The Supreme Court has held that the seat of arbitration exclusively determines the jurisdiction of courts, and not the venue where proceedings are conducted or the arbitral award is delivered.
The bench of Justice Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and Justice Alok Aradhe revisited the long-standing distinction between the “seat” and “venue” of arbitration, emphasizing that confusion between the two continues to cause jurisdictional errors.
The dispute arose from infrastructure contracts executed in Jammu & Kashmir, where arbitration proceedings were initiated following disagreements between the parties. While the arbitral tribunal had expressly fixed Srinagar as the seat of arbitration and New Delhi as the venue, the award was eventually delivered in New Delhi. Subsequently, the High Court returned a Section 34 challenge petition, holding that courts in New Delhi had jurisdiction since the award was rendered there.
Setting aside this view, the Supreme Court clarified that such an approach undermines the very concept of the juridical seat.
The Court observed that the seat of arbitration is the “juridical home” of arbitration, which determines both the applicable law and the court having supervisory jurisdiction. Once parties designate a seat, it operates akin to an exclusive jurisdiction clause, vesting authority solely in courts of that location, regardless of where hearings take place or where the award is signed.
Elaborating on the distinction, the Court explained that the venue is merely a place chosen for convenience, such as conducting hearings or examining witnesses, and does not carry any legal consequence for jurisdiction. Even if proceedings are conducted entirely at a different location, or the award is delivered there, such factors do not alter the designated seat unless expressly agreed upon by the parties.
Applying these principles, the Court noted that the parties had consciously agreed to Srinagar as the seat of arbitration, and there was no subsequent agreement to change it. The fact that proceedings were conducted and the award was delivered in New Delhi was held to be irrelevant for determining jurisdiction.
The Court further emphasized that allowing venue or place of award to dictate jurisdiction would create uncertainty and defeat party autonomy, which is central to arbitration law.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court held that courts at Srinagar alone have jurisdiction to entertain the challenge to the arbitral award, quashed the High Court’s order returning the petition, and restored the proceedings for adjudication on merits.
Case Details
Case Title: J&K Economic Reconstruction Agency Versus Rash Builders India Private Limited
Citation: JURISHOUR-805-SC-2026
Case No.: DIARY No.44792 OF 2025
Date: 15/04/2026

