A homebuyer sues a builder for delay. The builder replies: “Your agreement has an arbitration clause, so you cannot go to the consumer court.” This is not true once your complaint has been admitted. The Supreme Court held in June 2026 that an arbitration clause cannot oust the jurisdiction of a consumer forum, and an admitted complaint cannot be sent off to arbitration.
If you are short on time, jump to the step-by-step on what to do when the other side demands arbitration in your consumer case.
Quick answer: A private arbitration clause in your agreement does not remove your right to use the consumer forum. The consumer forum is an extra remedy that Parliament gave you. Once the District Forum admits your complaint, it shall not be transferred to another court or tribunal. This is the holding in T.K.A. Padmanabhan v. Abhiyan Cooperative Group Housing Society Ltd. (Supreme Court, Civil Appeal No. 10724/2016, decided 4 June 2026).
Many builder agreements, society bye-laws, and service contracts contain an arbitration clause. The clause says that any dispute will go to a private arbitrator, not to a court. Companies lean on this clause to push consumers out of the consumer forum, because arbitration is slower, costlier, and less consumer-friendly.
The pressure usually lands right after you file. The other side files an application asking the forum to “refer the matter to arbitration.” Many consumers panic and withdraw, thinking the clause binds them.
It does not. The consumer forum was created as a special, fast, low-cost remedy. The Supreme Court has now confirmed, in the Padmanabhan case, that a private clause cannot take that remedy away from you.
The case is T.K.A. Padmanabhan v. Abhiyan Cooperative Group Housing Society Ltd. (Supreme Court, Civil Appeal No. 10724/2016, decided 4 June 2026), by Justices Vikram Nath and V. Mohana.
The Court held two things that matter to you.
The appeal arose from a 2016 complaint, decided under the Consumer Protection Act regime then in force. The principle is general: an arbitration clause cannot send an admitted consumer complaint to arbitration. The same principle continues under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.
The arbitration clause is not a bar. Withdrawing throws away your fast, low-cost remedy. Stay in the consumer forum.
If the District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (DCDRC) has admitted your complaint, it cannot be transferred to arbitration. Note the admission date and the case number from your filing record.
State plainly that the consumer forum has jurisdiction. Cite T.K.A. Padmanabhan v. Abhiyan Cooperative Group Housing Society Ltd. (Supreme Court, Civil Appeal No. 10724/2016, decided 4 June 2026). Add that the consumer remedy is an additional remedy under the Consumer Protection Act and an arbitration clause cannot oust it.
Request the forum to dismiss the arbitration application and continue hearing your complaint on merits. Keep your prayer simple and in writing.
The agreement, payment receipts, the demanded versus delivered timeline, and any delay correspondence. Winning the jurisdiction point only clears the path; you still prove your claim.
Builders often argue that because you took the keys, you accepted the delay and gave up compensation. The Court rejected that logic. Taking possession does not extinguish the right to claim compensation for the period of delay before possession. That claim is separate and survives.
So if you took possession “under protest” or even without a written protest, you can still pursue compensation for the months or years the builder ran late. Keep the dates of the promised handover and the actual handover.
No. An arbitration clause does not oust the consumer forum. The forum is an additional remedy Parliament gave you. A private clause cannot defeat it. This was confirmed in T.K.A. Padmanabhan v. Abhiyan Cooperative Group Housing Society Ltd. (Supreme Court, Civil Appeal No. 10724/2016, decided 4 June 2026).
No. Once the District Forum has admitted a consumer complaint, it shall not be transferred to another court or tribunal. The forum should reject any application to refer the admitted complaint to arbitration and continue on merits.
Yes. Taking possession does not by itself extinguish your right to compensation for the pre-possession delay. The Supreme Court held that the delay-compensation claim is distinct and survives possession. Keep proof of the promised and actual handover dates.
Yes. The appeal arose from a 2016 complaint under the earlier regime, but the principle is general. An arbitration clause cannot send an admitted consumer complaint to arbitration. The same principle continues under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.
You do not need to pin a sub-section. Lead with the principle: the consumer remedy is an additional remedy under the Consumer Protection Act, and an arbitration clause cannot oust it. Then cite the Padmanabhan case. The principle is what the forum applies.