Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BAKUL CASHEW CO. & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SALES TAX OFFICER QUILON & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/03/1986
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 2239 1986 SCR (1) 610
1986 SCC (2) 365 1986 SCALE (1)380
ACT:
Promissory estoppel, plea of - Phrases used by
Ministers which cannot form the basis for a plea of
estoppel, detailed Sales Tax exemption granted
retrospectively by the State Government by GOMS 127/73/ID
dated 12.10.1973 withdrawn by a leter GOMS 143/73/ID dated
9.11.1973 issued under section 10(3) of the Kerala General
Sales Tax Act, 1963 (Kerala Act 15 of 1963) as amended,
validity of - Power of Government to cancel the earlier
Notification vis-a-vis the right of the cashew Factory
owners to secure the exemption.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants are Cashew Processors owning and/or
working cashew factories wherein nearly about 80 per cent of
the raw nuts processed were being imported during the
relevant time from African countries. The import of raw nuts
were canalised through the Cashew Corporation of India and
they were allotted to the appellants and various other
factory owners who were engaged in the business of
processing cashewnuts. There was delay in making the
assessment of sales tax payable by them under section 5 of
the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 during the period
1970 to 1974 and the Department commenced to make
assessments in or about the year 1974. The Government in the
meantime issued a Notification dated 12.10.73 granting
exemption to cashew manufacturers for the period between
September 1, 1970 and September 30, 1973 and had later
cancelled it by Notification dated 9.11.73, that is within
three weeks of the earlier Notification granting exemption.
The appellants filed a writ petition contending: (i)
that the Government was precluded by the rule of promissory
estoppel from claiming the purchase tax in respect of
cashewnuts imported from African countries; and (ii) that
the subsequent withdrawal of the exemption granted on
12.10.73 was bad. The Writ Petitions having been dismissed,
the appellants have come up in appeal by way of special
leave.
611
Dismissing the appeal, the Court
^
HELD : 1.1 The appellants in the instant case, are not
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entitled to any relief either on the principle of promissory
estoppel or on the basis of the earlier Notification issued
under section 10 of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963.
[621 E-F]
1.2 The whole case of the promissory estoppel lacks the
necessary factual foundation. In the instant case, the
allegations made in the petition do not establish (i) that
there was a definite representation by the Government to the
effect that the Government will not levy the tax; (ii) that
the appellants in fact altered their position by acting upon
such representation; and (iii) that they had suffered from
some prejudice sufficient to constitute an estoppel. [617 F-
G]
1.3 In cases of this nature, the evidence of
representation should be clear and unambiguous. It "must be
certain to every intent." The statements that are made by
ministers at such meetings, such as, "let us see", "we shall
consider the question of granting of exemption
sympathetically", "we shall get the matter examined", "you
have a good case for exemption" etc. even if true, cannot
form the basis for a plea of estoppel. The events that have
taken place subsequently belie the fact of any such promise
by the ministers. In fact the Cashew Corporation of India
had made a representation to the Government of India on May
7, 1971 and the Government of India wrote to the State
Government on March 4, 1972 urging that the exemption prayed
for by the cashew manufacturers may be favourably considered
by the Government of Kerala. The Government of Kerala
however rejected the said request. Then on further pressure
being put upon it, it issued the notification dated October
12, 1973 and immediately thereafter withdraw it after it
encountered severe public criticism. This conduct on their
part is not consistent with the appellants’ case that they
had actually promised in the year 1971 to exempt the cashew
trade from payment of the sales tax. [617 C-F]
2.1 The State Government had the necessary power to
cancel any Notification earlier issued, which power of
cancellation has been expressly conferred by section 10 (3)
of Kerala General Sales Tax Act. The authority which can
issue a
612
Notification may certainly cancel it also. The State
Government did so and cancelled the earlier Notification as
there was a public hue and cry that the State Government had
shown undue favour to the Kerala Cashewnut factory owners at
a time when the State Government was passing through grave
and difficult financial position. Moreover the transactions
in question related to the past period. [618 H, 621 D-E]
2.2 An authority which has the power to make
subordinate legislation cannot make it with retrospective
effect unles it is so authorised by the Legislature which
has conferred that power on it. The power of exemption in
the instant case was exercised through a retrospective
Notification which was a piece of subordinate legislation.
Further on the date on which the notification was issued the
Kerala Government had no such power under section 10 of the
Act as it stood then to issue a notification granting
exemption with retrospective effect. Such power was actually
conferred on it later on by the Kerala Legislature only by
way of amendment in 1980 by Kerala Act 19 of 1980. By the
addition of the words "either prospectively or
retrospectively" in sub-section (1) of section 10 the State
Legislature has now conferred the necessary power on the
State Government to grant exemption with retrospective
effect. This amendment also suggests that earlier the
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Government had no such power to grant exemption with
retrospective effect. [619 A-B; 620 B-C; 621 A-C]
Income Tax Officer v. M.C. Ponnoose & Ors., [1970] 1
S.C.R. 678 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1725
(NT) of 1977.
From the Judgment and Order dated 1st December, 1976 of
the Kerala High Court in O.P. No. 1740 of 1976.
P. Govindan Nair, Mrs. A.K. Verma, S. Sukumaran and
D.N. Misra for the Appellants.
T.S. Krishnamurthy Iyer, Karunakaran Nambiar and V.J.
Francis for the Respondents.
613
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. This appeal by special leave is filed
against the judgment dated December 1, 1976 in the petition
bearing Writ Petition No. O.P. 1740 of 1976 on the file of
the Kerala High Court filed by the afore-mentioned 26
appellants and 20 others. They prayed in the Writ Petition
inter alia for the issue of a writ in the nature of mandamus
to the State Government of Kerala to give effect to the
notification issued by the State Government bearing No.
G.O.MS. 127/73/ID dated October 12, 1973 under section 10 of
the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 (15 of 1963)
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) by which the State
Government had retrospectively granted an exemption in
respect of the tax payable under section 5 of the said Act
by the cashew manufacturers in that State on the purchase
turnover of cashewnuts imported from outside India through
the Cashew Corporation of India for the period between
September 1, 1970 and September 30, 1973 after quashing the
subsequent notification bearing No. G.O.MS. 143/73/TD dated
November 9, 1973 issued under section 10(3) of the Act
cancelling the above said notification dated October 12,
1973. The appellants and the other persons who had filed the
writ petition before the High Court are cashew processors
owning and/or working cashew factories wherein nearly about
80 per cent of the raw nuts processed were being imported
during the relevant time from African countries. The import
of raw nuts was canalised through the Cashew Corporation of
India and they were allotted to the appellants and various
other factory owners who were engaged in the business of
processing cashewnuts. It appears that there was delay in
making the assessment of tax payable by them under section 5
of the Act during the periods 1970 to 1974 and the
Department commenced to make assessments in or about the
year 1974. The Government in the meanwhile had issued the
notification dated October 12, 1973 granting exemption to
cashew manufacturers for the period between September 1,
1970 and September 30, 1973 and had later on cancelled it by
notification dated November 9, 1973 within about three weeks
from the date on which the exemption had been granted. It is
not necessary to refer to all the allegations made in the
writ petition for purposes of this case since the only point
urged before us relates to the right of the appellants to
secure the exemption as stated in the notification dated
October 12, 1973 by virtue of the rule of
614
promissory estoppel. The appellants urged two contentions
before the High Court in support of their plea : (i) that
the Government was precluded by the rule of promissory
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estoppel from claiming the purchase tax in respect of
cashewnuts imported from African countries and (ii) that the
exemption that had been granted on October 12, 1973 could
not be withdrawn by the subsequent notification issued on
November 9, 1973. In support of first limb of their argument
the appellants depended upon the representation which was
alleged to have been made on behalf of the Government by the
Chief Minister, the Industries Minister and the Revenue
Minister at a meeting held on April 25, 1971 and in support
of their second contention they depended upon section 10 of
the Act. The Government contested the case of the appellants
on both these points. The High Court upheld the case of the
State Government and rejected the said contentions. It,
however, directed the Kerala Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal to
make assessments taking into account the other contentions
of the assessees. This appeal by special leave is filed
against the judgment of the High Court of Kerala in the said
writ petition.
The allegations regarding the plea based on promissory
estoppel are found in Paragraphs 10 & 11 of the petition
which reads thus :-
"10. When the scheme of canalisation came to be
introduced in September, 1970, the members of the
cashew industry like the first petitioners were
keen that the purchases of raw cashewnuts in the
form of allotment from the said Corporation should
not be subjected to tax under the said Act as was
the case under the open general licence scheme.
The then Chairman of the said Corporation, Shri
M.C. Sarin, as also its Managing Director Shri
Z.K. Joseph assured the members of the cashew
industry that such purchases would not be exigible
to tax under the said Act. In a meeting held on
the 25th April 1971 where Shri Z.K. Joseph of the
said Corporation was also present the
representatives of the industry were assured by
the Chief Minister Shri Achuta Menon, the then
Industries Minister Shri N.E. Bellaram and the
then Revenue Minister Baby John that no tax would
be levied under the said Act on the turnover of
African raw nuts.
615
11. Subsequently, for three years, the Respondents
did not initiate assessment proceeding against the
allottees like the first petitioner and gave the
allottees to believe that no tax would be levied
on such purchases, relying upon which the
allottees have quoted prices for exports and made
huge commitments. If such imports were to be
regarded as taxable purchases by the respondents,
the allottees, like the first petitioner would not
have made commitments with the foreign buyers. In
fact, as late as 12th October, 1973, a
notification was issued by the fourth respondent,
a copy of which is hereto annexed and marked Exh.
’A’ under section 10 of the said Act giving effect
to such representations. The said notification was
published in Kerala Gazette on 23rd October, 1973,
clearly stating that the exemption to such
purchases was being accorded on the ground of
public interest. Without assigning reasons or
showing any change of circumstances, in less than
twenty days, another notification was issued on
9th November, 1973, a copy of which is hereto
annexed and marked Exh. ’B’ withdrawing the said
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exemption."
In the counter-affidavit filed on behalf of the State
Government it is stated in Paragraphs 18 & 19 thus :
"18. The averments in para 11 are denied. The
Cashew Corporation of India wrote to the
Government by Memorandum dated 3.5.1971 that
cashew industry may be exempted from payment of
tax under the Kerala General Sales Tax Act on
their purchases of imported raw cashewnuts. The
Ministry of Foreign Trade also addressed a
communication to the State Government dated
4.3.1972 that the matter may be sympathetically
considered. The cashew manufacturers and
exporters’ Associations also moved the Government
in this behalf by memorandum dated 6.3.1972. The
Government directed the Board of Revenue (Taxes)
to submit a report in the matter. The matter was
engaging the attention of the Board of Revenue and
the State Government from some time. In
616
view of very heavy stakes involved in the matter,
the Government had to analyse the entire
situation, especially with reference to the very
high amount of the Revenue involved. It was
reported that the grant of exemption will involved
loss of revenue of at least one crore of rupees
per annum. After consideration of the matter the
State Government decided to reject the request of
exemption prayed for. The Cashew Corporation of
India and the Government of India were given a
reply communicating the decision of the State
Government in February, 1973. Thereafter the
Kerala State Cashew Development Corporation
requested the Govt. to re-examine the decision as
the levy of tax would be heavy burden on the
industry. The Government passed an order (Ext.A)
granting the exemption for the period 1.9.1970 to
30.9.1973. It was resolved then that tax should be
levied from 1.10.1973 onwards. There was
considerable criticism about the grant of
exemption especially in the context of the grave
and difficult financial position of the State.
After mature consideration, by notification dated
9.11.1973 (Ext.B) the earlier Government order
dated 12.10.1973 (Ext.A) was cancelled.
19. The allottees were not given to believe that
no tax would be levied on such
purchases............"
In the reply affidavit filed on behlaf of the
appellants the above allegations made in the counter-
affidavit are denied.
The allegations in the appeal do not contain any
information about who was present at the so called meeting,
what representation was actually made, whether any of the
appellants acted on the basis of the said representation and
how he was prejudiced thereby. No material in the form of
documents in support of that plea that they altered their
price structure relying upon the alleged representation was
also produced by the appellants. The appellants were owners
of existing factories. None of them is shown to have
established any new factory relying on the representation of
any of the ministers. They were carrying on the business in
their
617
factories already. It is not their case that they would have
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closed down their factories but for the alleged
representation made to them. Nor it is their case that they
gave up a more advantageous project and diverted their
capital towards the cashewnut factory believing that the
Government would grant exemption from payment of tax and had
suffered any loss thereby. It is contended that the officer
who had filed the counter-affidavit could not have known
what transpired at the alleged meeting. The same plea is
available against the appellants too. The person who has
sworn to the affidavit on behalf of the appellants also does
not say that he was present at the meeting or that he had
any personal knowledge about what transpired at the meeting.
He does not give any material details about what actually
transpired there. In cases of this nature the evidence of
representation should be clear and unambiguous. It ’must be
certain to every intent’. The statements that are made by
ministers at such meetings, such as, ’let us see’, ’we shall
consider the question of granting of exemption
sympathetically’, ’we shall get the matter examined’, ’you
have a good case for exemption’ etc. even if true, cannot
form the basis for a plea of estoppel. Moreover, the events
that have taken place subsequently belie the fact of any
such promise by the ministers. It is seen that the Cashew
Corporation of India had made a representation to the
Government of India on May 7, 1971 and the Government of
India wrote to the State Government on March 4, 1972 urging
that the exemption prayed for by the cashew manufacturers
may be favourably considered by the Government of Kerala.
The Government of Kerala however rejected the said request.
Then on further pressure being put upon it, it issued the
notification dated October 12, 1973 and immediately
thereafter withdrew it after it encountered severe public
criticism. This conduct on their part is not consistent with
the appellants’ case that they had actually promised in the
year 1971 to exempt the cashew trade from payment of the
tax. The allegations made in the petition do not establish
(i) that there was a definite representation by the
Government to the effect that the Government will not levy
the tax; (ii) that the appellants in fact altered their
position by acting upon such representation, and (iii) that
they had suffered some prejudice sufficient to constitute an
estoppel. Hence the whole case of promissory estoppel lacks
the necessary factual foundation. It is, therefore,
unnecessary to consider the question of law
618
whether the plea of promissory estoppel can be raised
against a legislation which levies tax and whether an
assessee can claim exemption from a tax levied by the
legislature merely on the basis of a representation of a
minister.
We shall now proceed to consider the plea relating to
the power of the Government to cancel the notification
issued under section 10(1) of the Act.
During the relevant period section 10 of the Act read
thus :
"10. Power of Government to grant exemption and
reduction in rate of tax : (1) The Government may,
if they consider it necessary in the public
interest, by notification in the Gazette, make an
exemption or reduction in rate in respect of any
tax payable under this Act :
(i) on the sale or purchase of any specified goods
or class of goods, at all points or at a specified
point or points in the series of sales or purchase
by successive dealers, or
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(ii) by any specified class of person, in regard
to the whole or any part of their turnover.
(2) Any exemption from tax, or reduction in the
rate of tax, notified under sub-section (1). -
(a) may extend to the whole State or any specified
area or areas therein,
(b) may be subject to such restrictions and
conditions as may be specified in the
notification.
(3) The Government may, by notification in the
Gazette, cancel or vary any notification issued
under sub-section (1)."
As regards the power of Government to cancel the
notification which had been issued earlier, the High Court
has upheld the power of the Government to do so. We think
that the
619
High Court was right in taking that view. The liability to
pay sales tax arose at the point of time when the purchases
were made. The power of exemption in the instant case was
exercised through a retrospective notification which was a
piece of subordinate legislation. It has been held by this
Court that an authority which has the power to make
subordinate legislation cannot make it with retrospective
effect unless it is so authorised by the legislature which
has conferred that power on it. The law on the above point
is neatly summarised in Income Tax Officer v. M.C. Ponnoosse
& Ors. [1970] 1 S.C.R. 678 at pages 681-682 thus :
"Now it is open to a soverign legislature to enact
laws which have retrospective operation. Even when
the Parliament enacts retrospective laws such laws
are - in the words of Willes, J. in Phillips v.
Eyre (40 Law J. Rep (N.S.) Q.B. 28 at p.37) - ’no
doubt prima facie of questionable policy and
contrary to the general principle that legislation
by which the conduct of mankind is to be regulated
ought, when introduced for the first time, to deal
with future acts, and ought not to change the
character of past transactions carried on upon the
faith of the then existing law.’ The courts will
not, therefore, ascribe retrospectivity to new
laws affecting rights unless by express words or
necessary implication it appears that such was the
intention of the legislature. The Parliament can
delegate its legislative power within the
recognised limits. Where any rule or regulation is
made by the person or authority to whom such
powers have been delegated by the legislature it
may or may not be possible to make the same so as
to give retrospective operation. It will depend on
the language employed in the statutory provision
which may in express terms or by necessary
implication empower the authority concerned to
make a rule or regulation with retrospective
effect. But where no such language is to be found
it has been held by the courts that the person or
authority exercising subordinate legislative
functions cannot make a rule, regulation or bye-
law which can operate with retrospective effect;
(see Subba Rao, J. in Dr. Indramani Pyarelal Gupta
v. W.R. Nathu & Others
620
(1963 S.C.R. 721) - the majority not having
expressed any different opinion on the point; Modi
Food Products Ltd. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax
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U.P. (A.I.R. 1956 All. 35); India Sugar Refineries
Ltd. v. State of Mysore (A.I.R. 1960 Mys. 326) and
General S. Shivdev Singh & Anr. v. The State of
Punjab & Others (1959 P.L.R. 514)."
In the instant case on the date on which the
notification was issued the Kerala Government had no such
power under section 10 of the Act as it stood then to issue
a notification granting exemption with retrospective effect.
Such power was actually conferred on it later on by the
Kerala Legislature only by way of amendment in 1980 by
Kerala Act 19 of 1980. Now section 10 of the Act reads thus
:
"10. Power of Government to grant exemption and
reduction in rate of tax - (1) the Government may,
if they consider it necessary in the public
interest by notification in the Gazette, make an
exemption or reduction in rate, either
prospectively or retrospectively in respect of any
tax payable under this Act:-
(i) On the sale or purchase of any specified goods
or class of goods, at all points or at a specified
point or points in the series of sales or
purchases by successive dealers, or
(ii) by any specified class of persons in regard
to the whole or any part of the turnover.
(2) Any exemption from tax, or reduction in the
rate of tax, notified under sub-section (1), -
(a) may extend to the whole State or to any
specified area or areas therein, -
(b) may be subject to such restriction and
conditions as may be specified in the
notification.
(3) The Government may by notification in the
621
Gazette cancel or vary any notification issued
under sub-section (1)."
(emphasis added)
By the addition of the words ’either prospectively or
retrospectively’ by the aforesaid amendment, the State
Legislature has now conferred the necessary power on the
State Government to grant exemption with retrospective
effect. This amendment also suggests that earlier the
Government had no such power to grant exemption with
retrospective effect.
Hence the impugned notification which granted exemption
on October 12, 1973 for the earlier period between September
1, 1970 and September 30, 1973 was ineffective. It was also
not shown that relying upon the notification during the
period between October 12, 1973 and November 9, 1973 the
appellants had done any act which attracted the rule of
estoppel. The authority which can issue a notification may
cancel it also. Section 10(3) of the Act confers such power
of cancellation expressly. The State Government did so and
cancelled the earlier notification as there was a public hue
and cry that the State Government had shown undue favour of
the Kerala cashewnut factory owners at a time when the State
was passing through grave and difficult financial position.
Moreover the transactions in question related to the past
period.
Hence the appellants are not entitled to any relief
either on the principle of promissory estoppel or on the
basis of the earlier notification issued under section 10 of
the Act.
We agree with the High Court that the appellants had
not made out any case. The appeal is dismissed.
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Before concluding we may refer to a submission made on
behalf of the appellants that by virtue of the amendment by
Act 103 of 1976 to the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 by the
introduction of section 2(ab) in it they are entitled to
certain relief. We have not considered the effect of the
said amendment on the transactions in question. We express
no opinion on it. It is open to the appellants to raise the
point in the assessment proceedings or in any other
proceedings under the Act which may be pending now.
There will be no order as to costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
622