In a significant ruling refining the contours of arbitration law in India, the Supreme Court has held that a mere general reference to a tender document containing an arbitration clause does not amount to its incorporation into a contract, unless there is a clear and conscious intention of the parties to do so.
The judgment reinforces a crucial contractual principle which denotes that arbitration, being a consensual dispute resolution mechanism, cannot be inferred by implication or vague reference. The case arose from a dispute where the High Court had appointed an arbitrator on the premise that the arbitration clause contained in the tender documents formed part of the contract through reference.
However, the Supreme Court reversed this view, holding that no valid arbitration agreement existed between the parties. Consequently, the Court set aside the appointment of the arbitrator and allowed the appeal. The Court emphasised that at the stage of appointing an arbitrator, courts must undertake a strict prima facie examination of the existence of an arbitration agreement, rather than proceeding on assumptions.
At the heart of the ruling lies a doctrinal clarification that has long been part of arbitration jurisprudence. A “reference” to another document merely indicates that certain terms may be consulted and “incorporation”, on the other hand, requires a clear intention to make the terms including the arbitration clause part of the contract. The Court held that a general reference to tender conditions does not ipso facto import the arbitration clause into the Letter of Intent (LoI) or main agreement.
In the absence of specific mention of arbitration or an explicit incorporation clause, no arbitration agreement can be said to exist. The Bench relied on earlier landmark rulings, including M.R. Engineers & Contractors Pvt. Ltd. v. Som Datt Builders Ltd. and NBCC (India) Ltd. v. Zillion Infraprojects Pvt. Ltd.. These decisions consistently hold that a specific and conscious reference to the arbitration clause is necessary for incorporation, particularly in “two-contract” scenarios where multiple documents govern the transaction. The Court reaffirmed that arbitration cannot be inferred merely because parties have referred to a broader set of contractual documents.
The ruling also reiterates the importance of distinguishing between Single-contract cases, where all terms including arbitration form part of a unified agreement and Two-contract cases, where one document (e.g., LoI) refers to another (e.g., tender documents). In the latter category, the Court held, a higher threshold of clarity is required to establish incorporation, failing which disputes must be resolved through ordinary civil courts.
The judgment draws directly from Section 7(5) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, which provides that a reference to another document constitutes an arbitration agreement only if the reference is such as to make the arbitration clause part of the contract.
The Court clarified that mere reference to execution-related terms is insufficient. There must be clear contractual language showing acceptance of arbitration as the dispute resolution mechanism This interpretation ensures that arbitration remains a matter of consent, not implication. From a broader legal perspective, the ruling strengthens two foundational principles that Arbitration must be based on clear agreement between parties and dispute resolution mechanisms must be explicitly defined.
By rejecting implied incorporation, the Court has ensured that parties are not forced into arbitration without unequivocal consent.The judgment carries significant implications for government tenders and infrastructure contracts, where LoIs frequently refer to tender conditions and commercial agreements, where multiple documents are often read together
Parties will now be required to explicitly incorporate arbitration clauses, rather than relying on general references and they will have to clearly specify dispute resolution mechanisms in the principal contract itself
Failure to do so may result in disputes being relegated to civil courts instead of arbitration forums. The Supreme Court’s ruling marks a decisive reaffirmation of a settled but often overlooked principle that arbitration is a matter of explicit consent, not contractual ambiguity. By drawing a firm line between “reference” and “incorporation,” the Court has not only corrected an erroneous approach adopted by the High Court but also strengthened the integrity of arbitration as a consensual dispute resolution mechanism.
In doing so, the judgment ensures that efficiency in dispute resolution does not come at the cost of contractual clarity and legal certainty a balance that lies at the very heart of modern commercial jurisprudence.

