Innovative Film Academy Private … vs Endemol India Private Limited on 3 July, 2025

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Bombay High Court

Innovative Film Academy Private … vs Endemol India Private Limited on 3 July, 2025

   2025:BHC-OS:9926


                                                                                      CARBPL-22714-2024.docx



                                   IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
                                       ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION
                                            IN ITS COMMERCIAL DIVISION

                           COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION PETITION (L) NO. 22714 OF 2024

         Digitally
         signed by
                      Saravana Prasad                           ...Petitioner
         SHRADDHA
SHRADDHA KAMLESH
         TALEKAR
                            Versus
KAMLESH
TALEKAR  Date:
         2025.07.03
                      Endemol India Private Limited & Anr.      ...Respondents
         13:18:00
         +0530                                         WITH
                          COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION PETITION (L) NO. 22746 OF 2024

                      Innovative Film Academy Pvt. Ltd.                          ...Petitioner
                           Versus
                      Endemol India Private Limited & Anr.                        ...Respondents


                      Mr. Siddhesh Bhole a/w. Mr. Yakshay Chheda (through VC) a/w. Mr. Apoorva
                      Kulkarni i/b. SSB Legal and Advisory, for Petitioner in both Petitions.
                      Mr. Sharan Jagtiani, Senior Advocate a/w. Ms. Surabhi S. Agrawal, Mr.
                      Rashmin Khandekar, Mr. Anand Mohan, Ms. Sneha Nanandkar, Ms. Ruddhi
                      Bhalekar, Ms. Pallavi Thakur i/b. ANM Global, for Respondent No.1 in both
                      Petitions.


                                     CORAM: SOMASEKHAR SUNDARESAN, J.
                                     Reserved on : January 31, 2025
                                     Pronounced on : July 3, 2025

                      JUDGEMENT :

Context and Factual Background:

1. These Petitions are filed under Section 37(2)(b) of the Arbitration and

Conciliation Act, 1996 (“Arbitration Act“) challenging an order dated July 10,
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2024, passed by a Learned Arbitral Tribunal under Section 17 of the

Arbitration Act, directing a deposit of Rs. ~10.40 crores in a fixed deposit in a

nationalised bank and requiring expansive disclosures in the course of

conduct of the arbitral proceedings.

2. Innovative Film Academy Private Limited (” Innovative”) is a one-

person company formed by Mr. Saravana Prasad (” Prasad”). Innovative is

the Petitioner in Commercial Arbitration Petition (L) No. 22746 of 2024

while Prasad is the Petitioner in Commercial Arbitration Petition (L) No.

22714 of 2024. Innovative entered into a “Production Agreement” dated

March 10, 2021 (“Agreement”) whereby Endemol would create, produce, edit

post-production and deliver episodes of the well-known cookery television

show franchise “Masterchef” in Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam.

Payments were due on the basis of milestones across the span of work to be

carried out.

3. It is common ground that Endemol delivered the episodes in Tamil and

Telugu and was contractually entitled to payment on the four invoices it

raised on Innovative from time to time, aggregating to Rs. ~15.93 crores. It is

also common ground that a sum of Rs. ~4.45 crores has been paid by

Innovative to Endemol. A sum of Rs. ~1.08 crores was adjusted against dues

in another contract between the parties. The outstanding dues on the

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invoices were stated to be Rs. ~10.40 crores. Disputes and differences

relating to the claim to these dues are the trigger for the arbitral proceedings

which led to the Impugned Order being passed as an interlocutory measure

under Section 17 of the Arbitration Act.

4. The Learned Arbitral Tribunal has ordered the ” Respondents” (in the

arbitral proceedings i.e. Innovative and Prasad) to do the following:-

a) deposit the claimed sum of Rs. ~10.40 crores in a fixed deposit in a

nationalised bank, to be maintained without disturbance pending

the hearing and final disposal of the arbitration;

b) disclose all assets (movable and immovable) and all encumbrances,

charges and attachments on such assets since March 2019;

c) disclose details of all companies and firms in which they are

shareholders, directors or partners and the extent of their interest

in such enterprises;

d) disclose all income-tax returns since March 2019 along with the

profit and loss account and all ledger statements along with

narrations; and

e) disclose details of all bank accounts held by them since March 2019.

5. In arriving at the aforesaid directions, the Learned Arbitral Tribunal

has also denied multiple reliefs as formulated by Endemol but that need not
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detain my attention since Endemol has not challenged the Impugned Order.

Suffice it to say, disclosures had been sought by Endemol about the assets of

all family members of Prasad, which has been denied, but the Learned

Arbitral Tribunal has been persuaded to direct Prasad to make disclosures.

The Learned Arbitral Tribunal has essentially taken a prima facie view of the

facts and material on record; held that it cannot lean on principles of equity

and that it must stick to the contractual terms; noted that Endemol’s case

hinges primarily on a letter dated July 11, 2022, confirming balances in the

sum of Rs. ~10.40 crores as being due and payable (” Confirmation Letter”);

and that evidence would need to be led to examine the full veracity of the

dues owed in the course of the final hearing.

Analysis and Findings:

6. I have heard Mr. Sharan Jagtiani, Learned Senior Advocate and Mr.

Rashmin Khandekar, Learned Advocate on different dates, on behalf of

Endemol and Mr. Siddhesh Bhole, Learned Advocate on behalf of Innovative

and Prasad. I have gone through their written submissions and the copious

and voluminous case law tendered by them.

7. It is clear from the material on record that the Learned Arbitral

Tribunal has essentially directed in the Impugned Order, what the Learned

Arbitral Tribunal, in its wisdom, believed would meet the ends of justice as an
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interlocutory measure. There has been extensive reliance on merits by both

sides in the course of the hearing before me, seeking to draw inferences from

such detailed submissions on merits, although the Learned Arbitral Tribunal

has itself stated that it has not gone into the merits in any material depth.

8. Having examined the contentions and the material on record, what

stands out is that the Learned Arbitral Tribunal has taken note of the

Confirmation Letter as being the linchpin of Endemol’s arguments, and

indeed also noted that Innovative has not denied having issued the

Confirmation Letter. In my opinion, whether the Confirmation Letter was

something consciously issued or routinely issued in the course of audit

confirmations sought by auditors of Endemol, the reasons for which there is

no Confirmation Letter after 2022, and the implications of accounts

reconciliation exercises that the parties had engaged in, are all matters that

would be dealt with by the Learned Arbitral Tribunal in the course of the

conduct of the arbitration.

9. The real issue that arises in these two Petitions is whether the

Impugned Order represents a reasonable and plausible view or whether it

adopts a view that is implausible and untenable. Having examined the

Impugned Order and the material on record, it is apparent the Learned

Arbitral Tribunal has conclude the following:-

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a) Endemol’s case significantly hinges on the Confirmation Letter;

b) The issuance of the Confirmation Letter is not denied by Innovative;

c) However, the Confirmation Letter alone would not be conclusive of

the merits of the dispute;

d) There is a need to provide some security to Endemol for its dues;

e) However, Innovative parting with the entire sum would not be

appropriate;

f) Therefore, a deposit has been directed but in a fixed deposit which

is to be maintained in the name of the depositing parties, with a

commitment to keep it secure without disturbance during the

pendency of the arbitration;

g) Disclosures sought about the assets and liabilities of family

members of Prasad is “not required at this stage”; and

h) Therefore, disclosures, only by Innovative and Prasad would suffice.

One Person Company – Fundamental Policy of Law Ignored:

10. At the threshold, it should be noticed that Innovative is an OPC, a

concept introduced in the Companies Act, 2013 (” Companies Act“), to enable

formation of a company with just one shareholder. Such a legal framework

was explicitly introduced into the law, in a departure from the conventional

concept that it takes at least two individuals to keep each other “company”.

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By such construct, the Companies Act enabled the creation by a sole

individual, of a body corporate that is an artificial juridical person. Even

perpetual existence has been envisaged – the OPC does not come to an end

with the death of the sole shareholder since he would need to nominate

another individual who would become the sole shareholder of the OPC, which

continue as such. By such creation of legal fiction, the OPC is meant to create

a framework whereby, individuals who need the protection of limited liability

can ring-fence their personal liability and personal assets from the risks

involved in the businesses run by them.

11. It would not be out of place to mention that the concept of OPC has its

parallels in other advanced economies of the world including the European

Union, the United States of America, United Kingdom and even in Asian

economies such as China and Singapore.

12. The hallowed case of Saloman1 that laid the foundation of limited

liability for companies was the case of a leather boot manufacturer who

converted his sole proprietorship business into a company (of course with his

family owning nominal shares). The issue that arose was whether the

shareholder would be liable for the obligations of the company. The House of

Lords overturned the view of the Court of Appeal, which had held that the

1
Saloman vs. Saloman – (1897) AC 22
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company was a sham and a device, propagated to escape the liability of the

shareholder. Today, as a matter of Indian company law, the concept of the

OPC is now a matter of special corporate law policy of India introduced into

the Companies Act to enable individual entrepreneurs to ring-fence their

assets from exposure to liability arising out of the conduct of business by the

OPC formed by them.

13. Essentially, while the Impugned Order is generally incapable of being

interfered with since it but an interim arrangement, and the Learned Arbitral

Tribunal has taken a reasonable approach of ensuring that the money

directed to be deposited is not alienated from the Petitioners, the Impugned

Order represents a material error by treating Prasad and Innovative as one

and the same in terms of liability owed to the Endemol. The Impugned Order

makes no distinction between Innovative and Prasad. By directing both of

them to make the deposit, and worse, by directing each of them to make a full

disclosure of all personal assets, liabilities, tax returns, and ownership

interests in any enterprise, this facet of the Impugned Order is in direct

conflict with the fundamental policy of the India.

14. The Impugned Order contains no analysis as to why Prasad should be

roped into this mix by directing him to make a deposit and to give disclosure

of his personal assets and liabilities despite Innovative being a limited

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liability OPC. The Impugned Order is vulnerable on two counts – first, it

does not provide reasons as to why it would treat Innovative and Prasad as

one and the same in terms of liability owed; and second, it is directly contrary

to Innovative being a limited liability company, which implies that no final

relief of liability is possible against Prasad for no reason other than being the

sole shareholder of Innovative. Innovative being a limited liability company

totally undermines the ability to direct Prasad to meet obligations by way of

interim relief since there cannot arise final relief that fastens Innovative’s

liabilities on to Prasad. Therefore, in my opinion, the Impugned Order

cannot be sustained in relation to the directions issued against Prasad – of

making a deposit and providing disclosures.

15. There is also no analysis of any contemporaneous evidence that would

make Prasad contractually liable without being a party to the Agreement. If

such a factual matrix had been in existence and dealt with, one could have

considered that despite being ring-fenced from Innovative’s liability as its

shareholder, Prasad may have some obligation to meet.

16. At this stage, I do not even need to go into comparing the contours of

jurisdiction in an appeal from an order passed under Section 17 of the

Arbitration Act with the contours of the jurisdiction in an appeal from an

order under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act. However, even adopting the

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narrow scope of interference available to a Section 37 Court when

adjudicating the vulnerability of an order passed in the narrower scope of

review under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act, the Impugned Order does not

pass muster in its over-reach to Prasad.

17. Mr. Jagtiani would attempt to extrapolate from Cox & Kings2 to

propound the theory that Prasad was the signatory to contracts executed by

Innovative in his capacity as the sole director of the OPC; the correspondence

by Innovative was by Prasad; and thereby an implied consent to bind Prasad

was discernible. This submission is totally untenable and has to be stated to

be rejected. To begin with, it is nobody’s case that Prasad is a party to the

Agreement, which admittedly a contract between Innovative and Endemol.

Innovative was inherently an OPC, which, by law may have just one director

and by law must have only one shareholder. The OPC is meant to be the

business and social alter ego of the OPC, and that is by legal design. The legal

framework explicitly protects such sole shareholder by limiting the liability as

for any other company. If the director signing on behalf of the OPC is reason

enough to wish away the statutory scheme of limited liability, it would render

the very framework of the OPC redundant and otiose. If being an alter ego

were enough to dilute the limited liability of the sole shareholder of the OPC,

the very legal framework governing OPCs would stand obliterated.
2
Cox and Kings Ltd. vs. SAP India Private Limited and Another – (2024) 4 SCC 1
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18. Section 2(62) of the Companies Act defines an OPC as a company

which has only one person as a member. Shareholders of a company whose

liability is limited by the shares held, cannot be called upon to discharge the

obligations contracted by the company. It is nobody’s case that Innovative is

a company with unlimited liability company. By law, it is positively required

to suffix its name as a “private limited company”. Therefore, no liability of

Innovative can result in a liability of Prasad.

19. One could understand if there were other attendant facts dealt with in

the Impugned Order that could reasonable point to Prasad having contracted

liabilities in parallel without his capacity as sole shareholder of Innovative

being the reason. But that is not the case. There is no discussion of even a

prima facie possibility of such an element being involved, for it to be left for

later adjudication in the course of the final hearing. Therefore, the Impugned

Order is unsustainable insofar it effects an over-reach by imposing

obligations on Prasad to make a deposit and to make wide-ranging disclosure

of ownership of any and every asset and interest.

Direction to Deposit in FD:

20. As regards the very direction of making a deposit (leaving Prasad aside

for the reasons set out above) in a fixed deposit, it is apparent that the

Learned Arbitral Tribunal has not accepted the Confirmation Letter as gospel
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truth. Likewise, the Learned Arbitral Tribunal has not ignored the fact that

the issuance of the Confirmation Letter is not denied by Innovative. There is

no contemporaneous correspondence or correspondence after the

Confirmation Letter, that was presented by Innovative for consideration by

the Learned Arbitral Tribunal in order to undermine the Confirmation Letter.

21. Balancing all these factors, the Learned Arbitral Tribunal has taken a

reasonable and just approach of not directing a deposit in a manner that

Innovative loses control over the money but has only directed that Innovative

must create a fixed deposit and hold it secure, pending completion of

arbitration. I find this intervention just, equitable and well balanced, and

therefore unworthy of interference.

22. Mr. Bhole would contend that the Learned Arbitral Tribunal has placed

excessive reliance on the Confirmation Letter and that Learned Arbitral

Tribunal has cast a negative burden on Innovative to prove that the

Confirmation Letter is incorrect. I am unable to accept this proposition. The

Confirmation Letter was issued by Innovative. When balances are confirmed

to auditors of counterparties, it is essentially an assurance that the amounts

shown in the books of the counterparty as being due, is prima facie a true and

fair record in the books of accounts.

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23. It is true that such confirmations need not be conclusive evidence and

if there are disputes that arise subsequently, such disputes cannot be wished

away when dealing with balances in the books of accounts. However,

whether there are other circumstances and facts that would undermine such

a confirmation is a matter of evidence. That can be gone into in the course of

the arbitration. At the stage of considering the Section 17 proceedings, the

Learned Arbitral Tribunal has rightly adopted a prima facie view. Unless

such view is blatantly perverse by being in ex facie conflict with the material

on record, it would not be appropriate for this Court to interfere and

substitute its own view of what is more appropriate, in the place of the view

expressed by the Learned Arbitral Tribunal.

24. Mr. Bhole’s contention is that there has to be a risk of dissipation seen

from the material on record before a direction of deposit can be made. It is

now trite law that an arbitral tribunal need not be strictly hide-bound by the

principles laid down in Order 38, Rule 5 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.

Decisions of this Court3 in this regard holding that the arbitral tribunal does

not need to follow such requirements, have been approved by the Supreme

Court4. Apprehension of a diminution in value would also be an adequate

3
Jagdish Ahuja vs. Cupino Ltd. – 2020 SCC OnLine Bom 849; Ajay Singh vs. Kal Airways – 2017 SCC
OnLine Del 8934
4
Essar House (P) Ltd. Vs. Arcellor Mittal Nippon Steel (India) Ltd. – 2022 SCC OnLine SC 1219
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ground and it is not necessary to be hide-bound by the provisions of CPC. In

fact, Section 19 of the Arbitration Act provides that the arbitral tribunal shall

not be bound by the provisions of CPC. Likewise, under Section 28, the

arbitral tribunal shall take into account the terms of the contract and trade

usages applicable to the transaction. Going by the prima facie view that the

liability has been admitted, no fault can be found with the Impugned Order in

this regard.

25. Mr. Bhole has also contended that the Impugned Order should speak

for itself, and reasons cannot be subsequently added or canvassed in the

course of the appeal to defend the Impugned Order. An analysis of that

contention is unnecessary since on the face of the Impugned Order, despite

its crispiness bordering on being cryptic, it is clear that the Learned Arbitral

Tribunal has considered the liability arising out of the four invoices; the

relevance of the Confirmation Letter, without making it a pivotal and

absolute basis for directing a deposit; and has also taken care to balance the

direction to deposit, by letting Innovative keep the money with itself in a

fixed deposit. I am unable to find fault with the Impugned Order in relation

to the direction to keep a fixed deposit – of course, not as an obligation

imposed on Prasad but as an obligation imposed on Innovative.

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Conclusions and Directions:

26. Therefore, for the reasons set out above, it would be appropriate to

summarise my conclusions as under:

a) Since Prasad’s liability is limited by the Companies Act, no direction

against Prasad to make a deposit or make any disclosure is legally

sustainable or tenable – such a direction is in direct conflict with

the fundamental policy of Indian law governing OPCs, as enshrined

in the Companies Act;

b) Even a final relief against Prasad looks, prima facie, unlikely – it is

left open to the course of arbitration to see if there is any other basis

at all for any claim to be made against Prasad, but at this stage there

is not even a prima facie case for issuing any directions involving

personal liability on Prasad. Therefore, directing him to make a

deposit or to make disclosures of his personal assets and liabilities

(which can only be in aid of a potential future personal liability) is

untenable and liable to be set aside;

c) Therefore, the Impugned Order, insofar as it directs imposition of

any personal obligations on Prasad, is hereby set aside;

d) The Impugned Order, insofar as it imposes obligations on

Innovative – whether in the nature of maintaining a fixed deposit in

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a bank, or disclosing assets, liabilities and ownership interests of

Innovative – cannot be faulted with. In this regard, the Impugned

Order renders a plausible view that cannot be substituted by this

Court’s view, based on this Court’s own perception of what alternate

plausible view could have been adopted.

27. The captioned appeals are partially allowed in the aforesaid terms. On

a careful consideration of the issues involved, I am inclined not to impose

costs at this stage. The Learned Arbitral Tribunal shall factor in the outcome

in these proceedings when it eventually considers costs in the course of

rendering its final award in the arbitration being conducted by it.

28. It is clarified that all observations made in this judgement are in aid of

dealing with the prima facie findings of the Learned Arbitral Tribunal that is

impugned, and are therefore also made on a prima facie basis. Nothing

contained herein is meant to influence the adjudication of issues in the

course of the arbitration.

29. All actions required to be taken pursuant to this order, shall be taken

upon receipt of a downloaded copy as available on this Court’s website.

[SOMASEKHAR SUNDARESAN J.]
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