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Understanding the grounds to set aside an arbitral award in Bangladesh is essential for any respondent that believes a tribunal has overstepped its jurisdiction, violated due process or produced an award contrary to public policy. Section 43 of the Arbitration Act 2001 provides the exclusive statutory framework for challenging domestic awards before the High Court Division, mirroring, but not replicating, the UNCITRAL Model Law grounds familiar to international practitioners. The provision sets strict time limits, demands specific evidentiary thresholds and channels the application to a defined judicial bench.
This guide walks in-house counsel and external practitioners through every operative ground, the procedural steps required to file a set-aside application, the limitation rules that frequently trap the unwary, and the tactical considerations around seeking a stay of enforcement pending the court’s decision.
Section 43 of the Arbitration Act 2001 (Act No. I of 2001) is titled “Application for setting aside arbitral award” and constitutes the exclusive recourse against a domestic arbitral award. The provision states that an arbitral award may be set aside by the High Court Division only if the applicant furnishes proof that one or more of the enumerated grounds exists. Importantly, section 43 operates as a negative check: the court does not re-hear the merits but examines whether the arbitral process suffered from a defined defect or whether the resulting award offends a mandatory legal norm.
The structure of section 43 divides the grounds into two categories. The first category (section 43(2)(a)) contains defects that must be proved by the party making the application, incapacity, invalidity of the agreement, lack of proper notice, composition of the tribunal contrary to the parties’ agreement, and the award dealing with disputes beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration. The second category (section 43(2)(b)) contains grounds the court may raise of its own motion, non-arbitrability of the subject matter and conflict with the public policy of Bangladesh.
Section 43 applies to awards made in Bangladesh (domestic awards). For the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards, practitioners must look to Chapter X of the Arbitration Act 2001 (sections 45–46), which incorporates Bangladesh’s obligations under the New York Convention. The grounds for refusing recognition of a foreign award under section 46 overlap substantially with the section 43 catalogue, but the procedural vehicle, forum and burden of proof differ. A respondent seeking to resist enforcement of a foreign award should raise those defences in the enforcement proceeding itself rather than filing a freestanding set-aside application under section 43. For a detailed treatment of foreign award enforcement, see the companion guide on international arbitration, country ranking and seat selection.
Practical takeaway: Before drafting any application, confirm whether the award is domestic (section 43 applies) or foreign (sections 45–46 apply). Filing under the wrong provision wastes time and may itself trigger limitation problems.
When can an award be set aside? Only when one of the grounds expressly listed in section 43(2) of the Arbitration Act 2001 is established. The following subsections break down each ground, the evidence the High Court Division typically expects and how practitioners should frame the pleading.
Under section 43(2)(a)(iv), an award may be set aside if it “deals with a dispute not contemplated by or not falling within the terms of the submission to arbitration, or contains decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission.” This is the ground most commonly invoked in commercial disputes where a tribunal awards relief on a counterclaim that was never referred to arbitration or interprets the arbitration clause more broadly than the underlying contract permits.
To succeed, the applicant must attach the arbitration agreement, the notice of arbitration or terms of reference, the statement of claim/counterclaim, and the award itself, then demonstrate the specific paragraph(s) of the award that exceed the agreed scope. Where only a severable portion of the award is ultra vires, section 43(3) permits the court to set aside only that portion, preserving the remainder.
Section 43(2)(a)(i) provides that an award may be set aside where “a party to the arbitration agreement was under some incapacity” or “the said agreement is not valid under the law to which the parties have subjected it or, failing any indication thereon, under the law of Bangladesh.” In practice this ground covers corporate ultra vires arguments, agreements signed by persons without authority, and agreements unenforceable for want of form (for example, an oral arbitration clause where the Act requires writing).
Evidence typically required includes the corporate resolution or board minutes (or the absence thereof), the signatory’s power of attorney, and legal opinions on the governing law of the arbitration agreement if the parties have chosen a foreign law.
Section 43(2)(a)(ii)–(iii) addresses two linked defects: failure to give proper notice of the appointment of an arbitrator or of the arbitral proceedings, and a party being “otherwise unable to present his case.” The High Court Division applies these provisions to enforce the minimum requirements of procedural fairness, the right to be heard, adequate time to prepare submissions, and disclosure of material upon which the tribunal relies.
Courts look for concrete evidence of prejudice. An applicant that received short notice but nonetheless participated fully in the hearing will struggle to establish this ground. Conversely, an applicant that was denied an adjournment to respond to late-disclosed documents and can show the tribunal relied on those documents in its reasoning stands on stronger footing. Hearing transcripts, procedural orders and correspondence between the tribunal and the parties are the primary exhibits.
Under section 43(2)(b)(ii), the court may set aside an award if it “is in conflict with the public policy of Bangladesh.” Industry observers expect this ground to remain the most heavily litigated because it provides the widest discretion. Bangladeshi courts have interpreted arbitral award public policy narrowly, consistent with the pro-enforcement bias of the UNCITRAL Model Law. An award will offend public policy where it contravenes a mandatory statutory provision, was procured through fraud or corruption, or violates fundamental principles of morality or justice.
Fraud must be proved by cogent evidence, not mere allegation. Practitioners should be prepared to file supporting affidavits, forensic accounting reports, or certified copies of criminal complaints where applicable.
Section 43(2)(a)(v) allows a challenge where “the composition of the arbitral tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties.” This ground is narrow: the court looks at whether the institutional rules or the ad hoc procedure agreed by the parties was followed, not whether the tribunal’s procedural decisions were wise. Evidence includes the arbitration agreement’s provisions on tribunal composition, any institutional rules incorporated by reference, and a chronological record of the appointment process.
Section 43(2)(b)(i) empowers the court, acting on its own motion or on application, to set aside an award where “the subject-matter of the dispute is not capable of settlement by arbitration under the law of Bangladesh.” Disputes involving criminal offences, certain family-law matters and questions of title to immovable property have traditionally been treated as non-arbitrable. This ground does not require proof of prejudice; it is a threshold legal question.
| Ground | Statutory source | Practical evidence required |
|---|---|---|
| Incapacity or invalid arbitration agreement | Section 43(2)(a)(i) | Corporate resolution, signatory authority, governing-law opinion |
| Lack of proper notice / unable to present case | Section 43(2)(a)(ii)–(iii) | Hearing transcripts, procedural orders, correspondence |
| Award beyond scope of submission | Section 43(2)(a)(iv) | Arbitration agreement, terms of reference, claims list, award |
| Tribunal composition or procedure contrary to agreement | Section 43(2)(a)(v) | Agreement clause, institutional rules, appointment record |
| Subject matter not arbitrable | Section 43(2)(b)(i) | Legal submissions on non-arbitrability (no factual proof needed) |
| Award conflicts with public policy of Bangladesh | Section 43(2)(b)(ii) | Affidavits, forensic reports, criminal complaints, mandatory-law analysis |
Section 43(4) of the Arbitration Act 2001 provides that an application to set aside an arbitral award “may not be made after sixty days have elapsed from the date on which the party making that application had received the arbitral award.” The clock starts from receipt of the award, not the date on which the award is signed or published by the tribunal. Where the tribunal corrects or interprets the award under section 40, the sixty-day period runs from the date the corrected or interpreted version is received.
The Arbitration Act 2001 does not contain an express condonation power for late-filed set-aside applications. The general limitation provisions under the Limitation Act 1908 may apply by analogy, but the High Court Division has historically taken a strict approach. Industry observers expect courts to condone delay only in exceptional circumstances, for example, where the applicant can demonstrate that the award was deliberately withheld or that force majeure prevented timely filing. Practitioners should treat the sixty-day deadline as effectively absolute and begin preparing the application immediately upon receipt of an adverse award.
| Event | Limitation trigger | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Receipt of final award | Day 1 of the 60-day period | Record the date of receipt formally (courier receipt, email timestamp) |
| Receipt of corrected/interpreted award (s.40) | Fresh 60-day period from date of receipt | Only resets for the correction or interpretation, not the original award |
| 60th day from receipt | Filing deadline, application must be filed in High Court Division | No automatic grace period; condonation is discretionary and rare |
Practical takeaway: Instruct your client to notify you within 24 hours of receiving an award. Draft a skeleton application immediately so the filing can proceed well within the sixty-day window.
Applications to set aside arbitral award Bangladesh are filed before the High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh. The Chief Justice designates specific benches to hear arbitration-related matters. Early indications suggest that set-aside petitions filed after the 2026 procedural reforms continue to be listed before the bench designated for commercial and arbitration matters, practitioners should check the current cause list and the Chief Justice’s administrative order at the time of filing to confirm bench assignment.
The application is filed as a miscellaneous case or petition supported by an affidavit. The following documents should accompany the filing:
| Document | Purpose | Typical attachment |
|---|---|---|
| Petition / application under s.43 | States the grounds and relief sought | Original plus required number of copies |
| Supporting affidavit | Verifies facts and exhibits | Sworn before a Notary Public or Commissioner of Affidavits |
| Certified copy of the arbitral award | Proves the award and its date of receipt | Award plus proof of delivery/receipt |
| Original or certified copy of the arbitration agreement | Establishes jurisdiction and scope | Underlying contract containing the arbitration clause |
| Hearing transcripts / procedural orders | Supports natural-justice and procedural grounds | Certified or agreed transcripts |
| Vakalatnama (Power of Attorney for counsel) | Authorises the advocate to act | Executed by the applicant |
| Court fee stamp | Pays the statutory filing fee | As prescribed for miscellaneous cases |
Once filed, the registry assigns a case number and lists the matter for a first hearing. At the initial hearing, the court typically issues notice to the opposing party and may set a timetable for exchanging affidavits in opposition and reply. The likely practical effect is that a contested set-aside application, including interlocutory hearings, possible adjournments and final arguments, will take between six and eighteen months to reach a substantive decision, depending on the complexity of the grounds and the court’s cause list. Practitioners should factor this timeline into any parallel enforcement or settlement strategy. For more on how to prepare and conduct arbitration hearings, see the related guide.
Filing a set-aside application does not automatically suspend enforcement of the award. The applicant must file a separate prayer, typically within the same petition, requesting the court to stay enforcement pending set aside. Section 43 itself does not prescribe the test for granting a stay, so the High Court Division applies general principles of interim relief drawn from Order XXXIX of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 and its inherent powers.
The court evaluates three elements before granting a stay:
Courts may require the applicant to furnish security, typically a bank guarantee or deposit, as a condition of granting the stay. Practitioners should prepare a draft undertaking or security proposal at the time of filing to avoid delay.
Not every unfavourable award warrants a set-aside application. The decision matrix should consider:
An effective set-aside application requires disciplined preparation. The following checklist summarises the key steps:
Experienced arbitration counsel can compress this preparation into two to three weeks. Respondents who wait until the final days of the limitation period risk filing an incomplete application and forfeiting the right to a stay.
The grounds to set aside an arbitral award in Bangladesh are deliberately narrow, designed to uphold the finality of arbitration while guarding against genuine procedural abuse and public-policy violations. The sixty-day window under section 43(4) is unforgiving, and the High Court Division expects applicants to present focused, well-evidenced petitions. Respondents who act swiftly, identify the correct statutory ground and support their application with credible documentary evidence give themselves the best prospect of success. Those who also need to explore enforcement options or compare Bangladesh’s arbitration framework with other jurisdictions can consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for qualified local counsel.
Last reviewed: 14 June 2026
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Suhan Khan, FCIArb at ACCORD CHAMBERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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