IAMC 
Litigation News

Supreme Court rejects IAMC review petition challenging quashing of free land allotment by Telangana

On February 4, the Supreme Court upheld a Telangana High Court quashing the State’s decision to allot 3.70 acres of land at Raidurg village in Hyderabad to IAMC without charging market value.

S N Thyagarajan

The Supreme Court has rejected a review petition filed by the International Arbitration and Mediation Centre (IAMC) against a February 2026 order upholding the quashing of allotment of 3.70 acres of government land in Hyderabad to the arbitration centre for free. [The International Arbitration and Mediation Centre v. Koti Raghunatha Rao & Ors]

A Bench of Justices Dipankar Datta and SVN Bhatti also rejected IAMC’s application seeking oral hearing in the matter.

Having perused the order under review and the grounds urged in support of the prayer made, we are of the considered opinion that no case for review has been set up,” the Court said in its May 5 order.

Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice SV Bhatti

On February 4, the Supreme Court upheld a Telangana High Court quashing the State government’s decision to allot 3.70 acres of land at Raidurg village in Hyderabad to IAMC without charging market value.

The case arose from two pleas challenging government orders issued by the State between 2021 and 2022. These orders concerned three issues. The first was the free allotment of land to IAMC. The second was grant of ₹3 crore as financial assistance. The third was a direction requiring government departments and public sector undertakings to refer disputes above ₹3 crore to IAMC for arbitration.

The petitioners had argued that the decisions amounted to arbitrary distribution of State largesse. They also claimed that the land allotment violated statutory rules and caused loss to the public exchequer.

A Division Bench of Justices K Lakshman and K Sujana held that promotion of institutional arbitration may be a legitimate public purpose. However, the State could not bypass mandatory statutory requirements to achieve that objective. The High Court found that the allotment violated the Andhra Pradesh (Telangana Area) Alienation of State Lands and Land Revenue Rules, 1975. It noted that IAMC was a private trust at the time of allotment. It also found that no material showed compliance with the statutory procedure for alienation of government land.

However, the High Court did not interfere with the ₹3 crore grant or the dispute-referral policy.

[Read Order]

IAMC review order.pdf
Preview

Voters deleted during WB SIR higher than winning margin: TMC's Kalyan Banerjee to Supreme Court

Show patience, compassion for young lawyers: Supreme Court to judges after Andhra Pradesh HC judge outburst

Supreme Court declines to entertain plea challenging decision to cancel AoR exam for 2026

She was an active participant: ED opposes Jacqueline Fernandez's plea to turn approver in PMLA case

Private counsel assisting prosecution can't argue or cross-examine during criminal trial: MP High Court

SCROLL FOR NEXT