State Of Odisha & Anr vs Director Of Industries on 20 June, 2025

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Orissa High Court

State Of Odisha & Anr vs Director Of Industries on 20 June, 2025

Author: S.K. Panigrahi

Bench: S.K. Panigrahi

                                                                    Signature Not Verified
                                                                    Digitally Signed
                                                                    Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
                                                                    Reason: Authentication
                                                                    Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
                                                                    Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36



                     IN THE HIGH COURT OF ORISSA AT CUTTACK
A.F.R.

                                    W.P.(C) No. 3376 of 2016

           (In the matter of an application under Articles 226 and 227of the
           Constitution of India, 1950).

           State of Odisha & Anr.                       ....                    Petitioner(s)

                                             -versus-
           Director of Industries, Micro Small          ....        Opposite Party (s)
           Entrepreneurs Facilitation Council,
           Odisha, Cuttack & Anr.


         Advocates appeared in the case throughHybrid Mode:

           For Petitioner(s)             :               Ms. Jyoshnamayee Sahoo, ASC



           For Opposite Party (s)        :                       Mr. S. Routray, Adv.


                     CORAM:
                     DR. JUSTICE S.K. PANIGRAHI

                          DATE OF HEARING:-08.04.2025
                         DATE OF JUDGMENT:-20.06.2025
         Dr. S.K. Panigrahi, J.

1. The petitioners, in the present Writ Petition, are challenging the order

dated 23.08.2013 passed by the Micro and Small Enterprises

Facilitation (MSEF) Council, as well as the order dated 09.03.2015

passed by the learned District Judge, Nuapada in the related

execution proceedings, on the ground that both orders are illegal,

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Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
Reason: Authentication
Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

arbitrary, and passed without jurisdiction, and are therefore liable to

be quashed.

I.      FACTUAL MATRIX OF THE CASE:

 2.     The brief facts of the caseare asfollows:

(i)     The State Government, through the Department of Health & Family

        Welfare,   launched    a   scheme    titled   the   'Area        Development

Programme’ in 1981, with assistance from the Government of the

United Kingdom. The said programme was implemented in two

phases and formally concluded on 31.03.1996.

(ii) In the course of implementation, the Project Director issued

Procurement Order No. 2522 dated 08.06.1994 in favour of M/s Steel

and Steel Products/Opposite Party No.2, for supply of office steel

tables and steel shelving cabinets to various Primary Health Centres

in the districts of undivided Kalahandi and Bolangir.

(iii) Pursuant thereto, Opposite Party No.2 raised Bill No. 74 dated

25.10.1994 for a sum of ₹1,32,316/-, addressed to the Project Director.

Payment was made via Bank Draft No. 456291 dated 14.02.1995, and

the same was acknowledged under letter dated 16.02.1996. However,

an amount of ₹47,081/- towards transportation, loading, unloading,

and packing charges remained unpaid.

(iv) In 2007, Opposite Party No.2 submitted a revised claim before the

MSEF Council under the provisions of the Micro, Small and Medium

Enterprises Development Act, 2006, seeking recovery of ₹47,081/-

along with compound interest towards unpaid charges for unloading,

transportation, and ancillary services. The claim was founded on a bill

dated 19.03.2007.

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Signature Not Verified
Digitally Signed
Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
Reason: Authentication

Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

(v) On 03.12.2010, Opposite Party No.2 filed MSEFC Case No. 26 of 2010

before the Chairman, MSEFC (Odisha), claiming a total of

₹43,96,852.43/-, comprising ₹47,081/- as principal, ₹8,57,180.30/- as

interest, ₹2,83,428.50/- towards financial loss, and ₹12,56,243.55/-

towards mental agony.

(vi) On 23.08.2013, the MSEF Council passed an award directing the

Petitioners to pay ₹47,081/- along with compound interest at three

times the bank rate notified by the Reserve Bank of India.

(vii) Upon receipt of the award, the Principal Secretary, Health & Family

Welfare Department, Government of Odisha, vide letter dated

13.10.2014, requested the MSEF Council to re-examine the matter.

(viii) Acting on the said request, the MSEF Council called upon Opposite

Party No.2 to produce relevant documents. Thereafter, on 11.11.2014,

the Council passed an order advising the parties to amicably resolve

the dispute.

(ix) Despite the above, Opposite Party No.2 initiated Execution Case No. 4

of 2014 before the learned District Judge, Nuapada, for execution of

the award dated 23.08.2013 passed in MSEFC Case No. 26 of 2010.

(x) The Petitioners filed objections before the executing court, contending,

inter alia, that the award dated 23.08.2013 stood impliedly recalled or

rendered unenforceable by virtue of the Council’s subsequent

direction dated 11.11.2014. Nevertheless, the executing court

proceeded to pass an order dated 29.11.2014.

(xi) Thereafter, vide Order No. 41 dated 09.03.2015, the District Judge,

Nuapada, directed the Petitioners to ensure maintenance of a

sufficient amount in their bank account. Subsequently, vide Order No.
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Reason: Authentication
Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

25 dated 04.09.2015, the Petitioners were further directed to file an

affidavit disclosing their bank account details and particulars of

immovable property.

II. SUBMISSIONS ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONERS:

3. Learned counsel for the Petitioners earnestly made the following

submissions in support of his contentions:

(i) The Petitioners submitted that the impugned award dated 23.08.2013

passed by the MSEF Council, along with the orders dated 09.03.2015

and 04.09.2015 passed by the District Judge, Nuapada, are illegal,

arbitrary, and passed in gross violation of the principles of natural

justice, and are therefore liable to be set aside.

(ii) The Petitioners submitted that while rendering the impugned award,

the MSEF Council did not consider or deal with the documents on

record, which is evident from the Council’s subsequent order dated

11.11.2014 directing re-examination of the matter, and hence, the

award dated 23.08.2013 is erroneous, bad in law, and liable to be set

aside.

(iii) The Petitioners submitted that the initiation of proceedings by the

MSEF Council under Section 18 of the Micro, Small and Medium

Enterprises Development Act, 2006 was without jurisdiction, as the

claim of Opposite Party No.2 pertains to the year 1994, which is prior

to the enactment of the said Act. Proceedings before the MSEF

Council are maintainable only in respect of claims arising from

contracts entered into and executed after the commencement of the

Act.

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Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
Reason: Authentication

Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

(iv) The Petitioners further submitted that the claim of Opposite Party

No.2 pertains to alleged charges for unloading, transportation, and

other services in relation to supplies made in the year 1994. The claim,

being in the nature of a money claim, was raised after a lapse of

sixteen years and is therefore barred by limitation under Article 26 of

the Limitation Act, 1963. On this ground as well, the impugned award

is liable to be set aside.

(v) The Petitioners submitted that the bills on the basis of which M/s.

Steel and Steel Products, Opposite Party No.2, has claimed the

principal amount of Rs. 47,081/- are disputed, as they are neither

authentic nor related to any actual supplies made to the Petitioners.

The claims are vexatious, appear to have been made for ulterior

purposes, and were raised long after the relevant programme had

already been closed and wound up. The Petitioner further submitted

that the MSEF Council failed to examine these aspects and, without

proper scrutiny, passed an award directing payment of the principal

amount along with interest totalling Rs. 97,13,900.66. The award is,

therefore, arbitrary, bad in law, and liable to be set aside.

(vi) The Petitioners submitted that even assuming, without admitting, that

the provisions of the Act of 2006 apply to the present case, the

proceedings before the MSEF Council amounted only to conciliation.

As per the statute, arbitration could be initiated only after failure of

conciliation. Since no conciliation was conducted, the Council lacked

authority to pass an award directing payment of Rs. 47,081 with

compound interest at three times the RBI bank rate.

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Reason: Authentication

Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

(vii) The Petitioners contended that a perusal of the order dated 11.11.2014

shows that the MSEF Council itself found it necessary to re-verify and

re-examine the documents forming the basis of Opposite Party No.2’s

claim. This indicates that the earlier award was passed without proper

evidence, reflects non-application of mind, and is perverse. The award

is therefore liable to be quashed.

III. SUBMISSIONS ON BEHALF OF THE OPPOSITE PARTIES:

4. The Learned Counsel for the Opposite Parties earnestly made the

following submissions in support of his contentions:

(i) The arbitral award has attained finality and become enforceable as a

decree, as it was not challenged within the statutory period prescribed

under Section 34(3) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. It

was contended that the present writ petition is not maintainable, since

the only remedy was to file an application under Section 34, which the

Petitioners failed to pursue within the prescribed time. A challenge

under Article 226 is impermissible in view of the self-contained

mechanism under the Arbitration Act.

(ii) Despite full knowledge of the statutory framework and expiry of

limitation, the Petitioner chose to file this writ petition as a belated

attempt to delay execution proceedings and seek indulgence for

condonation of delay before the appropriate forum.

(iii) The Petitioners had admitted to the claim during and after the

proceedings before the MSEF Council, including by requesting

Opposite Party No. 2 to furnish bank details for disbursement of the

awarded amount. They also submitted an application seeking

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Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

reduction in interest after the award was passed, which amounts to

admission of liability.

(iv) The Petitioners never raised objections to jurisdiction or the claims

before the MSEF Council, nor did they invoke Section 16 of the

Arbitration Act. They are now estopped from challenging the award

or jurisdiction in this writ petition.

(v) The grounds raised in the present writ were never raised before the

MSEF Council or the appropriate forum, and similar objections were

already rejected by the executing court in Execution Case No. 04/2014.

The petitioners are thus barred from re-agitating the same

contentions.

(vi) The claim originally filed under the repealed 1993 Act is saved under

Section 32(2) of the MSMED Act, 2006, and is well within limitation.

The MSEF Council had jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute.

(vii) The award passed by the MSEF Council is valid, reasoned, and based

on the Petitioners’ own admissions and representations. The award

directs payment of Rs. 47,081 along with statutory interest under the

MSMED Act, which the Petitioner had agreed to pay.

(viii) Conciliation proceedings were duly conducted, and the Petitioners

admitted the claims of Opposite Party No. 2 during the process. On

failure to comply, the Council lawfully proceeded to pass the award.

IV. COURT’S REASONING AND ANALYSIS:

5. Heard learned counsel for the parties and perused the materials on

record.

6. At the outset, it is necessary to delineate the legal framework

governing the present dispute.

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Signature Not Verified
Digitally Signed
Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
Reason: Authentication

Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

7. The arbitral award in question was rendered by the Micro and Small

Enterprises Facilitation Council under Section 18 of the Micro, Small

and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006, which provides a

special dispute resolution mechanism for claims arising under Section

17, regarding delayed payments to MSMEs. At the relevant time,

Section 18 envisaged conciliation as the initial step in the dispute

resolution process. The Council could either conduct the conciliation

itself or refer the matter to any institution or centre providing

alternate dispute resolution services. Upon failure of conciliation, the

Council was empowered to act as an arbitral tribunal or refer the

matter for arbitration, with the proceedings governed by the

Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. The term “conciliation” in

Section 18 was subsequently substituted with “mediation” by the

Mediation Act, 2023.

8. Section 18 of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development

Act, 2006, further mandates resolution of references within ninety

days. Therefore, once the Council assumes the role of an arbitral

tribunal, the entire process stands subsumed within the framework of

the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.

9. Consequently, any challenge to such an award must be mounted

strictly in accordance with Section 34 of the Arbitration and

Conciliation Act, 1996, which governs applications for setting aside

arbitral awards.

10. Section 34(3)of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, prescribes a

rigid limitation period of three months from the date of receipt of the

award, extendable by a further period of thirty days only upon
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Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

showing sufficient cause. The proviso makes it abundantly clear that

no application shall be entertained beyond this outer limit of 120 days.

11. The Supreme Court in Union of India v. Popular Construction Co.1

observed that the words “but not thereafter” used in the proviso to

Section 34(3) constitute a legislative bar to any challenge being

entertained beyond the prescribed 120-day period, even by invocation

of Section 5 of the Limitation Act.

12. Similarly, in Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services Ltd. v.

MaheshbhaiTinabhaiRathod2, reaffirmed that the strict limitation

period for challenging arbitral awards under Section 34(3) of the

Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 is absolute and non-extendable

beyond 120 days.

13. Furthermore, the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 is a self-

contained code that strictly curtails judicial intervention to the extent

expressly permitted under the statute. The invocation of writ

jurisdiction under Article 226 to circumvent or override this statutory

framework has been consistently discouraged by the courts.

14. In Deep Industries Limited v. ONGC3, the Supreme Court cautioned

that High Courts must refrain from entertaining writ petitions under

Article 226 or 227 which effectively re-examine issues reserved for

arbitral adjudication. It was observed as hereinunder:

“22. … The drill of Section 16 of the Act is that where a
Section 16 application is dismissed, no appeal is provided
and the challenge to the Section 16 application being

1
(2001) 8 SCC 470.

2

(2022) 4 SCC 162.

3

(2020) 15 SCC 706.

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Signed by: BHABAGRAHI JHANKAR
Reason: Authentication

Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

dismissed must await the passing of a final award at which
stage it may be raised under Section 34. What the High
Court has done in the present case is to invert this statutory
scheme by going into exactly the same matter as was gone
into by the arbitrator in the Section 16 application, and then
decided that the two-year ban/blacklisting was no part of the
notice for arbitration issued on 2-11-2017, a finding which
is directly contrary to the finding of the learned arbitrator
dismissing the Section 16 application. For this reason alone,
the judgment under appeal needs to be set aside. Even
otherwise, as has been correctly pointed out by Mr Rohatgi,
the judgment under appeal goes into the merits of the case
and states that the action of putting the Contractor and his
Directors “on holiday” is not a consequence of the
termination of the agreement. This is wholly incorrect as it
is only because of the termination that the show-cause notice
dated 18-10-2017 proposing to impose a two-year
ban/blacklisting was sent. Even otherwise, entering into the
general thicket of disputes between the parties does not
behove a court exercising jurisdiction under Article 227,
where only jurisdictional errors can be corrected.”

15. Likewise, in Bhaven Construction v. Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam

Ltd.,4the Supreme Court observed:

“18. …It is therefore, prudent for a Judge to not exercise
discretion to allow judicial interference beyond the
procedure established under the enactment. This power
needs to be exercised in exceptional rarity, wherein one
party is left remediless under the statute or a clear “bad
faith” shown by one of the parties. This high standard set by

(2022) 1 SCC 75.

4

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Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

this Court is in terms of the legislative intention to make the
arbitration fair and efficient…”

16. Turning to the facts of the present case, the record reveals that the

petitioners actively participated in the arbitral proceedings before the

MSEF Council without raising any jurisdictional objection under

Section 16 of the 1996 Act. Their post-award conduct, particularly a

letter from Petitioner No. 2 seeking the opposite party’s bank account

details for disbursal of the awarded amount, demonstrates clear and

unequivocal acquiescence to the arbitral award.

17. Rather than availing the statutory remedy under Section 34 within the

prescribed limitation period, the petitioners sought reduction of the

rate of interest before the MSEF Council, a course of action wholly

inconsistent with any challenge to the validity of the award.

18. Further, it is evident that the present writ petition was filed nearly

two and a half years after the award was passed, and more than two

years after execution proceedings had already been initiated. No

credible explanation has been furnished for this inordinate delay. It is

settled law that writ jurisdiction cannot be invoked to sidestep

statutory remedies or revive claims barred by limitation.

19. The principle of estoppel squarely applies. The petitioners did not

challenge the jurisdiction of the MSEF Council during the arbitral

proceedings and made no attempt to set aside the award within the

prescribed timeframe. In BSNL v. Motorola India Pvt. Ltd.5, and the

Supreme Court held that under Section 4 of the 1996 Act, a party that

[2009] 2 SCC 337.

5

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Location: ORISSA HIGH COURT, CUTTACK
Date: 24-Jun-2025 16:53:36

proceeds with arbitration despite knowing of a procedural lapse

without promptly objecting waives its right to object later.

V. CONCLUSION

20. In view of the foregoing discussion, this Court is of the considered

opinion that no interference is called for under Article 226 of the

Constitution.

21. The arbitral award dated 23.08.2013 was never challenged under

Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 within the

prescribed limitation period and has, therefore, attained finality. The

petitioners’ conduct clearly reflects acquiescence, and the present

challenge appears to be a belated and unmerited attempt to reopen

settled proceedings.

22. Accordingly, the Writ Petition is dismissed.

23. Interim order, if any, passed earlier stands vacated.

(Dr.S.K. Panigrahi)
Judge

Orissa High Court, Cuttack,
Dated the20th June, 2025

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