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Promoters Must Shield Company from Liability Immediately, Not Wait for Final Appeal Outcome: Supreme Court

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The Supreme Court has held that promoters cannot defer their liability until confirmation by the highest appellate court when the contract clearly mandates protection against any recovery at all stages of litigation.

The bench of Justice S.V.N. Bhatti and Justice Prasanna B. Varale clarified that even if Clause 32(a) is treated as an indemnity contract, the obligation to indemnify arises once liability becomes absolute, and need not await actual loss or final adjudication. The use of the word “ensure” in the clause was interpreted as imposing a stronger, immediate obligation rather than a contingent one.

The judgment arose from a dispute involving VPS Healthcare and Medeor Hospitals (formerly Rockland Hospitals), which had entered into a Share Purchase Agreement with the promoters. Subsequent disputes led to a Deed of Compromise dated February 2, 2019, which was crystallized into a Consent Award by the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) on March 1, 2019. 

The central issue before the Court was the interpretation of Clause 32(a) of the Consent Award, particularly whether the promoters’ obligation to indemnify VPS/Medeor arose immediately upon liability being imposed or only after such liability was confirmed by the “Highest Court of Appeal.”

The dispute gained complexity after an arbitral award in favour of Ernst & Young (EY) directed Medeor Hospitals to pay approximately ₹10 crore with interest and costs. Medeor was compelled to deposit over ₹15.86 crore pursuant to a conditional stay granted by the Delhi High Court. 

VPS/Medeor sought enforcement of the Consent Award against the promoters, arguing that the promoters had undertaken an unconditional obligation to ensure that no liability arising from specified litigations would be recovered from them at any stage. However, the Delhi High Court had deferred enforcement, holding that the promoters’ obligation would arise only after final confirmation of liability by the highest appellate court.

Setting aside this interpretation, the Supreme Court found that the High Court had erred by reading only a part of the clause while ignoring its broader contractual scheme. The Court emphasized that Clause 32(a) must be read holistically and not in isolation.

The Court identified five distinct components within the clause, including the promoters’ obligation to defend litigation, ensure no recovery of liability from VPS/Medeor, and indemnify them. Importantly, it held that the obligation “to ensure that no liability is recovered” is an absolute and immediate obligation, not contingent upon the final outcome of appeals.

Rejecting the promoters’ argument, the Court clarified that the provision requiring discharge of liability within 30 days of confirmation by the highest court is merely a timeline for a worst-case scenario, and not the trigger for liability. Treating it as such would render other parts of the clause redundant.

The Court also noted that VPS/Medeor had already incurred a concrete liability by depositing ₹15.86 crore under court directions. This deposit itself constituted a crystallized liability, thereby activating the promoters’ obligation under the Consent Award. 

Further, the Supreme Court observed that accepting the promoters’ interpretation would create a paradox—allowing them to indefinitely delay payment by avoiding final appellate adjudication, thereby defeating the commercial intent of the settlement.

The Court reiterated that a consent award is essentially a contract with the imprimatur of the court and must be enforced as agreed between the parties, except in exceptional circumstances. It cautioned against interpretations that dilute contractual obligations or defeat the purpose of commercial settlements.

The Supreme Court held that the enforcement of the Consent Award cannot be deferred and that the promoters are obligated to protect VPS/Medeor from liability at the stage when such liability arises, including interim deposits ordered by courts.

Case Details

Case Title: VPS Healthcare Private Limited Versus Prabhat Kumar Srivastava

Citation: JURISHOUR-753-SC-2026

Case No.: SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 23869 OF 2023

Date: 13/04/2026

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Amit Sharma
Amit Sharma
Amit Sharma is the Content Editor at JurisHour. He has been writing about the Indian legal market. He has covered tax & company litigation stories from the Supreme Court, High Courts and Various Tribunals. Amit graduated from MLSU Law College with B.A.LL.B. and also holds an LL.M. from MLSU, Udaipur, Rajasthan. An Advocate in Taxation, and practised in Tribunals as well as Rajasthan High Court and pursued Masters in Constitutional Law. He started out small with little resources but a big plan to take tax legal education to the remotest locations across India and eventually to the world. His vision is to make tax related legal developments accessible to the masses.

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