Global Law Experts Logo
injunction against invocation of bank guarantee

Injunction Against Invocation of Bank Guarantee: India (2026), Fraud & Special Equities, Conditional vs Unconditional Bgs

By Global Law Experts
– posted 32 minutes ago

Indian courts will restrain the invocation of a bank guarantee only in two narrowly defined circumstances: egregious fraud by the beneficiary, or special equities that would cause irretrievable injustice to the party that furnished the guarantee. A February 2026 Delhi High Court ruling has sharpened the evidentiary thresholds for both exceptions, making the question of when and how to seek an injunction against invocation of bank guarantee more urgent for commercial litigators than at any point in recent years.

This guide provides a practitioner-first roadmap, covering the doctrinal tests, the critical distinction between unconditional and conditional bank guarantees, recent Supreme Court and High Court precedents, RBI regulatory norms, and a step-by-step tactical checklist for in-house counsel and external litigators who must act within hours of receiving an invocation notice.

Executive Summary and Immediate Actions

A bank guarantee (BG) is an independent, autonomous contract between the issuing bank and the beneficiary. Indian courts have consistently held that the bank’s obligation under a BG is distinct from the underlying contract between the parties. This independence principle means that courts are extremely reluctant to grant an injunction against invocation of bank guarantee, doing so effectively overrides a contractually assumed risk and impedes legitimate commercial expectations.

That reluctance, however, is not absolute. The Supreme Court of India has recognised two exceptions where courts may restrain invocation:

  1. Fraud: The beneficiary’s demand is based on demonstrable, egregious fraud that vitiates the very foundation of the guarantee.
  2. Special equities (irretrievable injustice): Allowing invocation would cause irreparable harm of such magnitude that no monetary compensation could adequately remedy it.

If your organisation has just received an invocation demand, time is the most critical resource. The following five-step emergency checklist should be initiated before formal legal pleadings are drafted.

Five-Step Emergency Checklist

  • Preserve all evidence immediately. Secure the original BG instrument, the demand notice, all bank correspondence, and the underlying contract. Create timestamped digital copies.
  • Notify your bank in writing. Send a formal written communication to the issuing bank alerting it to the disputed invocation and requesting that payment be held pending resolution. This does not legally bind the bank but creates a contemporaneous record.
  • File an urgent interim application. Approach the appropriate court, civil court under Order 39 of the Code of Civil Procedure, a Commercial Court, or the arbitral tribunal under Section 17 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, within 24–48 hours of the demand.
  • Prepare a detailed affidavit. The affidavit must set out, with documentary support, the specific fraud or special equities ground relied upon. Vague allegations will not suffice.
  • Seek ex parte relief if payment is imminent. Where the bank has indicated it will honour the demand within days, apply for ex parte ad interim relief on the first date of listing itself.

What Is Invocation of a Bank Guarantee?

The invocation of a bank guarantee, also called encashment, is the act by which a beneficiary calls upon the issuing bank to pay the guaranteed sum. In commercial practice, BGs serve as security for performance obligations (performance guarantees), advance payment recovery (advance payment guarantees), or financial creditworthiness (financial guarantees). Once a valid demand is made, the bank is ordinarily obligated to pay without investigating the merits of any dispute between the applicant and the beneficiary.

This independent-contract doctrine means that even if the applicant believes the underlying claim is baseless, the bank’s duty to pay remains intact unless a court intervenes. The practical consequence is stark: once payment is made, the applicant’s remedy shifts from preventing the outflow to recovering money already disbursed, a far more difficult and protracted exercise. Understanding the distinction between unconditional and conditional bank guarantees is therefore essential before deciding on a litigation strategy.

Unconditional vs Conditional BG, Why the Distinction Matters

Not every bank guarantee operates identically. Whether a BG is unconditional (payable on mere demand) or conditional (payable only upon fulfilment of stipulated preconditions) fundamentally affects both the bank’s payment obligation and the court’s willingness to intervene. In-house counsel assessing whether to seek an injunction against invocation of bank guarantee must first classify the instrument correctly.

Comparison: Unconditional vs Conditional Bank Guarantees

Feature Unconditional BG Conditional BG
Bank’s payment obligation Immediate on demand; the bank does not investigate the underlying dispute or require supporting documentation beyond the demand itself. Payment depends on stated conditions, submission of specified documents, certificates, or proof of default. The bank may verify whether conditions are met.
Court reluctance to restrain Very high. Injunction granted only in exceptional cases where egregious fraud or special equities are established with clear evidence. Comparatively lower. If the beneficiary has not satisfied the preconditions, courts are more willing to restrain invocation on procedural grounds alone.
Practical remedy if wrongly invoked After payment, the applicant must pursue a separate claim against the beneficiary or bank, recovery is difficult and delayed. Interlocutory relief is more readily obtainable if preconditions remain unfulfilled, making preventive action more realistic.
Evidentiary burden on applicant Must demonstrate fraud that is “of an egregious nature” or irretrievable injustice, a high threshold. Must demonstrate non-fulfilment of conditions, a relatively lighter procedural burden.

The overwhelming majority of commercial BGs in India, particularly those issued for government contracts, infrastructure projects, and large-scale procurement, are unconditional. Early indications from recent Delhi High Court orders suggest that courts are scrutinising the specific language of each instrument more carefully before applying the strict non-interference rule, reinforcing the need for precise drafting at the contract stage. For a broader discussion of how dispute resolution mechanisms interact with guarantee enforcement, see the practical comparison of arbitration and litigation.

The Legal Tests: Fraud and Special Equities

The twin exceptions to the non-interference rule form the doctrinal backbone of every application seeking an injunction against invocation of bank guarantee in India. Both exceptions demand rigorous evidence and precise pleading. Courts will not entertain generalised or speculative allegations.

The Fraud Exception, Elements and Evidence

The fraud ground requires the applicant to demonstrate that the beneficiary’s demand is rooted in dishonesty so fundamental that honouring the guarantee would itself amount to facilitating a fraud. Indian courts have consistently held that the fraud must be “egregious”, meaning clear, obvious, and established by uncontroverted evidence at the interlocutory stage itself.

The elements that courts typically assess include:

  • Fabrication of documents. The beneficiary has submitted forged or materially altered documents to trigger the invocation, for example, falsified inspection reports or fictitious breach notices.
  • Non-existent obligation. The underlying contract has been fully performed, validly terminated, or never came into existence, and the beneficiary’s demand has no contractual basis whatsoever.
  • Collusion. The beneficiary has acted in concert with a third party to create artificial grounds for invocation.
  • Bad faith connected to the guarantee itself. The demand is made not to enforce a legitimate contractual right but as a pressure tactic in unrelated negotiations, though this ground is difficult to prove and courts remain cautious.

Documentary evidence is paramount. Courts will expect the applicant’s affidavit to exhibit the original contract, the BG instrument, the demand notice, and specific contemporaneous records (emails, audit reports, delivery confirmations) that contradict the beneficiary’s claims. Mere assertions of contractual dispute, however genuine, do not cross the fraud threshold.

Special Equities, Irretrievable Injustice

The special equities exception, sometimes framed as the “irretrievable injustice” ground, applies where allowing the invocation would cause harm so disproportionate and unrecoverable that no damages award could later put the applicant back in its original position. This is not simply a matter of financial hardship; the harm must be of a qualitative character that money alone cannot remedy.

Courts have considered factors such as:

  • Insolvency or winding-up risk. Payment under the guarantee would render the applicant insolvent, and the beneficiary lacks the financial standing to refund the amount if the applicant later succeeds on the merits.
  • Irreversible business consequences. Invocation would trigger cascading defaults across multiple contracts or lead to debarment from government tenders.
  • Proportionality. The guaranteed sum is grossly disproportionate to the actual loss, and the beneficiary’s demand appears opportunistic rather than compensatory.

Industry observers expect the special equities ground to be invoked more frequently in 2026, particularly in infrastructure and defence procurement disputes where single invocations can imperil an entire project pipeline. The distinction between revocation of bank guarantee (a contractual or administrative act) and court-ordered injunction is important here: revocation can only occur where the BG’s own terms permit it or where all parties consent, whereas an injunction is a judicial remedy imposed over the bank’s independent obligation.

Procedure and Tactical Steps to Obtain an Injunction Against Invocation of Bank Guarantee

Selecting the correct procedural route is as important as establishing the substantive grounds. The choice depends on whether an arbitration clause governs the underlying dispute and the urgency of the application.

Procedural Routes

  • Civil court, Order 39 CPC. Where no arbitration clause exists, an application under Order 39 Rules 1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure is the standard route. Commercial Courts with designated jurisdiction over BG disputes offer faster listing timelines.
  • Arbitral tribunal, Section 17. Where an arbitration clause governs the underlying contract, the arbitral tribunal (once constituted) can grant interim measures under Section 17 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. Such orders are enforceable as court orders.
  • Court, Section 9. Before the arbitral tribunal is constituted, or where the tribunal cannot act with sufficient urgency, the applicant may approach the court under Section 9 of the Arbitration Act for interim relief. This is frequently the fastest route in practice.
  • Ex parte ad interim orders. Where payment is days or hours away, courts may grant ex parte relief on the first hearing itself, but only on a strong prima facie showing and an undertaking to serve the respondent immediately.

Evidence Checklist for a Prima Facie Case

A well-prepared application should exhibit the following documents:

  1. Certified copy of the bank guarantee instrument (original or bank-attested copy).
  2. The beneficiary’s invocation/demand notice.
  3. The underlying contract, including all amendments and addenda.
  4. Correspondence between the parties demonstrating the contractual position (performance records, completion certificates, breach notices).
  5. Evidence of fraud (if relied upon), forged documents, fabricated reports, with expert verification where possible.
  6. Financial statements or auditor’s certificate demonstrating irretrievable injustice (if relying on special equities).
  7. Bank correspondence, any communication from the issuing bank confirming receipt of the demand or timeline for payment.

Balancing Convenience and Irreparable Harm

Courts apply the standard tripartite test for interim injunctions: prima facie case, balance of convenience, and irreparable harm. In the context of bank guarantees, the balance of convenience inquiry often turns on whether the beneficiary can be adequately compensated by damages if the injunction is granted and later found to have been wrongly issued, and conversely, whether the applicant can recover monies already paid if the injunction is refused. A practical tactical timeline runs as follows: Day 0, receive demand; within 24 hours, preserve evidence and instruct counsel; Day 1–3, draft application and affidavit; Day 3–7, file and seek urgent listing; Day 7–14, interim hearing and order.

For disputes involving complex commercial matters in India, early engagement of specialist litigation counsel is critical.

Recent Case Law (2024–2026): Delhi HC 2026 and Key Supreme Court Precedents

The bank guarantee latest judgement developments in 2026 have refined the practical application of the fraud and special equities tests. The following decisions are the most significant for practitioners.

Delhi High Court, 12 February 2026

In a decision published on 12 February 2026, the Delhi High Court examined the evidentiary standard required to obtain an injunction restraining the invocation of an unconditional performance guarantee. The court reaffirmed the settled position that mere contractual disputes, including allegations of delay, defective workmanship, or partial non-performance, do not constitute fraud of the kind that warrants judicial intervention. Critically, the court emphasised that the applicant must place before the court “clear, unambiguous, and contemporaneous” documentary evidence of fraud at the time of filing itself; subsequent discoveries cannot retroactively justify an injunction that lacked an evidentiary foundation at the outset.

Supreme Court Precedents Establishing the Doctrine

The Supreme Court of India has, across several landmark decisions, laid down the twin-exception framework that governs every injunction against invocation of bank guarantee application. Among the most frequently cited authorities is a December 2019 decision where the Court held that the independent nature of a bank guarantee must not be undermined except in cases of established fraud or where allowing encashment would result in irretrievable injustice. The Court underscored that bank guarantees are the lifeblood of international commerce and that judicial restraint in interfering with their invocation is essential to maintaining commercial confidence.

Earlier Supreme Court authorities, including decisions on government infrastructure BGs and public sector procurement guarantees, have consistently applied the same framework, rejecting attempts to broaden the exceptions beyond fraud and special equities. The likely practical effect of the 2026 Delhi High Court ruling is to further tighten the evidentiary requirements, making it harder for applicants to secure ex parte relief without a robust documentary record.

High Court Developments (2020–2025)

Across the Bombay, Madras, and Calcutta High Courts, the period from 2020 to 2025 has seen a steady stream of decisions reinforcing the non-interference principle while occasionally finding special equities in extreme cases, typically where the applicant demonstrated imminent insolvency and the beneficiary’s financial standing cast doubt on the prospect of recovery. These decisions collectively confirm that the threshold remains high but is not insurmountable where the evidence is compelling. A searchable repository of relevant judgments can be accessed through IndianKanoon’s BG invocation database.

Regulatory and Bank-Practice Context: RBI Norms and Bank Procedures

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) regulates bank guarantee issuance and invocation through its master directions and periodic circulars. Banks issuing guarantees are required to exercise due diligence before issuance, maintain adequate margins, and honour valid demands promptly. Importantly, RBI guidelines on bank guarantee reinforce the independent nature of the instrument, banks are instructed not to delay payment on a valid demand merely because the applicant has raised a dispute, unless a court order specifically restrains payment.

In practice, most issuing banks require the original bank guarantee instrument to be presented by the beneficiary at the time of invocation. However, the question of whether the original document is strictly mandatory varies: some bank guarantee formats and RBI directions contemplate invocation via authenticated electronic communication, particularly for guarantees governed by URDG 758 (Uniform Rules for Demand Guarantees). Applicants seeking an injunction should verify the specific terms of their guarantee instrument and any applicable RBI circulars. For broader context on the RBI’s new banking rules for 2026, practitioners should consult the latest regulatory guidance.

Where a court grants an injunction, the bank is legally bound to withhold payment until the order is vacated. Banks generally require a certified copy of the court order and will not accept informal notifications. Timely service of the injunction order on the bank, ideally on the same day, is therefore a critical operational step.

Practical Templates and In-House Counsel Checklist

For in-house legal teams and contract managers who may face BG invocation for the first time, a structured response framework is essential. The following checklist can be adapted to any industry sector:

  • Pre-dispute preparedness. Maintain a centralised register of all outstanding BGs with expiry dates, guaranteed amounts, beneficiary details, and copies of the guarantee instruments. Ensure originals are stored securely.
  • Demand received, first 24 hours. Immediately instruct external counsel. Provide the original BG, demand notice, contract file, and all correspondence. Obtain a bank statement confirming the current status of the guarantee.
  • Affidavit preparation, key headings. Brief factual background; nature and terms of the BG; details of the invocation demand; grounds for restraining invocation (fraud / special equities); documentary evidence annexed; balance of convenience and irreparable harm analysis; prayer for interim relief.
  • Post-filing actions. Serve the court order on the bank immediately upon grant. Notify the beneficiary’s counsel. Prepare for the respondent’s reply and any vacating application.

The Global Law Experts India lawyer directory connects businesses with dispute resolution specialists experienced in BG litigation across all major High Courts.

Conclusion and Next Steps

Securing an injunction against invocation of bank guarantee in India remains an uphill battle, but it is achievable where the evidence supports fraud or special equities and where the application is filed with urgency, precision, and comprehensive documentation. The 2026 Delhi High Court rulings reinforce that courts will intervene when the evidence is compelling, but will not tolerate speculative or belated applications. For businesses facing an imminent demand, the priority is to preserve evidence, classify the guarantee correctly, and approach the right forum without delay. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides access to experienced dispute resolution counsel across India who can assist with urgent BG litigation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ameya Gokhale at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Delhi High Court, Judgment (12 February 2026)
  2. Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, Handbook on Injunctions against Invocation of Bank Guarantees
  3. Supreme Court of India, Judgment (18 December 2019)
  4. GNLU Law Review, Special Equities and Bank Guarantees
  5. International Bar Association, Force Majeure and Bank Guarantee Enforcement
  6. IndianKanoon, Bank Guarantee Invocation Case Database
  7. Singhania & Partners, Supreme Court on BG Invocation
  8. GNLU SRDC-ADR Magazine, Section 17 Injunctions against BG Invocation
  9. Reserve Bank of India, Bank Guarantee Circulars
  10. CaseMine, Director General Project Varsha v. Navayuga Van Oord JV (Delhi HC)

FAQs

What happens when a bank guarantee is invoked?
When a beneficiary invokes a bank guarantee, it presents a formal demand to the issuing bank for payment of the guaranteed sum. The bank is ordinarily obligated to pay without investigating the underlying dispute. Once paid, the bank debits the applicant’s account or calls upon the applicant to reimburse the amount, typically with interest and charges.
Revocation differs from injunction. A BG can be revoked only if its terms expressly permit revocation, or if the beneficiary consents. Unilateral revocation by the applicant or bank is not possible for irrevocable guarantees. An injunction, by contrast, is a court-ordered restraint on the bank’s payment obligation, it does not revoke the guarantee itself but suspends its encashment.
RBI master directions require banks to honour valid demands promptly, maintain prescribed margins, and exercise due diligence at the issuance stage. Banks must not delay payment on the basis of a dispute between the applicant and beneficiary unless a court order specifically restrains payment. Practitioners should consult the latest RBI circulars available at rbi.org.in for current requirements.
In most domestic banking practice, banks require the original guarantee instrument to be presented or surrendered upon invocation. However, where the BG is governed by URDG 758 or where the instrument’s own terms permit authenticated electronic demands, physical presentation of the original may not be mandatory. The specific terms of each guarantee must be reviewed.
Indian courts will restrain invocation of an unconditional BG only where the applicant establishes either egregious fraud, supported by clear, contemporaneous documentary evidence, or special equities demonstrating that payment would cause irretrievable injustice that cannot be compensated by damages. The threshold is deliberately high to protect the integrity of commercial guarantees.
Speed is critical. Banks may honour demands within days of receipt. The applicant should instruct counsel within hours, file an application within 24–72 hours, and seek ex parte interim relief at the first available hearing. Delay weakens the claim for urgent relief and may render the application infructuous if the bank has already made payment.
Once payment is made, the applicant must pursue a separate suit or arbitration against the beneficiary for recovery of the amount wrongly received. The applicant may also seek attachment of the beneficiary’s assets to secure the claim. Recovery proceedings are invariably slower and costlier than preventive injunctive relief, underscoring the importance of acting before encashment occurs.

Find the right Advisory Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading advisory professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
ADVISORS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF ADVISORS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GAE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Injunction Against Invocation of Bank Guarantee: India (2026), Fraud & Special Equities, Conditional vs Unconditional Bgs

Send welcome message

Custom Message