freeze the respondent’s assets so they cannot dissipate funds while delaying.

I have a court decree for ₹50 lakhs but the debtor has no visible assets — can I locate and attach hidden assets?

Yes. In execution proceedings, courts can issue notices to banks and financial institutions to disclose account details; the Executing Court can appoint a Receiver to discover assets; and discovery of assets through summons to the judgment debtor is available under Order XXI CPC. For sophisticated debtors, forensic investigation of related-party transactions may be needed.

Is there a time limit to challenge an arbitral award?

Yes — Section 34 challenge must be filed within 3 months of receipt of the award (extendable by 30 days if sufficient cause is shown). After this window closes, the award is enforceable as a decree. Missing this deadline is fatal; courts have very limited discretion to condone delay beyond the 30-day extension.

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Raghvendra Singh Raghuvanshi

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  • When to Approach the MP High Court: Writ Petitions, Appeals, and Criminal Revisions
  • How to Recover Money Through Arbitration and Civil Litigation in Indore
  • How Corporate Disputes and Contract Enforcement Work in Indian Courts
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