2026ArbitrationBankingHigh CourtJanuary 2026LatestLegal

Delhi HC – Arbitral Award -Clarifies on Rules of Appropriation First for Interest before Principal

Delhi HC Reaffirms the principle that payments made by judgment debtor are first appropriated towards interest and then towards principal, unless the decree or contract specifies otherwise.   This ensures fairness to decree-holders and discourages debtors from exploiting the delays.

Delhi HC – Arbitral Award -Clarifies on Rules of Appropriation First for Interest before Principal

Arbitral Award – Payments of Judgment Debtor – Interest Takes Priority, rules Delhi High Court

Doctrine of Appropriation in Execution Proceedings of Arbitral Award – Delhi HC Ruling

Section 36 Arbitration Act and Execution of the Arbitral Award

The petitioner filed petition for execution of the arbitral award dated 16.12.1997 for Rs.1,70,70,720.80 with interest of Rs.2,36,89,755.10 upto 16.12.1997 and Rs.25,52,834 upto 22.4.1998 i.e. till filing of the execution petition.

The controversy was whether the interest given by the Arbitrator would be part of the principal or would be separately treated as interest on the principal.

The judgment debtor had paid Rs.12,68,70,889/- in three instalments to the decree holder.

According to the decree holder, the amounts deposited by the judgment debtor should be adjusted towards the interest and the balance amount should be adjusted towards the principal.

In this context, reliance is placed on the decision of the Supreme Court in Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd  Vs.   R.S. Avtar Singh and Company (2013)(1) SCC 243.

31.1. The general rule of appropriation towards a decretal amount was that such an amount was to be adjusted strictly in accordance with the directions contained in the decree and in the absence of such directions adjustments be made firstly towards payment of interest and costs and thereafter towards payment of the principal amount subject, of course, to any agreement between the parties.

31.2. The legislative Intent in enacting sub-rules (4) and (5) is a clear pointer that interest should cease to run on the deposit made by the judgment-debtor and notice given or on the amount being tendered outside the court in the manner provided in Order 21 Rule 1(1)(b).

31.3. If the payment made by the judgment-debtor falls short of the decreed amount, the decree-holder will be entitled to apply the general rule of appropriation by appropriating the amount deposited towards the Interest, then towards costs and finally towards the principal amount due under the decree.

31.4. Thereafter, no further interest would run on the sum appropriated towards the principal. In other words if a part of the principal amount has been paid along with interest due thereon as on the date of issuance of notice of deposit interest on that part of the principal sum will cease to run thereafter.

31.5. In cases where there is a shortfall in deposit of the principal amount, the decree-holder would be entitled to adjust interest and costs first and the balance towards the principal and beyond that the decree-holder cannot seek to reopen the entire transaction and proceed to recalculate the interest on the whole of the principal amount and seek for reappropriation.”

Judgment dated 6.12.2025 of the High Court of Delhi in EX.P.99/1998 of M/s. S.A.Builders Ltd   Vs.  Municipal Corporation of Delhi with connected matters

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I HAVE READ THE DISCLAIMER AND AGREE TO IT.

User Acknowledgement

By proceeding further and clicking on the "AGREE" button herein below, I acknowledge that I of my own accord wish to know more about LegalDeli for my own information and use. I further acknowledge that there has been no solicitation, invitation or inducement of any sort whatsoever from LegalDeli or any of its members to create an Attorney-Client relationship through this knowledge site. I further acknowledge having read and understood the Disclaimer below.

Disclaimer
About: This knowledge-site (www.LegalDeli.in) is owned and operated by LegalDeli (“NDA”), and is a resource for your informational and educational purposes only.

No Warranty: NDA does not warrant that any content or information contained on this knowledge-site is accurate, correct, complete or up-to-date, and hereby disclaims any and all liability to any person for any actual or threatened loss or damage caused by errors or omissions, whether such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident or otherwise. NDA assumes no liability for the interpretation and/or use of the content and/or information contained on this knowledge-site, nor does it offer any warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied in relation to such content or information.

Third-Party Links: NDA does not intend that links / URLs contained on this knowledge-site re-directing users to third party websites be considered as referrals to, endorsements of, or affiliations with any such third party website operators. NDA is not responsible for, and makes no representations or warranties, express or implied, about the content or information contained on such third party websites to which links may be provided on this knowledge-site.

No Legal Advice: By clicking ‘I agree’ and proceeding further, you acknowledge, represent and undertake that you on your own accord wish to know more about NDA, its capabilities and research content and information contained on the knowledge-site, for your own knowledge and personal use. The content and information contained on this knowledge-site should not be construed as nor relied upon as legal advice. You as a reader or recipient of content or information contained in this knowledge-site should not act, nor refrain from acting, based upon any or all of such content or information, but should always seek the advice of competent legal counsel licensed to practice the relevant law in the appropriate jurisdiction.

No Attorney-Client Relationship: This knowledge-site is not intended to be and you should not consider the content or information contained therein to be an advertisement, solicitation, inducement or invitation for an Attorney-Client relationship. Transmission, receipt or use of this knowledge-site, including content and information contained therein, does not constitute nor create an Attorney-Client relationship between NDA and you.