Construction Arbitration India

Construction Arbitration in India: Strategic Lessons from a Recent High Court Ruling

A recent judgment of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh in M/s United India Insurance Company vs. M/s Kishan Singh & Others (April 2026) offers important strategic guidance for construction companies navigating disputes in large infrastructure projects.

Beyond its legal significance, the ruling highlights a practical reality: in complex construction disputes, arbitration outcomes are driven by evidence strategy, not merely contractual entitlement.

Background of the case

The dispute arose from the collapse of a bridge span during execution of a hydro-electric project—an incident that led to severe financial loss and human casualties. The contractor’s claim ran into crores, while the insurer, United India Insurance Company, relied on a surveyor’s report to approve a significantly lower amount.

This divergence—common in EPC and infrastructure projects—triggered arbitration.

Arbitration Discussion

What the Tribunal Did Differently

  • It rejected inflated reconstruction costs and focused on actual loss valuation
  • It scrutinized and partially disregarded the surveyor’s findings where they lacked clarity
  • It applied proportionality principles under the insurance framework
  • It delivered a balanced award—higher than the insurer’s offer, but lower than the contractor’s claim

The result: a defensible, reasoned award that survived judicial scrutiny at all levels.

Construction Site

The Court’s Position: Arbitration is Final—Almost

  • No re-evaluation of evidence: Courts will not re-assess facts or substitute their own interpretation
  • “Plausible view” standard: If the arbitrator’s conclusion is reasonable, it stands—even if alternatives exist
  • Expert reports are not binding: Surveyor assessments are relevant, but not conclusive

This reflects India’s consistent shift toward arbitration finality and minimal judicial intervention.

Court Enforcement

What This Means for Construction Companies

1. Evidence is Your Strongest Asset

Arbitration outcomes hinge on documentation, technical substantiation, and financial clarity. Claims unsupported by robust evidence are likely to be discounted—even if contractually justified.

2. Don’t Over-Rely on Surveyor Reports

Insurance surveyors’ assessments are often treated as benchmarks—but this case confirms they can be challenged, diluted, or rejected if inconsistencies exist.

3. Valuation Strategy Matters

Tribunals prioritize actual loss and commercial reality over theoretical or inflated claims. Overstated claims may weaken credibility.

4. Arbitration is Not a Second Trial

Once an award is issued, scope for appeal is extremely narrow. Poor preparation at the arbitration stage cannot be corrected later in court.

5. Risk Allocation Must Be Understood Early

Insurance coverage, contract structure, and execution risks must be aligned from the outset to avoid disputes over liability and compensation.

AU Corporate Perspective: Moving from Dispute to Strategy

  • Structuring contracts and insurance frameworks to minimize ambiguity
  • Building claim-ready documentation systems during project execution
  • Conducting pre-arbitration risk assessments to strengthen case positioning
  • Representing clients in arbitration with a commercially aligned, evidence-first approach

Conclusion

This judgment reinforces a clear message for the construction sector:

Arbitration rewards preparation, precision, and credibility—not just contractual claims.

As infrastructure projects grow in scale and complexity, companies that integrate legal strategy with project execution will be best positioned to protect value and manage risk effectively.

Facing a construction dispute?

AU Corporate provides end-to-end arbitration strategy, claim management, and dispute support.