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ToggleDefining the Conflict: Arbitration Finality versus Foreign Exchange Control
The process of enforcing foreign arbitral awards in India, governed by Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (A&C Act), often encounters rigorous scrutiny under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA). The historical tension centers on whether payments originating from an international award, particularly those relating to foreign investment, required a specific licensing approval from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) even after the award was recognized as a judicial decree.
This regulatory uncertainty allowed judgment debtors to invoke Section 48(2)(b) of the A&C Act, the “Public Policy of India” exception to resist enforcement, often claiming the underlying transaction was non-compliant with Capital Account norms, such as those governing guaranteed returns on investments. Prior to the 2025 definitive ruling, this ambiguity meant that even a judicially approved award could be stalled indefinitely, awaiting bureaucratic clearance.
The Statutory Classification under FEMA, 1999
The legal foundation for foreign currency transactions in India is the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999. FEMA categorizes cross-border financial flows strictly as either Capital Account Transactions (CAPs), which alter a resident’s assets or liabilities outside India and are tightly controlled, or Current Account Transactions (CATs).
Section 5 of FEMA, 1999, read with the Foreign Exchange Management (Current Account Transaction) Rules, 2000, establishes that CATs are generally liberalized and permitted without regulatory permission, except for those specifically restricted or prohibited under its Schedules.
Significantly, payments derived from court decrees or compensatory arbitral awards are not explicitly included in Schedule I (Prohibited), Schedule II (Central Government Approval), or Schedule III (RBI Approval) of the Current Account Transaction Rules. This omission legally places such payments within the free ambit of Section 5, provided they are genuinely compensatory and not an attempt to circumvent Capital Account restrictions.
Genesis of the 2025 Clarification: The Conditional Order of the Madras High Court
The critical clarification emerged from the Supreme Court’s examination of the GPE (India) Ltd. v. Twarit Consultancy Services (P) Ltd. matter (SLP (C) No. 6856/2023). The case involved two Mauritius-based investors who secured an award from the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) against an Indian entity. The award granted compensatory damages of approximately INR 195 crores for breach of contractual obligation to purchase shares.
When the investors sought enforcement in India under the A&C Act, the Madras High Court passed an order on January 5, 2023, recognizing the award as enforceable under Section 49, but controversially imposing a precondition: enforcement could only proceed upon obtaining prior approval from the RBI. This judicial requirement risked reintroducing the very bureaucratic delays the modern arbitration framework sought to eliminate, giving the debtor a tactical opportunity for obstruction.
The Supreme Court’s Definitive Stance: GPE (India) Ltd.
The procedural roadblock was definitively removed by the Supreme Court’s order of August 26, 2025.The pivotal moment in the proceedings was the authoritative statement provided by the RBI via an affidavit.
The RBI confirmed that the payment of compensatory damages awarded by the Arbitral Tribunal for a breach of contract constitutes a Current Account Transaction under Section 5 of FEMA, 1999, read with the Foreign Exchange Management (Current Account Transaction) Rules, 2000. Crucially, the central bank affirmed that such a transaction “per se, would not require any approval or permission from the RBI”.
Deferring to this expert regulatory classification, the Supreme Court removed the conditional requirement imposed by the High Court. The Court provided “unqualified endorsement for the award’s expeditious execution,” thereby confirming that, upon judicial recognition under Section 49 of the A&C Act, the foreign award payment faces “no impediment in law” regarding FEMA compliance.
Impact on Enforcement and Compliance Requirements
This ruling reinforces India’s progressive judicial commitment to international arbitration, further narrowing the public policy exception under Section 48 of the A&C Act. The judgment solidifies the legal distinction: while the original investment agreement may have raised Capital Account concerns, the subsequent compensatory damages payment constitutes a liberalized Current Account outflow.
The operational consequence is that the burden of compliance shifts from seeking discretionary regulatory approval to procedural due diligence by the Authorized Dealer (AD) Category-I banks. These AD banks are responsible for processing the remittance as a CAT.
To ensure compliance, the judgment debtor must present the AD bank with the final judicial decree, confirmed under Section 49 of the A&C Act, which clearly establishes the nature of the payment as compensatory damages.
The AD bank must then process the outflow and ensure accurate reporting to the RBI under the prevailing FEMA Master Directions for CATs, securing transparency without mandatory pre-approval delays. This decisive action by the Supreme Court provides essential commercial certainty, confirming that once a foreign arbitral award is recognized as a decree of an Indian court, its payment cannot be frustrated by superfluous administrative hurdles.
These questions also intersect with broader cross-border enforcement themes explored in our guide on enforcing foreign arbitral awards in India.