Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S MOTILAL PADAMPAT SUGAR MILLS CO. (P.) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/12/1978
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 621 1979 SCR (2) 641
1979 SCC (2) 409
CITATOR INFO :
F 1980 SC 768 (1)
O 1980 SC1285 (40)
R 1983 SC 848 (8)
E&R 1985 SC 941 (4)
R 1986 SC 806 (9,10,11,12,13,14)
RF 1986 SC 872 (181,182)
F 1987 SC 590 (7)
RF 1987 SC2414 (22,23)
RF 1988 SC1247 (3)
RF 1989 SC1933 (28)
R 1989 SC2138 (64)
C 1991 SC 14 (11)
D 1991 SC 818 (18)
RF 1992 SC1075 (3)
RF 1992 SC2169 (28)
ACT:
Waiver doctrine of-Waiver is a question of fact and it
must be properly pleaded and proved.
Public law-Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel, its
contours and parameters, explained.
Estoppel-Estoppel in pais-Promissory Estoppel-
Applicability of the doctrine against the Government and
extent threreof-Doctrine of executive necessity whether
could be a valid defence and if so under what circumstance.
Representations de futureo by public body if
enforceable ex-contractu by a person who acts upon such
representation or promise intended to be acted on-Burden of
proof-Degree of standard of proof in such cases.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant is a limited company which is primarily
engaged in the business of manufacture and sale of sugar and
it has a cold storage plant and a steel foundry. With
reference to a news item dated 10th October 1968 in the
National Herald in which it was stated that the State of
Uttar Pradesh had decided to give exemption from sales tax
for a period of three years under section 4A of the U.P.
Sales Tax Act to all new industrial units in the State with
a view to enabling them "to come on firm footing in
developing stage", the appellant addressed a letter dated
11th October 1968 to the Director of Industries stating that
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in view of the sales tax holiday announced by the Government
the appellant intended to set up a Hydrogenation plant for
manufacture of Vanaspati and sought for confirmation that
this industrial unit which it proposed to set up, would be
entitled to sales tax holiday’ for a period of three years
from the date it commenced production. The Director of
Industries by his letter dated 14th October 1968, confirmed
that "there will be no sales tax for three years on the
finished product of your proposed Vanaspati factory from the
date it gets power connection for commencing production".
Thereafter when the appellant’s representative met the 4th
respondent, who was at that time the Chief Secretary to the
Government as also Advisor to the Governor and apprised the
latter that the appellant was setting up the Vanaspati
factory solely on the basis of the assurance given on behalf
of the Government that the appellant would be entitled to
exemption from sales tax for a period of three years from
the date of commencement of commercial production at the
factory, the 4th respondent reiterated the assurance made.
Again the appellant, by its letter dated 13th December 1968,
requested the 4th respondent "to please confirm that we
shall be allowed sales tax holiday for a period of three
years on the sale of Vanaspati from the date we start
production". The 4th respondent replied on 22nd December
1968 that "the State Government will be willing to consider
your request for grant of exemption from U.P. Sales Tax for
a period of three years from the date of
642
production" and asked the appellant to obtain the requisite
application form and submit a formal application to the
Secretary to the Government in the Industries department,
and in the meanwhile "to go ahead with the arrangements for
setting up the factory". The appellant in the meantime had
submitted an application dated 21st December 1968 for a
formal order granting exemption from sales tax under section
4A of the U.P. Sales Tax Act. The appellant was also
subsequently informed by the letter dated 23rd January 1969
of the 4th respondent categorically that the proposed
Vanaspati factory of the appellant "will be entitled to
exemption from U.P. Sales Tax for a period of three years
from the date of going into production and that this will
apply to all Vanaspati sold during that period in Uttar
Pradesh itself". The appellant, on the basis of these
unequivocal assurances, went ahead with the setting of the
Vanaspati factory and made much progress.
By the middle of May 1969, the State Government started
having second thoughts on the question of exemption and the
appellant was requested to attend a meeting "to discuss the
question of giving concession in Sales Tax on Vanaspati
products". The appellant immediately by its letter dated
19th May 1969 pointed out to the 5th respondent that so far
as the appellant was concerned, the State Government had
already granted exemption from sales tax by the letter of
the Chief Secretary dated 23rd January, 1969, but still, the
appellant would be glad to send its representative to attend
the meeting. The appellant’s representative did attend the
meeting held on 3rd June 69 and reiterated that so far as
the appellant was concerned, it had already been granted
exemption from sales tax and the State Government stood
committed to it
The State Government, however, went back upon the
assurance and a letter dated 20th January 1970 was addressed
by the 5th respondent intimating that the Government had
taken a policy decision that new Vanaspati units in the
State which go into commercial production by 30th September
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1970, would be given only partial concession in Sales Tax at
different rates on each year of production. The appellant,
by its letter dated 25th June 1970, pointed out to the
Secretary to the Government that the appellant proposed to
start commercial production of Vanaspati with effect from
1st July 1970 and stated that, as notified in the letter of
20th January 1970, the appellant would be availing of the
exemption granted by the State Government and would be
charging Sales Tax at the rate of 3 1/2% instead of 7% on
the sales of Vanaspati manufactured by it for the period of
one year commencing from 1st July 1970. The factory of the
appellant thereafter went into production from 2nd July 1970
and the appellant informed the Secretary to the Government
about the same by its letter dated 3rd July 1970. The State
Government, however, once again changed its decision and on
12th August 1970, a news item appeared in the ’Northern
Indian Patrika’ stating that the Government had decided to
rescind the earlier decision i.e. the decision set out in
the letter dated 20th January 1970, to allow concession in
the rates of Sales Tax to new Vanaspati Units. The appellant
thereupon filed a writ petition in the High Court of
Allahabad asking for a writ directing the State Government
to exempt the sales of Vanaspati manufactured by the
appellant from Sales Tax for a period of three years
commencing from 2nd January 1970 by issuing a notification
under section 4A of the U.P. Sales Tax Act from the
appellant for the said period of three years. The plea based
on the
643
doctrine of promissory estoppel was, however rejected by the
Division Bench of the High Court principally on the ground
that the appellant had waived the exemption, if any, by
accepting the concessional rates set out in the letter of
the respondent dated 20th January 1970.
Allowing the appeal by certificate, the Court,
^
HELD: 1. The view taken by the High Court, namely, that
even if there was an assurance given by the 4th respondent
on behalf of the State Government and such assurance was
binding on the State Government on the principle of
promissory estoppel, the appellant had waived its right
under it by a accepting the concessional rates of sales tax
set out in the letter of the 5th respondent dated 20th
January, 1970 is not correct. [656 D-E]
2. Waiver is a question of fact and it must be properly
pleaded and proved. No plea of waiver can be allowed to be
raised unless it is pleaded and the factual foundation for
it is laid in the pleadings. [656 E-F]
In the instant case:
(a) the plea of waiver was not taken by the State
Government in the affidavit filed on its behalf in reply to
the writ petition, nor was it indicated even vaguely in such
affidavit. It was raised for the first time at the hearing
of the writ petition. That was clearly impermissible without
an amendment of the affidavit in reply or a supplementary
affidavit raising such plea. [656 F]
(b) It was not right for the High Court to have allowed
the plea of waiver to be raised against the appellant and
that plea should have been rejected in limine. If waiver
were properly pleaded in the affidavit in reply, the
appellant would have had an opportunity of placing on record
facts showing why and in what circumstances the appellant
came to address the letter dated 25th June 1970 and
establishing that on those facts there was no waiver by the
appellant of its right to exemption under the assurance
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given by the 4th respondent. But in the absence of such
pleading in the affidavit in reply, this opportunity was
denied to the appellant [656F-H]
3. Waiver means abandonment of a right and it may be
either express or implied from conduct, but its basic
requirement is that it must be "an intentional act with
knowledge". There can be no waiver unless the person who is
said to have waived is fully informed as to his right and
with full knowledge of such right, he intentionally abandons
it. [657A, B]
In the instant case, on the facts, the plea of waiver
could not be said to have been made out by the State
Government: There was nothing to state that at the date when
the appellant addressed the letter dated 25th June 1970, it
had full knowledge of its right to exemption under the
assurance given by the 4th respondent and that it
intentionally abandoned such right. It is not possible to
presume in the absence of any material placed before the
Court, that the appellant had full knowledge of its right to
exemption so as to warrant an inference that the appellant
waived such right by addressing the letter dated 25th June
1970. It is difficult to speculate what was the reason why
the appellant addressed the letter 25th June 1970 stating
that it would avail of the concessional rates of sales tax
granted under the letter dated 20th January 1970. [657 D-E]
644
Earl of Darnley v. London, Chathan and Dover Rly. Co.
(Proprietors etc.), [1867] L.R. 2 H.L. 43 @ 57 Craine v.
Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Ltd. 28 C.L.R. 305;
Martindala v. Faulkner [1846] 2 Q.B. 706; quoted with
approval.
4. The doctrine called ’promissory estoppel’,
’equitable estoppel’, ’quasi estoppel’, and ’new estoppel’
is a principle evolved by equity to avoid injustice where a
promise is made by a person knowing that it would be acted
on and it is person to whom it is made and in fact it is so
acted on and it is inequitable to allow the party making the
promise to go back upon it. Though commonly named promissory
estoppel it is neither in the realm of contract nor in the
realm of estoppel. The basis of the doctrine is the inter
position of equity, which has always true to its form
stepped in to mitigate the rigours of strict law. [658 E-G]
5. The true principle of promissory estoppel is that
where one party has by his words or conduct made to the
other a clear and unequivocal promise which is intended to
create legal relationship effect a legal relationship to
arise in the future, knowing or intending that it would be
acted upon by the other party to whom the promise is made
and it is infact so acted upon by the other party, the
promise would be binding on the party making it and he would
not be entitled to go back upon it, if it would be
inequitable to allow him to do so having regard to the
dealings which have taken place between the parties, and
this would be so irrespective whether there is any pre-
existing relationship between the parties or not. Equity
will in a given case where justice and fairness demand,
prevent a person from insisting on strict legal rights even
where they arise, not under any contract, but on his own
title deeds or under statute. [662 B-D]
To the applicability of the doctrine of promissory
estoppel it is not necessary that there should be some
contractual relationship between the parties. Nor can any
such limitation, namely, that the doctrine of promissory
estoppel is limited in its operation to cases where the
parties are already contractually bound and one of the
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parties induces the other to believe that the strict rights
under the contract would not be enforced be justifiably
introduced to curtail the width and amplitude of the
doctrine. The parties need not be in any kind of legal
relationship before the transaction from which the
promissory estoppel take its origin. The doctrine would
apply even where there is no pre-existing legal relationship
between the parties, but the promise is intended to create
legal relations or affect a legal relationship whish will
arise in future. [660 G-H, 661 A, F-G].
Jorden V. Money, [1854] 5 H.L. 185, Hughes v.
Metropolitan Railway Co., [1857] 2 A.C. 439, Birmingam &
District Land Co. v. London and North- Western Rail Co.,
]1888] 40 Ch. D. 268; discussed and questioned.
Central London Property Trust Ltd. v. High Trees House
Ltd., [1947] K.B. p. 130:: [1956] 1 All. E.R. 256;
explained.
Evenden v. Guildford City Association Football Club
Ltd., [1975] 3 All. E.R. 269 @ 272 :: [1975] 3 W.L.R. 251 @
255; Crabb v. Arun District Council. [1975] All E.R. 865 @
875:: [1975] 8 W.L.R. 847 @ 858 CA; quoted with approval.
645
6. The doctrine of promissory estoppel cannot be
inhibited by the same limitation estoppel in the
strict sense of the term. It is an equitable principle
evolved by the Courts for doing justice and there is no
reason why it should be given only a limited application by
way of defence and it should only be a shield and not a
sword to found a cause of action. It can be the basis of a
cause of action. [662 D-E, 663 E-F].
There is no qualitative difference between ’proprietary
estoppel’ and ’promissory estoppel’. Both are the off
springs of equity and if equity is flexible enough to permit
proprietary estoppel to be used as a cause of action, there
is no reason in logic or principle why promissory estoppel
should also not be available as cause of action, if
necessary to satisfy the equity. [665 G-H]
Central London Property Trust Ltd. v. High Trees House
Ltd . [1947]1 K.B.P. 130: [1956] 1 All. E.R. 256; Combe v.
Combe [1951] 2 K.B. 215; Beesly v. Hallwood Estate Ltd.
[1960] 2 All. E.R. 314; Municipal Corporation of Bombay.v
Secty. of State I.L.R. 29 Bomb. 580 @ 607; Mooregate
Mercantile Co. Ltd. v. Twichings,s [1975] 3 W.L.R. 286;
referred to.
Crabb v. Arun District Council [1975] All. E.R. 865 @
875 explained. Ramsden v. Dysen,[1866] L.R H.L. 129; Dunlop
Pneuntafic Tyre Co. v. Saifridge & Co. Ltd. 1915 A.C. 847:
discussed.
7. Law is not a mausoleum. It is not an antique to be
taken down, dusted admired and put back on the shelf. It is
rather like an old but vigorous tree having its roots in
history, yet continuously taking new grafts and putting out
new sprouts and occasionally dropping dead wood. It is
essentially a social process, the end product of which is
justice and hence it must keep on growing and developing
with changing social concepts and values. Otherwise, there
will be estrangement between law and justice and law will
cease to have legitimacy Though ’continuity with the past is
a historical necessity’, ’conformity is not to be turned
into a fetish’. [668 H, 669 A-B].
Therefore, despite the fact that allowing promissory
estoppel to found a cause of action would seriously dilute
the principle which requires consideration to support a
contractual obligation, this new principle, which is a child
of equity brought into the world with a view to promoting
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honesty and good faith and bringing, law closer to justice
should not be held in fetters but allowed to operate in all
its activist magnitude. so that it may fulfil the purpose
for which was conceived and born. [668 F-G].
Robertson v Minister of Pensions. [1949] 1 K. B. 227
Evenden Guldford city Association Football Club Ltd. [1975]
3 All. E.R. p. 269. Candler v. Crane Christmas & Co.
[1951] 2 K. B. 164 @ 178; quoted with approval.
8. A promise may, in the United States, derive
contractual enforceability if it has been made by the
promisor knowing or intending that it would be acted on and
the promisee has altered his position in reliance on it,
notwithstanding that there is no consideration in the sense
in which that word is used in English
646
and Commonwealth jurisprudence. However, the basic
requirement for invoking this principle must be present
namely that the fact situation should be such that injustice
can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise. The
doctrine of promissory estoppel has been used in the United
States to reduce, if not to destroy, the prestige of
consideration as an essential of valid contract and also
used in diverse other situations as founding a cause of
action: [670 D-E, 673 B].
Alleghany College v. National Chauteaque Country
Bank 57 Am L. R. 980; Drennan v. Stat Paving Company
[1958] 31 California 2nd 409; referred.
Under the English law, the judicially formed view is
that the crown is not immune from liability under the
doctrine of promissory estoppel and the view taken by
Denning J., in [1949] 1 K. B. 227 that the crown cannot
escape its obligation under the doctrine of promissory
estoppel by "praying in aid the doctrine of executive
necessity" still holds the field. [674 D].
Robretson v. Minister of Pensions [1949] 1 K. B.
227; quoted with approval:
Rederiaktiebolaget Amphitrities. v. The King
[1921] 3 K. B. 500; referred to.
Howell v. Falmouth Boat Construction Co. Ltd. 1951
A. C. 837; explained
10. Even in the United States, the trend in the State
Courts, of late, has been strongly in favour of the
application of the doctrine of promissory estoppel against
the Government and public bodies "where interests of
justice, morality and common fairness clearly dictate that
course". It is being increasingly felt that "the Government
ought to set a high standard in its dealings and
relationships with citizens and the word of a duly
authorised Government agent, acting within the scope of his
authority, ought to be as good as a Government bond". The
Government would not be estopped "by the acts of its
officers and agents who without authority enter into
agreements to do what the law does not sanction or permit"
and "these dealing with an agent of the Government must be
held to have notice of limitations of his authority". But if
the acts of omissions of officers of the Government are
within the scope of their authority and are not otherwise
impermissible under the law, they "will work estoppel
against Government". [676 F-H, 677 A-D]
Federal Crop Insurance Corporarion v. Maroill 332
U.S. 380: 92 L. ed. discussed and explained.
Valsonavich v. United States 335 Fed. Rep. 2nd p.
96; quoted With approval.
11. Where the Government makes a promise knowing or
intending that it would be acted on by the promisee and, in
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fact, the promisee, acting in reliance on it, alters his
position, the Government would be held bound by the promise
and the promise would be enforceable against the Government
at the instance of the promisee notwithstanding that there
is no consideration for the promise and the promise is not
recorded in the form of a formal contract as required by
Article 299 of the Constitution. [682 G-H, 683-A].
647
It is elementary that in a Republic governed by the
rule of law, no one, a however high or low is above the law.
Every one is subject to the law as fully and completely as
any other and the Government is no exception. It is indeed
the pride of constitutional democracy and rule of law that
the Government stands on the same footing as a private
individual so far as the obligation of the law is concerned;
the former is equally bound as the latter. On no principle
can a Government committed to the rule of law, claim
immunity from the doctrine of promissory estoppel. The
Government cannot be heard to say that it is under no
obligation to act in a manner that is fair and just or that
it is not bound by considerations of ’honesty and good
faith’. In fact the Government should be held to a high
"standard of rectangular rectitude while dealing with its
citizens". [683 A-C].
Gangaes Manufacturing co v. Surajmull and Ors.,
I.L.R. 5 Cal. 669; Municipal Corporation of Bombay v.
The Secretary of State, I,L.R. 29 Bomb. 588; approved.
Collector of Bombay v. Municipal Corporoaton of
rlle City of Bombay and Ors. [1952] S.C.R. 43; Union
of India v. Indo-Afghan Agencies, [1968] 2 S.C.R. 366;
followed.
Ransden v. Dyson,[1866] L.R. 1HL 170; referred to.
Robertson v. Minister of Pensions, [1949] 1 K. B.
227; quoted with approval as the correct law.
12. The doctrine of executive necessity, regarded as
sufficient Justification for the Government to repudiate
even its contractual obligations was emphatically negatived
in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case and the supremacy of the
laws was established, [683 C-D].
Therefore, it is not open to Government to claim
immunity from the applicability of the rule of promissory
estopped and thereby repudiate a promise made by it on the
ground that such promise may fetter its future executive
action. If the Government wants to preserve its freedom of
executive action from being hampered or restricted, the
Government should not make a promise knowing or intending
that it would be acted on by the promisee and the promisee
would alter his position relying upon it. But, if the
Government makes such a promise and the promisee acts in
reliance upon it and alters his position the Government
would be compelled to make good such promise like any other
private individual. [683 D-F].
13. The law cannot acquire legitimacy and gain social
acceptance unless it accords with the moral values of the
society. It should be the constant endeavor of the Courts
and the legislatures to close the gap between law and
morality and bring about as near an approximation between
the two as possible. The doctrine of promissory estopped is
a significant judicial contribution in that direction.[683
F-G].
Since the doctrine of promissory estoppel is an
equitable doctrine, it must yield when the equity so
requires. If it could be shown the by Government that having
regard to the facts as they have transpired, it would be
inequitable to hold the Government to the promise made by
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it, the Court would not raise an equity in favour of the
promisee and enforce the promise against the Government.
648
The doctrine of promissory estoppel would be displaced in
such a case because on the facts, equity would not require
that the Government should be held bound by the promise made
by it. [683 G-H, 684 A]
When the Government is able to show that in view of the
facts, as they have transpired public interest would be
prejudiced if the Government were required to carry out the
promise, the Court would have to balance, the public
interest in the Government carrying out a promise made to a
citizen which has induced the citizen to act upon it and
alter his position and the public interest likely to suffer
if the promise were required to be carried out by the
Government and determine which way the equity lies. It would
not be enough for the Government just to say that public
interest requires that the Government should not be
compelled to carry out the promise or that the public
interest would suffer if the Government were required to
honour it. The Government cannot claim to be exempt from the
liability to carry out the promise ’on some indefinite and
undisclosed ground of necessity or expediency’, nor can the
Government claim to be the sole judge of its liability and
repudiate it ’on an exparte appraisement of the
circumstances. [684 A-D]
In order to resist its liability, the Government should
disclose to the Court the various events necessitating its
claim to be exempt from the liability and it would be for
the Court to decide whether those events are such as to
render it inequitable to enforce the liability against the
Government. [684 D-E].
Mere claim of change of policy would not be sufficient
to exonerate the Government from the liability: the
Government would have to show precisely the changed policy
with the reason and justification therefor, to enable the
Court to judge for "itself which way the public interest
lies and what equity of the case demands. It is only if the
Court is satisfied, on proper and adequate material placed
by the Government, that over-riding public interest requires
that the Government should not be held bound by the promise
but should be free to act unfettered by it that the Court
would refuse to enforce the promise against the Government.
[684 E-F]
The essence of the rule of law is that the Court would
not act on the mere ipse dixit of the Government, for it is
the Court which has to decide and not the Government,
whether the Government should be held exempt from
liability.[684 F-G]
The burden would be upon the Government to show that
the public interest in the Government acting otherwise than
in accordance with the promise is so overwhelming that it
would be inequitable to hold the Government bound by the
promise and the Court would insist on a highly rigorous
standard of proof in the discharge of this burden. But even
where there is no such over-riding public interest, it may
still be competent to the Government to resile from the
promise ’on giving reasonable notice, which need not be a
formal notice, giving the promisee a reasonable opportunity
of resuming his position’ provided of course it is possible
for the promisee to restore status quo ante. If, however,
the promisee cannot resume his position, the promise would
become final and irrevocable. [684 G-H, 685 A].
Emmanuel Ayodeji Ajayi v. R. T. Briscoe, [1964] 3 All.
E.R. 556; referred to
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649
14. So far as the doctrine of promissory estoppel is
concerned, no distinction can be made between a private
individual and a public body. This doctrine is also
applicable against a public body like a municipal council.
However, this doctrine cannot be applied in teeth of an
obligation or liability imposed by law. It cannot be invoked
to compel the Government or even a private party to do an
act prohibited by law. There can also be no promissory
estoppel against the exercise of legislative power. The
Legislature can never be precluded from exercising its
legislative function by resort to the doctrine of pro-
missory estoppel. [688C, G-H 689 A].
Century Spinng and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. & Anr. v. The
Ulhasnagr Municipal Council and Anr. [1970] 3 SCR 854;
Turner Mossison and Co. Ltd. v. Hunngerfard Investmetn Trust
Ltd.[1972] 3 S.C.R. 711; discussed & followed.
M. Ramanatha Pillai v. The Stare of Kerala & Anr.
[1974] 1 SCR 51 5 @ 526; Assistant Cusrodian v. Brij
Kishore Agarwala & Ors. [1975] 2 SCR 359, explained and
held inapplicable.
Sate of Kerala v. Gwalior Rayon Silk Manufacturing
Co. Ltd. [1974] 1 S.C.R. 671 @ 688; reiterated.
Malhortra and Sons & Ors. v. Union of India and
Ors. A.I.R. 1976 J & K p. 41 approved.
Excise Commissioner U.P. Allahabad v. Ram Kumar
[1976] Suppl. S.C.R. 532; Bihar Eastern Gangetic
Fishermen Cooperative Society Ltd. v. Sipali Sangil and
Ors. [1978] 1 S R 375; A.I.R. 1977 S.C. 2149; Radha
Krishan Agarwal v. State of Bihar and Ors. [1977] 3
S.C.R. 249;: [1977] 3 S.C.C. 457; explained.
15. In order to attract the applicability of the
doctrine of promissory estoppel, it is not necessary that
the promisee, acting in reliance on the promise, should
suffer any deteriment. What is necessary is no more than
that there should be alteration of his position in reliance
on the promise. If detriment were a necessary element, there
would be no need for the doctrine of promissory estoppel
because, in that event in quite a few cases, the detriment
would form the consideration and the promise would be
binding, as a contract. If by deteriment is meant injustice
to the promisee which would result if the promisor were to
resile from his promisee, then detriment would certainly
come in as a necessary ingredient. The detriment in such a
case is not some prejudice sneered by the promisee acting on
the promise, put the prejudice which would be caused to the
promisee, if the promisor were allowed to back on the
promise. It is not necessary for the promisee to show that
he has acted to his detriment. All that he has to show is
that he has acted to reliance on the promise and altered his
position. [694 A-B, F-G, 695 E, 694 D].
Central London Property Trust Ltd. V. High Trees
House, [1947] K.B. p. 130:: [1956] 1 All. E.R.
256, W. J. Alan & Co. Ltd. v. El Nasar Export and
Import Co. [1972] 2 All. E.R. p. 127, @ p. 140, Tool
Metal Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v. Tunosten Electric
Co. Ltd. [1955] All. E. R. 657; [1975] 1 W. L. R. 761
Emmaulel Ayodeji
650
Ajya V. R. T. Briscoe [1964] All. E. R. 556 Karnmins
Ballrooms Ltd. v. Zenith Investments (Torquay) Ltd.
[1970] 2 All. E.R. 871, Grurldt v. the Boulder Pty.
Gold Mines Ltd. [1938] 59 C.L.R. 641; quoted with
approval.
In the instant case.
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The facts necessary for involving the doctrine of
promissory estoppel were clearly resent and the Government
was bound to carry out the representation and exempt the
appellant from sales tax in respect of sales of Vanaspati
effected by it in Uttar Pradesh for a period of three years
from the date of commencement of the production. [693 F-G]
(a) The letter dated 23rd January 1969 was a
representation on behalf of the Government, the
representation having been made by the 4th respondent in his
capacity as the Chief Secretary of the Government
categorically to the effect that the appellant would be
entitled to exemption from sales tax in respect of the sale
of vanaspati effected in Uttar Pradesh for a period of three
years from the date of commencement of production. This
representation was made by way of clarification in view of
the suggestion in the appellant letter dated 2 nd January
1969 that the financial institutions were not prep ed to
regard the earlier letter of the 4th respondent dated 22nd
December 1968 as a definite commitment on the part of the
Government to grant exemption from sales tax. [692 H, 693 A-
B]
(b) The representation made by the 4th respondent was a
representation within the scope of his authority and was
binding on the Government in as much as the 4th respondent,
who was at the material time the Chief Secretary to the
Government and also Adviser to the Governor discharging the
functions of the Government during the President’s Rule had
authority to bind the Governor. Moreover the averment to
this effect in the Writ Petition was not denied by the State
in the affidavit in reply filed on its behalf [693 C-D].
(c) This representation was made by the Government
knowing or intending that it would be acted on by the
appellant because the appellant made it clear that it was
only on account of the exemption from sales tax promised by
the Government that the appellant had decided to set up the
factory for manufacture of Vanaspati. In fact the appellant
relying on this representation of the Government, borrowed
moneys from various financial institutions, purchased plant
and machinery from M/s. De Smith (India) Pvt. Ltd., Bombay
and set up a Vanaspati factory at Kanpur. [693 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1597 of
1972.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated 25th January,
1972of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Misc. Writ No.
3788/70.
S.T. Desai, Shri Narain, J. B. Dadachanji, Ravinder
Narain, S Swarup and Talat Ansari for the Appellant.
G. N. Dikshit, M. V. Goswami and O. P. Rana for RR 1-3
and 5.
Girish Chandra for Respondent No. 4.
651
A. B. Dewan, Ravinder Narain, S. Swarup and A. N.
Haksar for the Intervener (M/s. Modi Rubber Ltd.).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J., This appeal by certificate raises a
question of considerable importance in the field of public
law. How far and to what extent is the State bound by the
doctrine of promissory estoppel ? It is a doctrine of
comparatively recent origin but it is potentially so
fruitful and pregnant with such vast possibilities for
growth that traditional lawyers are alarmed lest it might
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upset existing doctrines which are looked upon almost
reverentially and which have held the field for a long
number of years. The law in regard to promissory estoppel is
not yet well settled though it has been the subject of
considerable debate in England as well as the United States
of America and it has also received consideration in some
recent decisions in India and we, therefore, propose to
discuss it in some detail with a view to defining its
contours and demarcating its parameters. We will first state
briefly the facts giving rise to this appeal. This is
necessary because it is only where certain fact-situations
exist that promissory estoppel can be invoked and applied.
The appellant is a limited company which is primarily
engaged in the business of manufacture and sale of sugar and
it has also a cold storage plant and a steel foundry. On
10th October, 1968 a news item appeared in the National
Herald in which it was stated that the State of Uttar
Pradesh had decided to give exemption from sales tax for a
period of three years under section 4A of the U.P. Sales Tax
Act to all new industrial units in the State with a view to
enabling them "to come on firm footing in developing stage".
This news item was based upon a statement made by Shri M. P.
Chatterjee the then Secretary in the Industries Department
of the Government. The appellant, on the basis of this
announcement, addressed a letter dated 11th October, 1968 to
the Director of Industries stating that in view of the sales
tax holiday announced by the Government, the appellant
intended to set up a Hydro-genation Plant for manufacture of
Vanaspati and sought for confirmation that this industrial
unit, which it proposed to set up would be entitled to sales
tax holiday for a period of three years from the date it
commenced production. The Director of Industries replied by
his letter dated 14th October, 1968 confirming that "there
will be no sales tax for three years on the finished product
of your proposed Vanaspati factory from the date it gets
power connection for commencing production." The appellant
thereupon started taking steps to contact various financiers
for financing the project and also initiated negotiations
with manufacturers for purchase of machinery for setting
652
up the Vanaspati factory. On 12th December, 1968 the
appellant’s representative met the 4th respondent who was at
that time the Chief Secretary to the Government as also
Advisor to the Governor and intimated to him that the
appellant was setting up the Vanaspati factory solely on the
basis of the assurance given on behalf of the Government
that the appellant would be entitled to exemption from sales
tax for a period of three years from the date of
commencement of commercial production at the factory and the
4th respondent reiterated the assurance that the appellant
would be entitled to sales tax holiday in case the Vanaspati
factory was put up by it. The appellant by its letter dated
13th December, 1968 placed on record what had transpired at
the meeting on the previous day and requested the 4th
respondent "to please confirm that we shall be allowed sales
tax holiday for a period of three years on the sale of
Vanaspati from the date we start production." On the same
day the appellant entered into an agreement with M/s. De
Smith (India) Pvt. Ltd., Bombay for supply of plant and
machinery for the Vanaspati factory, providing clearly that
the appellant would have the option to terminate the
agreement, if within 10 weeks exemption from sales tax was
not granted by the State Government. The 4th respondent
replied on 22nd December, 1968 confirming that "the State
Government will be willing to consider your request for
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grant of exemption from U.P. Sales Tax for a period of three
years from the date of production" and asked the appellant
to obtain the requisite application form and submit a formal
application to the Secretary to the Government in the
Industries Department and in the meanwhile to "go ahead with
the arrangements for setting up the factory". The appellant
had in the meantime submitted an application dated 21st
December, 1968 for a formal order granting exemption from
sales tax under section 4A of the Act. It appears that the
letter of the 4th respondent dated 22nd December, 1968 was
not regarded as sufficient by the financial institutions
which were approached by the appellant for financing the
project since it merely stated that the State Government
would be willing to consider the request for grant of
exemption and did not convey any decision of the State
Government that the exemption would be granted. The
appellant, therefore, addressed a letter dated 22nd January,
1969 to the 4th respondent pointing out that the financial
institutions were of the view that the letter of the 4th
respondent dated 22nd December, 1968 "did not purport to
commit the Government for the concession mentioned" and it
was, therefore, necessary to obtain a formal order of
exemption in terms of the application submitted by it. The
4th respondent, however, stated categorically in his letter
in reply dated 23rd January, 1969 that the proposed
Vanaspati Factory of the appellant "will be
653
entitled to exemption from U.P. Sales Tax for a period of
three years from the date of going into production and that
this will apply to all Vanaspati sold during that period in
Uttar Pradesh itself" and expressed his surprise that "a
letter from the Chief Secretary to the State Government
stating this fact in clear and unambiguous words should not
carry conviction with the financial institutions." In view
of this unequivocal assurance given by the 4th respondent,
who not only occupied the post of Chief Secretary to the
Government but was also Advisor to the Governor functioning
under the President’s rule, the appellant went ahead with
the setting up of the Vanaspati Factory. The appellant by
its letter dated 25th April, 1969 advised the 4th respondent
that the U.P. Finance Corporation, being convinced by the
clear and categorical assurance given by the 4th respondent
that the Vanaspati Factory of the appellant would be
entitled to exemption from sales tax for a period of three
years from the date of commencement of production, had
sanctioned financial assistance to the appellant and the
appellant was going ahead with the project in full speed to
enable it to start production at the earliest. The appellant
made considerable progress in the setting up of the
Vanaspati Factory but it seems that by the middle of May
1969 the State Government started having second thoughts on
the question of exemption and a letter dated 16 May, 1969
was addressed by the 5th respondent who was Deputy Secretary
to the Government in the Industries Department, intimating
that a meeting has been called by the Chief Minister on 23rd
May, 1969 "to discuss the question of giving concession in
Sales Tax on Vanaspati products" and requesting the
appellant to attend the meeting. The appellant immediately
by its letter dated 19th May, 1969 pointed out to the 5th
respondent that so far as the appellant was concerned, the
State Government had already granted exemption from Sales
Tax by the letter of the Chief Secretary dated 23rd January,
1969 but still, the appellant would be glad to send its
representative to attend the meeting as desired by the 5th
respondent. The proposed meeting was, however, postponed and
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the appellant was intimated by the 5th respondent by its
letter dated 23rd May, 1969 that the meeting would now be
held on 3rd June, 1969. The appellant’s representative
attended the meeting on that day and reiterated that so far
as the appellant was concerned, it had already been granted
exemption from Sales Tax and the State Government stood
committed to it. The appellant thereafter proceeded with the
work of setting up the Vanaspati plant on the basis that in
accordance with the assurance given by the 4th respondent on
behalf of the State Government, the appellant would be
exempt from payment of Sales Tax for a period of three years
from the date of commencement of production.
654
The State Government however went back upon this
assurance and a letter dated 20th January, 1970 was
addressed by the 5th respondent intimating that the
Government had taken a policy decision that new Vanaspati
Units in the State which go into commercial production by
30th September, 1970 would be given partial concession in
Sales Tax at the following rates for a period of three
years:
First year of production 31/2%
Second year of production 3%
Third year of production 21/2%
The appellant by its letter dated 25th June, 1970 pointed
out to the Secretary to the Government that the appellant
proposed to start commercial production of Vanaspati with
effect from 1st July, 1970, and stated that, as notified in
the letter dated 20th January, 1970, the appellant would be
availing of the exemption granted by the State Government
and would be charging sales tax at the rate of 31/2% instead
of 7% on the sales of Vanaspati manufactured by it for a
period of one year commencing from 1st July, 1970. The
factory of the appellant thereafter went into production
from 2nd July, 1970 and the appellant informed the Secretary
to the Government about the same by its letter dated 3rd
July, 1970. The State Government however once again changed
its decision and on 12th August, 1970 a news item appeared
in the Northern India Patricia stating that the Government
had decided to rescind the earlier decision i.e. the
decision set out in the letter dated 20th January, 1970, to
allow concession in the rates of Sales Tax to new Vanaspati
Units. The appellant thereupon filed a writ petition in the
High Court of Allahabad asking for a writ directing the
State Government to exempt the sales of Vanaspati
manufactured by the appellant from sales tax for a period of
three years commencing from 2nd July, 1970 by issuing a
notification under section 4A and not to collect or charge
sales tax from the appellant for the said period of three
years. It appears that in the writ petition as originally
filed, there was no plea of promissory estoppel taken
against the State Government and the writ petition was,
therefore, amended by obtaining leave of the High Court with
a view to introducing the plea of promissory estoppel. The
appellant urged in the amended writ petition that the 4th
respondent acting on behalf of the State Government had
given an unequivocal assurance to the appellant that the
appellant would be entitled to exemption from payment of
sales tax for a period of three years from the date of
commencement of the production and this assurance was given
by the 4th respondent intending or knowing that it would be
acted on by the appellant and in fact
655
the appellant, acting in reliance on it, established the
Vanaspati factory by investing a large amount and the State
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Government was, therefore, bound to honour the assurance and
exempt the Vanaspati manufactured and sold by the appellant
from payment of sales tax for a period of three years from
2nd July, 1970. This plea based on the doctrine of
promissory estoppel was, however rejected by the Division
Bench of the High Court principally on the ground that the
appellant had waived the exemption, if any, by accepting the
concessional rates set out in the letter of the Deputy
Secretary dated 20th January, 1970. The appellant thereupon
preferred the present appeal after obtaining a certificate
of fitness from the High Court.
The principal argument advanced on behalf of the
appellant in support of the appeal was that the 4th
respondent had given a categorical assurance on behalf of
the State Government that the appellant would be exempt from
payment of sales tax for a period of three years from the
date of commencement of production and such assurance was
given intending or knowing that it would be acted on by the
appellant and in fact the appellant, acting in reliance on
it, altered its position and the State Government was,
therefore, bound, on the principle of promissory estoppel,
to honour the assurance and exempt the appellant from sales
tax for a period of three years from 2nd July, 1970, being
the date on which the factory of the appellant commenced
production. The appellant assailed the view taken by the
High Court that this claim of the appellant for exemption
based on the doctrine of promissory estoppel was barred by
waiver, because the appellant had by its letter dated 25th
June, 1970 accepted that it would avail of the exemption
granted under the letter of the 5th respondent dated 20th
January, 1970 and charged sales tax at the concessional rate
of 31/2% instead of 7% during the first year of its
production. The appellant urged that waiver was a question
of fact which was required to be pleaded and since no plea
of waiver was raised in the affidavit filed on behalf of the
State Government in opposition to the writ petition, it was
not competent to the State Government to rely on the plea of
waiver for the first time at the hearing of the writ
petition. Even if the plea of waiver were allowed to be
raised, notwithstanding that it did not find place in the
pleadings, no waiver was made out, said the appellant, since
there was nothing to show that were the circumstances in
which the appellant had addressed the letter dated 25th
June, 1970 stating that it would avail of the exemption
granted under the letter dated 20th January, 1970 and it was
not possible to say that the appellant, with full knowledge
of its right to claim total exemption from payment of sales
tax, waived that right and agreed to accept the concessional
rates set out in the letter dated 20th January, 1970. The
656
State Government on the other hand strongly pressed the plea
of waiver and submitted that the appellant had clearly
waived its right to complete exemption from payment of Sales
Tax by addressing the letter dated 25th June, 1970. The
State Government also contended that, in any event, even if
there was no waiver, the appellant was not entitled to
enforce the assurance given by the 4th respondent, since
such assurance was not binding on the State Government and
more-over, in the absence of notification under section 4A,
the State Government could not be prevented from enforcing
the liability to sales tax imposed on the appellant under
the provisions of the Act. It was urged on behalf of the
State Government that there could be no promissory estoppel
against the State Government so as to inhibit it from
formulating and implementing its policies in public
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interest. These were broadly the rival contentions urged on
behalf of the parties and we shall now proceed to consider
them.
We shall first deal with the question of waiver since
that can be disposed of in a few words. The High Court held
that even if there was an assurance given by the 4th
respondent on behalf of the State Government and such
assurance was binding on the State Government on the
principle of promissory estoppel, the appellant had waived
its right under it by accepting the concessional rates of
sales tax set out in the letter of the 5th respondent dated
20th January, 1970. We do not think this view taken by the
High Court can be sustained. In the first place, it is
elementary that waiver is a question of fact and it must be
properly pleaded and proved. No plea of waiver can be
allowed to be raised unless it is pleaded and the factual
foundation for it is laid in the pleadings. Here it was
common ground that the plea of waiver was not taken by the
State Government in the affidavit filed on its behalf in
reply to the writ petition, nor was it indicated even
vaguely in such affidavit. It was raised for the first time
at the hearing of the writ petition. That was clearly
impermissible without an amendment of the affidavit in reply
or a supplementary affidavit raising such plea. If waiver
were properly pleaded in the affidavit in reply, the
appellant would have had an opportunity of placing on record
facts showing why and in what circumstances the appellant
came to address the letter dated 25th June, 1970 and
establishing that on these facts there was no waiver by the
appellant of its right to exemption under the assurance
given by the 4th respondent. But in the absence of such
pleading in the affidavit in reply, this opportunity was
denied to the appellant. It was, therefore, not right for
the High Court to have allowed the plea of waiver to be
raised against the appellant and that plea should have been
rejected in limine.
657
Secondly, it is difficult to see how, on the facts, the
plea of waiver could be said to have been made out by the
State Government. Waiver means abandonment of a right and it
may be either express or implied from conduct, but its basic
requirement is that it must be "an intentional act with
knowledge". Per Lord Chelmsford, L.C. in Earl of Darnley v.
London, Chatham and Dover Rly. Co. There can be no waiver
unless the person who is said to have waived is fully
informed as to his right and with full knowledge of such
right, he intentionally abandons it. It is pointed out in
Halsbury’s Laws of England (4 d) Volume 16 in paragraph 1472
at page 994 that for a "waiver to be effectual it is
essential that the person granting it should be fully
informed as to his rights" and Isaacs, J, delivering the
judgment of the High Court of Australia in Craine v.
Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Ltd. has also emphasised
that waiver "must be with knowledge, an essential supported
by many authorities". Now in the present case there is
nothing to show that at the date when the appellant
addressed the letter dated 25th June, 1970, it had full
knowledge of its right to exemption under the assurance
given by the 4th respondent and that it intentionally
abandoned such right. It is difficult to speculate what was
the reason why the appellant addressed the letter dated 25th
June, 1970 stating that it would avail of the concessional
rates of sales tax granted under the letter dated 20th
January, 1970. It is possible that the appellant might have
thought that since no notification exempting the appellant
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from sales tax had been issued by the State Government under
section 4A, the appellant was legally not entitled to
exemption and that is why the appellant might have chosen to
accept whatever concession was being granted by the State
Government. The claim of the appellant to exemption could be
sustained only on the doctrine of promissory estoppel and
this doctrine could not be said to be so well defined in its
scope and ambit and so free from uncertainty in its
application that we should be compelled to hold that the
appellant must have had knowledge of its right to exemption
on the basis of promissory estoppel at the time when it
addressed the letter dated 25th June, 1970. In fact, in the
petition as originally filed, the right to claim total
exemption from sales tax was not based on the plea of
promissory estoppel which was introduced only by way of
amendment. Moreover, it must be remembered that there is no
presumption that every person knows the law. It is often
said that every one is presumed to know the law, but that is
not a correct statement: there is no such maxim known to the
law. Over a hundred and thirty years ago, Maule, J., pointed
out in Martindala v. Faulkner(3): "There is no presumption
in this country
658
that every person knows the law: it would be contrary to
common sense and reason if it were so". Scrutton, also once
said: "It is impossible to know all the statutory law, and
not very possible to know all the common law." But it was
Lord Atkin who, as in so many other spheres, put the point
in its proper context when he said in Evans v.
Bartlem(1)"_____the fact is that there is not and never has
been a presumption that every one knows the law. There is
the rule that ignorance of the law does not excuse, a maxim
of very different scope and application." It is, therefore,
not possible to presume, in the absence of any material
placed before the Court, that the appellant had full
knowledge of its right to exemption so as to warrant an
inference that the appellant waived such right by addressing
the letter dated 25th June, 1970. We accordingly reject the
plea of waiver raised on behalf of the State Government.
That takes us to the question whether the assurance
given by the 4th respondent on behalf of the State
Government that the appellant would be exempt from sales tax
for a period of three years from the date of commencement of
production could be enforced against the State Government by
invoking the doctrine of promissory estoppel. Though the
origin of the doctrine of promissory estoppel may be found
in Hughes v. Metropolitan Railway Co.(2) and Birmingham &
District Land Co. v. London & North-Western Rail Co.(3)
authorities of old standing decided about a century ago by
the House of Lords, it was only recently in 1947 that it was
rediscovered by Mr. Justice Denning, as he then was, in his
celebrated judgment in Central London Property Trust Ltd. v.
High Trees House Ltd.(4) This doctrine has been variously
called ’promissory estoppel’, ’equitable estoppel’, ’quasi
estoppel’ and ’new estoppel’. It is a principle evolved by
equity to avoid injustice and though commonly named
’promissory estoppel, it is, as we shall presently point
out, neither in the realm of contract nor in the realm of
estoppel. It is interesting to trace the evolution of this
doctrine in England and to refer to some of the English
decisions in order to appreciate the true scope and ambit of
the doctrine particularly because it has been the subject of
considerable recent development and is steadily expanding.
The basis of this doctrine is the inter-position of equity.
Equity has always, true to form, stepped into mitigate the
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rigours of strict law. The early cases did not speak of this
doctrine as estoppel. They spoke of it as ’raising an
equity’. Lord Cairns stated
659
the doctrine in its earliest form-it has undergone
considerable development since then-in the following words
in Hughes v. Metropolitan Railway Company (supra):
"It is the first principle upon which all Courts
of Equity proceed, that if parties who have entered
into definite and distinct terms involving certain
legal results....afterwards by their own act or with
their own consent enter upon a course of negotiation
which has the effect of leading one of the parties to
suppose that the strict rights arising under the
contract will not be enforced, or will be kept in
suspense, or held in abeyance, the person who otherwise
might have enforced those rights will not be allowed to
enforce them where it would be inequitable having
regard to the dealings which have thus taken place
between the parties."
This principle of equity laid down by Lord Cairns made
sporadic appearances in stray cases now and then but it was
only in 1947 that it was disinterred and restated as a
recognised doctrine by Mr. Justice Denning, as he then was,
in the High Trees’ case (supra). The facts in that case were
as follows: The plaintiffs leased to the defendents, a
subsidiary of the plaintiffs, in 1937 a block of flats for
99 years at a rent of & 2500/- a year. Early in 1940 and
because of the war, the defendants were unable to find sub-
tenants for the flats and unable in consequence to pay the
rent. The plaintiffs agreed at the request of the defendants
to reduce the rent to &. 1250/- from the beginning of the
term. By the beginning of 1945 the conditions had improved
and tenants had been found for all the flats and the
plaintiffs, therefore, claimed the full rent of the premises
from the middle of that year. The claim was allowed because
the court took the view that the period for which the full
rent was claimed fell out side the representation, but Mr.
Justice Denning, as he then was, considered Obiter whether
the plaintiffs could have recovered the covenanted rent for
the whole period of the lease and observed that in equity
the plaintiffs could not have been allowed to act
inconsistently with their promise on which the defendants
had acted. It was pressed upon the Court that according to
the well settled law as laid down in Jorden y. Money(1), no
estoppel could be raised against plaintiffs since the
doctrine of estoppel by representation is applicable only to
representations as to some state of facts alleged to be at
the time actually in existence and not to promises de futuro
which, if binding at all, must be binding only as contracts
and here there was no representa-
660
tion of an existing state of facts by the plaintiffs but it
was merely a promise or representation of intention to act
in a particular manner in the future. Mr. Justice Denning,
however, pointed out:
"The law has not been standing still since Jorden
v. Money. There has been a series of decisions over the
last fifty years which, although they are said to be
cases of estoppel are not really such. They are cases
in which a promise was made which was intended to
create legal relations and which, to the knowledge of
the person making the promise, was going to be acted on
by the person to whom it was made, and which was in
fact so acted on. In such cases the courts have said
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that the promise must be honoured."
The principle formulated by Mr. Justice Denning was, to
quote his own words, "that a promise intended to be binding,
intended to be acted on and in fact acted on, is binding so
far as its terms properly apply". Now Hughes v. Metropolitan
Railway Co. (supra) and Birmingham and District Land Co. v.
London & North Western Rail Co. (supra), the two decisions
from which Mr. Justice Denning drew inspiration for evolving
this new equitable principle, were clearly cases where the
principle was applied as between parties who were already
bound contractually one to the other. In Hughes v.
Metropolitan Railway Co. (supra) the plaintiff and the
defendant were already bound in contract and the general
principle stated by Lord Cairns, L.C. was:
"If parties who have entered into definite and
distinct terms involving certain legal results
afterwards-enter upon a course of negotiations".
Ten years later Bowen, L. J. also used the same
terminology in Birmingham and District Land Co. v. London
and North Western Rail Co. (supra) that:
"If persons who have contractual rights against
others induce by their conduct those against whom they
have such rights to believe-----".
These two decisions might, therefore, seem to suggest
that the doctrine of promissory estoppel is limited in its
operation to cases where the parties are already
contractually bound and one of the parties induces the other
to believe that the strict rights under the contract would
not be enforced. But we do not think any such limitation can
justifiably be introduced to curtail the width and amplitude
of this doctrine. We fail
661
to see why it should be necessary to the applicability of
this doctrine that there should be some contractual
relationship between the parties. In fact Donaldson, J.
pointed out in Durham Fancy Goods Ltd. v. Michael Jackson
(Fancy Goods) Ltd. (1) :
"Lord Cairns in his enunciation of the principle
assumed a pre-existing contractual relationship between
the parties, but this does not seem to me to be
essential, provided that there is a pre-existing legal
relationship which could in certain circumstances give
rise to liabilities and penalties."
But even this limitation suggested by Donaldson, J.
that there should be-a pre-existing legal relationship which
could in certain circumstances give rise to liabilities and
penalties is not warranted and it is significant that the
statement of the doctrine by Mr. Justice Denning in the High
Trees’ case does not contain any such limitation. The
learned Judge has consistently refused to introduce any such
limitation in the doctrine and while sitting in the Court of
Appeal, he said in so many terms, in Evenden v. Guildford
City Association Football Club Ltd.(2)
"Counsel for the appellant referred us, however,
to the second edition of Spencer Bower’s book on
Estoppel by Representation[(1966) pp. 340-342] by Sir
Alexander Turner, a judge of the New Zealand Court of
Appeal. He suggests the promissory estoppel is limited
to cases where parties are already bound contractually
one to the other. I do not think it is so limited : see
Durham Fancy Goods Ltd. v. Michael Jackson (Fancy
Goods) Ltd. It applies whenever a representation is
made, whether of fact or law, present or future, which
is intended to be binding, intended to induce a person
to act on it and he does act on it."
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This observation of Lord Denning clearly suggest that
the parties need not be in any kind of legal relationship
before the transaction from which the promissory estoppel
takes its origin. The doctrine would seem to apply even
where there is no pre-existing legal relationship between
the parties, but the promise is intended to create legal
relations or affect a legal relationship which will arise in
future. Vide Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed. Vol. 16 p.
1018, Note 2 para 1514. Of course it must be pointed out in
fairness to Lord Denning that he made it clear
662
in the High Trees’ case that the doctrine of promissory
estoppel cannot found a cause of action in itself, since it
can never do away with the necessity of consideration in the
formation of a contract, but he totally repudiated in
Evenden’s case the necessity of a pre-existing relationship
between the parties and pointed out in Crabb v. Arun
District Council(1) that equity will in a given case where
justice and fairness demand, prevent a person from insisting
on strict legal rights even where they arise, not under any
contract, but on his own title deeds or under statue. The
true principle of promissory estoppel, therefore seems to be
that where one party has by his words or conduct made to the
other a clear and unequivocal promise which is intended to
create legal relations or affect a legal relationship to
arise in the future, knowing or intending that it would be
acted upon by the other party to whom the promise is made
and it is in fact so acted upon by the other party, the
promise would be binding on the party making it and he would
not be entitled to go back upon it, if it would be
inequitable to allow him to do so having regard to the
dealings which have taken place between the parties, and
this would be so irrespective whether there is any
preexisting relationship between the parties or not.
It may be pointed out that in England the law has been
well-settled for a long time, though there is some
indication of a contrary trend to be found in recent
juristic thinking in that country, that promissory estoppel
cannot itself be the basis of an action. It cannot found a
cause of action : it can only be a shield and not a sword.
This narrow approach to a doctrine which is otherwise full
of great potentialities is largely the result of an
assumption, encouraged by it rather misleading nomenclature,
that the doctrine is a branch of the law of estoppel. Since
estoppel has always been traditionally a principle invoked
by way of defence, the doctrine of promissory estoppel has
also come to be identified as a measure of defence. The
ghost of traditional estoppel continues to haunt this new
doctrine and that is why we find that while boldly
formulating and applying this new equity in the High Trees’
case, Lord Denning added a qualification that though in the
circumstances set out, the promise would undoubtedly be held
by the courts to be binding on the party making it,
notwithstanding that under the old common law it might be
difficult to find any consideration for it. "the courts have
not gone so far as to give a cause of action in damages for
the breach of such a promise, but they have refused to allow
the party making it to act inconsistently with it". Lord
Denning also pointed out in Combe v.
663
Combe(2) that "Much as I am inclined to favour the
principles stated in the High Trees’ case, it is important
that it should not be stretched too far, lest it should be
endangered. That principle does not create new causes of
action where none existed before. It only prevents a party
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from insisting upon his strict legal rights, when it would
be unjust to allow him to enforce them, having regard to the
dealings which have taken place between the parties......"
So also said Buckley, J., in the more recent case of Beesly
v. Hallwood Estates Ltd.(1) "The doctrine may afford a
defence against the enforcement or otherwise of enforceable
rights : it cannot create a cause of action." It is,
however, necessary to make it clear that though this
doctrine has been called in various judgments and text books
as promissory estoppel and it has been variously described
as ‘equitable estoppel’, ‘quasi estoppel’ and ‘new
estoppel’, it is not really based on the principle of
estoppel, but it is a doctrine evolved by equity in order to
prevent injustice where a promise is made by a person
knowing that it would be acted on by the person to whom it
is made and in fact it is so acted on and it is inequitable
to allow the party making the promise to go back upon it.
Lord Denning himself observed in the High Trees’ case,
expressly making a distinction between ordinary estoppel and
promissory estoppel that cases like the one before him were"
not cases of estoppel in the strict sense. They are really
promises, promises intended to be binding, intended to be
acted upon and in fact acted upon". Jenkins, C.J. also
pointed out in Municipal Corporation of Bombay v. Secretary
of State (2) that the "doctrine is often treated as one of
estoppel but I doubt whether this is correct, though it may
be a convenient name to apply". The doctrine of promissory
estoppel need not, therefore, be inhibited by the same
limitation as estoppel in the strict sense of the term. It
is an equitable principle evolved by the courts for doing
justice and there is no reason why it should be given only a
limited application by way of defence.
It may be noted that even Lord Denning recognised in
Crabb v. Arun Distric Council (supra) that "there are
estoppels and estoppels. Some do give rise to a cause of
action. Some don’t" and added that "in the species of
estoppel called ‘proprietary estoppel’, it does give rise to
a cause of action" The learned Law Lord, after quoting what
he had said in Moorgate Mercantile Co. Ltd. v.
Twitchings,(3) namely that the effect of estoppel on the
true owner may be that :
664
"his own title to the property, be it land or
goods, has been held to be limited or extinguished, and
new rights and interests have been created therein. And
this operates by reason of his conduct-what he has led
the other to believe-even though he never intended it."
Proceeded to observe that "the new rights and
interests, so created by estoppel, in or over land, will be
protected by the courts and in this way give rise to a cause
of action". The Court of Appeal in this case allowed Crabb a
declaration of "a right of access at point over the verge on
to Mill Park Road and a right of way along that road to Hook
Lane" on the basis of an equity arising out of the conduct
of the Arun District Council. Of course, Spencer Bower and
Turner, in their Treatise on ‘The Law Relating to Estoppel
by Representation’ have explained this decision on the basis
that it is an instance of the application of the doctrine of
estoppel by encouragement or acquiescence or what has now
come to be known as proprietary estoppel which, according to
the learned authors, forms an exception to the rule that
estoppel cannot found a cause of action. But if we look at
the judgments of Lord Denning and Scarman, L.J., it is
apparent that they did not base their decision on any
distinctive feature of proprietary estoppel but proceeded on
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the assumption that there was no distinction between
promissory and proprietary estoppel so far as the problem
before them was concerned. Both the learned Law Lord and the
learned Lord Justice applied the principle of promissory
estoppel in giving relief to Crabb. Lord Denning, referring
to what Lord Cairns had said in Hughes v. Metropolitan
Railway Co.,(1) a decision from which inspiration was drawn
by him for evolving the doctrine of promissory estoppel in
the High Tree’s case, observed that "- it is the first
principle on which all courts of equity proceed......that it
will prevent person from insisting on his strict legal
rights-whether arising under a contract, or on his title
deeds, or by statute-when it would be inequitable for him to
do so having regard to the dealings which have taken place
between the parties". The decision in the High Trees’ case
was also referred to the learned Law Lord and so also other
cases supporting the doctrine of promissory estoppel.
Scarman, L.J. also observed that in pursuing the inquiry as
to whether there was an equity in favour of Crabb, he did
not find helpful "the distinction between promissory and
proprietary estoppel". He added that this "distinction may
indeed be valuable to those who have to teach or expound the
law, but I do not think that, in solving the particular
problem raised by a particular case, putting the law into
categories is of the slightest assistance". It does appear
to us that this was a case deci-
665
ded on the principle of promissory estoppel. The
representative of the Arun District Council clearly gave
assurance to Crabb that they would give him access to the
new road at point B to serve the southern portion of his
land and the Arun District Council in fact constructed a
gate at point B, and in the belief induced by this
representation that he would have right of access to the new
road at point B, Crabb agreed to sell the northern portion
of his land without reserving for himself as owner of the
southern portion any right of way over the northern portion
for the purpose of access to the new road. This was the
reason why the Court raised an equity in favour of Crabb and
held that the equity would be satisfied by giving Crabb "the
right of access at point B free of charge without paying
anything for it". Arun District Council was held bound by
its promise to provide Crabb access to the new road at point
B and this promise was enforced against Arun District
Council at the instance of Crabb. The case was one which
fell within the category of promissory estoppel and it may
be regarded as supporting the view that promissory estoppel
can be the basis of a cause of action. It is possible that
the case also came within the rule of proprietary estoppel
enunciated by Lord Kingsdown in Ramsden v. Dyson(1) :
"The rule of law applicable to the case appears to
me to be this : If a man, under a verbal agreement with
a landlord for a certain interest in land, or what
amounts to the same thing, under an expectation,
created or encouraged by the landlord that he shall
have a certain interest, takes possession of such land,
with the consent of the landlord, and upon the faith of
such promise or expectation, with the knowledge of the
land lord, and without objection by him, lays out money
upon the land, a Court of equity will compel the
landlord to give effect to such promise or
expectation."
and Spencer Bower and Turner may be right in observing that
that was perhaps the reason why it was held that the promise
made by Arun District Council gave rise to a cause of action
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in favour of Crabb. But, on what principle, one may ask, is
the distinction to be sustained between promissory estoppel
and proprietary estoppel in the matter of enforcement by
action. If proprietary estoppel can furnish a cause of
action, why should promissory estoppel not ? There is no
qualitative difference between the two. Both are the off-
springs of equity and if equity is flexible enough to permit
proprietary estoppel to be used as a cause of action, there
is no reason in logic or principle why promissory estoppel
should also not be available as a cause of action, if
necessary to satisfy the equity.
666
But perhaps the main reason why the English Courts have
been reluctant to allow promissory estoppel to found a cause
of action seems to be the apprehension that the doctrine of
consideration would other wise be completely displaced.
There can be no doubt that the decision of Lord Denning in
the High Trees’ case represented a bold attempt to escape
from the limitation imposed by the House of Lords in Jorden
v. Money (supra) and it rediscovered an equity which was
long embedded beneath the crust of the old decisions in
Hughes v. Metropolitan Railway Co. (supra) and Birmingham
and District Land Co. v. London and North Western Rail Co.
(supra), and brought about a remarkable development in the
law with a view to ensuring its approximation with justice,
an ideal for which the law has been constantly striving. But
it is interesting to note the Lord Denning was not prepared
to go further, as he thought that having regard to the
doctrine of consideration which was so deeply entrenched in
the jurisprudence of the country, it might be unwise to
extend promissory estoppel so as to found a cause of action
and that is why he uttered a word of caution in Combe v.
Combe (supra) that the principle of promissory estoppel
"should not be stretched too far, lest it should be
endangered". The learned Law Lord proceeded to add "seeing
that the principle never stands alone as giving a cause of
action in itself, it can never do away with the necessity of
consideration when that is an essential part of the cause of
action. The doctrine of consideration is too firmly fixed to
be overthrown by a side wind." Spencer Bower and Turner also
point out at page 384 of their Treatise (3rd ed) that it is
difficult to see how in a case of promissory estoppel a
promise can be used to found a cause of action without
according to it operative contractual force and it is for
this reason that "a contention that a promissory estoppel
may be used to found a cause of action must be regarded as
an attack on the doctrine of consideration." The learned
authors have also observed at page 387 that "to give a
plaintiff a cause of action on a promissory estoppel must be
little less than to allow an action in contract where
consideration is not shown" and that cannot be done because
consideration "still remains a cardinal necessity of the
formation of a contract." It can hardly be disputed that
over the last three or four centuries the doctrine of
consideration has come to occupy such a predominant position
in the law of contract that under the English law it is
impossible to think of a contract without consideration and,
therefore, it is understandable that the English courts
should have hesitated to push the doctrine of promissory
estoppel to its logical conclusion and stopped short at
allowing it to be used merely as a weapon of defence,
though, as we shall point out, there are, quite a few cases
where this doctrine has been used
667
not as founding a cause of action in itself but as a part of
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a cause of a action.
The modern attitude towards the doctrine of
consideration is, however, changing fast and there is
considerable body of juristic thought which believes that
this doctrine is "something of an anchronism". Prof.
Holdsworth pointed out long ago in his History of English
Law that "the requirements of consideration in its present
shape prevent the enforcement of many contracts, which ought
to be enforced, if the law really wishes to give effect to
the lawful intentions of the parties to them; and it would
prevent the enforcement of many others, if the judges had
not used their ingenuity to invest considerations. But the
invention of considerations, by reasoning which is both
devious and technical, adds to the difficulties of the
doctrine". Lord Wright remarked in an article published in
49 Harvard Law Review, 1225 that the doctrine of
consideration in its present form serves no practical
purpose and ought to be abolished. Sir Federick Pollock also
said in his well known work of ‘Ganius of Common Law’, p. 91
that the application of the doctrine of consideration" to
various unusual but not unknown cases has been made subtle
and obscured by excessive dialectic refinement". Equally
strong is the condemnation of this doctrine in judicial
pronouncements. Lord Duned observed in the well known case
of Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. v. Selfridge and Co. Ltd.(1) "I
confess that this case is to my mind apt to nip any budding
affection which one might have had for the doctrine of
consideration. For the effect of that doctrine in the
present case is to make it possible for a person to snap his
fingers at a bargain deliberately made, a bargain not in
itself unfair, and which the person seeking to enforce it
has a legitimate interest to enforce." The doctrine of
consideration has also received severe criticism at the
hands of Dean Roscoe Pound in the United States. The reason
is that promise as a social and economic institution becomes
of the first importance in a commercial and industrial
society and it is an expression of the moral sentiment of a
civilised society that a man’s word should be ‘as good as
his bond’ and his fellow-men should be able to rely on the
one equally with the other. That is why the Law Revision
Committee in England in its Sixth Report made as far back as
1937 accepted Prof. Holdsworth’s view and advocated that a
contract should exist if it was intended to create or affect
legal relations and either consideration was present or the
contract was reduced to writing. This recommendation,
however, did not fructify into law with the result that the
present position remains what it was. But having regard to
the general opprobrium to which the doctrine of
consideration has been subjected
668
by eminent jurists, we need not be unduly anxious to project
this doctrine against assault or erosion nor allow it to
dwarf or stultify the full development of the equity of
promissory estoppel or inhibit or curtail its operational
efficacy as a justice device for preventing injustice. It
may be pointed out that the Law Commission of India in its
13th Report adopted the same approach and recommended that,
by way of exception to section 25 of the Indian Contract
Act, 1925, a promise, express or implied, which the promisor
knows or reasonably should know, will be relied upon by the
promisee, should be enforceable, if the promisee has altered
his position to his detriment in reliance on the promise. We
do not see any valid reason why promissory estoppel should
not be allowed to found a cause of action where, in order to
satisfy the equity, it is necessary to do so.
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We may point out that even in England where the judges
apprehending that if a cause of action is allowed to be
founded on promissory estoppel it would considerably erode,
if not completely overthrow, the doctrine of consideration,
have been fearful to allow promissory estoppel to be used as
a weapon of offence, it is interesting to find that
promissory estoppel has not been confined to a purely
defensive role. Lord Denning himself said in Combe v. Combe
(supra) that promissory estoppel "may be a part of a cause
of action", though "not a cause of action itself". In fact
there have been several cases where promissory estoppel has
been successfully invoked by a party to support his cause of
action, without actually founding his cause of action
exclusively upon it. Two such cases are : Robertson v.
Minister of Pensions(1) and Evenden v. Guildford City
Association Football Club Ltd.(2) The English courts have
thus gone a step forward from the original position when
promissory estoppel was regarded merely as a passive equity
and allowed it to be used as a weapon of offence to a
limited extent as a part of the cause of action, but still
the doctrine of consideration continues to inhibit the
judicial mind and that has thwarted the full development of
this new equitable principle and the realisation of its vast
potential as a juristic technique for doing justice. It is
true that to allow promissory estoppel to found a cause of
action would seriously dilute the principle which requires
consideration to support a contractual obligation, but that
is no reason why this new principle, which is a child of
equity brought into the world with a view to promoting
honesty and good faith and bringing law closer to justice
should be held in fetters and not allowed to operate in all
the activist magnitude, so that it may fulfil the purpose
for which it was conceived and born. It must be remembered
that law is not a mausoleum. It is not an antique to be
taken
669
down, dusted, admired and put back on the shelf. It is
rather like an old vigorous tree, having its roots in
history, yet continuously taking new grafts and putting out
new sprouts and occasionally dropping dead wood. It is
essentially a social process, the end product of which is
justice and hence it must keep on growing and developing
with changing social concepts and values. Otherwise, there
will be estrangement between law and justice and law will
cease to have legitimacy. It is true as pointed out by Mr.
Justice Holmes, that continuity with the past is a
historical necessity but it must also be remembered at the
same time, as pointed out by Mr. Justice Cardozo that
"conformity is not to be turned into a "fetish". We would do
well to recall the famous words uttered by Mr. Justice
Cardozo while closing his first lecture on "Paradoxes of
Legal Science";
"The disparity between precedent and ethos may so
lengthen with the years that only covin and chicenery
would be disappointed if the separation were to end.
There are many intermediate stages, mores, if
inadequate to obliterate the past, may fix direction
for the future. The evil precedent may live, but so
sterilized and truncated as to have small capacity for
harm. It will be prudently ignored when invoked as an
apposite analogy in novel situations, though the novel
element be small. There will be brought forward other
analogies, less precise, it may be, but more apposite
to the needs of morals. The weights are constantly
shifted to restore the equilibrium between precedent
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and justice."
Was it not Lord Denning who exhorted judges not to be
timorous sours but to be bold spirits, ready to allow a new
cause of action if justice so required. (Candler v. Crane
Christmas & Co.(1)
We may profitably consider at this stage what the
American law on the subject is because in the United States
the law has always shown a greater capacity for adjustment
and growth than elsewhere. The doctrine of promissory
estoppel has displayed remarkable vigour and vitality in the
hands of American Judges and it is still rapidly developing
and expanding in the United States. It may be pointed out
that this development does not derive its origin in any way
from the decision of Lord Denning in the High Trees’ case
but ante-dates this decision by a number of years; perhaps
it is possible that it may have helped to inspire that
decision. It was long before the decision in the High
Trees’case that the American Law Institute’s Restatement of
the Law of Contract’s came out with the following
proposition in Article 90 :
670
"A promise which the promisor should reasonably
expect to induce action or forbearance of a definite
and substantial character on the part of the promisee,
and which does induce such action or forbearance, is
binding if injustice can be avoided only by enforcement
of the promise."
This proposition was explained and elucidated by
several illustrations given in the article and one of such
illustrations was as follows :
"A promises B to pay him an annuity during B’s
life. B thereupon resigns a profitable employment, as A
expected that he might. B receives the annuity for some
years, in the meantime becoming disqualified from again
obtaining good employment. A’s promise is binding."
It is true that the Restatement has not the same
weight, as a source of law, as actual decisions of courts of
high standing, yet the principle set out in Article 90 has
in fact formed the basis of a number of decisions in various
states and it is now becoming increasingly clear that a
promise may in the United States derive contractual
enforceability if it has been made by the promisor intending
that it would be acted on and the promisee has altered his
position in reliance on it, notwithstanding that there is no
consideration in the sense in which that word is used in
English and Commonwealth jurisprudence. Of course the basic
requirement for invoking this principle must be present
namely, that the fact situation should be such that
"injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the
promise". There are numerous examples of the application of
this principle to be found in recent American decisions.
There is, for instance, the long line of cases in which a
promise to give a charitable subscription has been
consistently held to be enforceable at the suit of the
charity. Though attempts have been made to justify these
decisions by reasoning that the charity by commencing or
continuing its charitable work after receiving promise has
given good consideration for it, we do not think that, on
closer scrutiny, the enforceability of the promise in these
cases can be supported by spelling out the presence of some
form of consideration and the true principle on which they
are really based is the principle of promissory estoppel.
This is also the view expressed in the following statement
at page 657 of vol. 19 of American Jurisprudence :
"A number of courts have upheld the validity of
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charitable subscriptions on the theory of promissory
estoppel holding that while a mere promise to
contribute is unenforceable for want of consideration,
if money has been expended or liabilities have been
incurred in reliance on the promise so
671
that non fulfillment will cause injury to the payee,
the donor is estopped to assert the lack of
consideration, and the promise will be enforced."
Chief Justice Cardozo, presiding over the Court of Appeals
of the State of New York, explained the ratio of these
decisions in the same terms in Alleghany College v. National
Chauteuque County Bank(1):
"The half-truths of one generation tend at times
to perpetuate themselves in the law as the whole truths
of another, when constant repetition brings it about
that qualifications, taken once for granted, are
disregarded or forgotten. The doctrine of consideration
has not escaped the common lot. As far back as 1881,
Judge Holmes in his lectures on the Common Law (p. 292)
separated the detriment which is merely a consequence
of the promise from the detriment, which is in truth
the motive or inducement, and yet added that the courts
’have gone far in obliterating this distinction’. The
tendency toward effacement has not lessened with the
years. On the contrary there has grown up of recent
days a doctrine that a substitute for consideration or
an exception to its ordinary requirements can be found
in what is styled a ’promissory estoppel’. Williston,
Contract, Ss. 139, 116. Whether the exception has made
its way in this State to such an extent as to permit us
to say that the general law of consideration has been
modified accordingly, we do not now attempt to say.
Cases such as 234 N.Y. 479 and 221 N.Y. 431-may be
signposts on the road. Certain at least it is that we
have adopted the doctrine of promissory estoppel as the
equivalent of consideration in connection with our law
of charitable subscriptions. So long as those decisions
stand, the question is not merely whether the
enforcement of a charitable subscription can be squared
with the doctrine of consideration in all its ancient
rigor. The question may also be whether it can be
squared with the doctrine of consideration as qualified
by the doctrine of promissory estoppel".
We have said that the cases in this State have
recognized this exception, if exception it is thought to be.
Thus, in 12 N.Y. 18 the subscription was made without
request, express or implied that the church do anything on
the faith of it. Later, the church did incur expense to the
knowledge of the promisor, and in the reasonable belief that
the promise would be kept. We held the promise binding,
though
672
consideration there was none except upon the theory of a
promissory estoppel. In 74 N.Y. 72 a situation substantially
the same became the basis for a like ruling. So in 103 N.Y.
600 and (1901) 167 N.Y. 96 the moulds of consideration as
fixed by the old doctrine were subject to a like expansion.
Very likely, conceptions of public policy have shaped, more
or less subconsciously, the rulings thus made. Judges have
been affected by the thought that ’defences of that
character’ are ’breaches of faith towards the public, and
especially towards those engaged in the same enterprise, and
an unwarrantable disappointment of the reasonable
expectations of those interested’. W. F. Allen J. in 12 N.Y.
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18 and of 97 Vt. 495 and cases there cited. The result
speaks for itself irrespective of the motive. Decisions
which have stood so long, and which are supported by so many
considerations of public policy and reason, will not be
over-ruled to save the symmetry of a concept which itself
came into our law, not so much from any reasoned conviction
of its justice, as from historical accidents of practice and
procedure. (8 Holdsworth, History of English Law, 7 et.
seq). The concept survives as one of the distinctive
features of our legal system. We have no thought to suggest
that it is obsolete or on the way to be abandoned. As in the
case of other concepts, however, the pressure of exceptions
has led to irregularities of form."
It is also interesting to note that the doctrine of
promissory estoppel has been widely used in the United
States in diverse other situations as founding a cause of
action. The most notable instances are to be found in what
may be called the "sub-contractor bid cases" in which a
contractor about to tender for a contract, invites a sub-
contractor to submit a bid for a sub-contract and after
receiving his bid the contractor submits a tender. In such
cases, the sub-contractor has been held unable to retract
his bid and be liable in damages if he does so. It is not
possible to say that any detriment which the contractor may
be able to show in these cases would amount to consideration
in its strict sense and these decisions have plainly been
reached on an application of the doctrine of promissory
estoppel. One of such cases was Drennan v. Star Paving
Company(1) where Traynor, J. explicitly adopted as good law
the text of Article 90 of the Restatement of the law of
Contracts quoted above and stated in so many words that "the
absence of consideration is not fatal to the enforcement of
such a promise". There are also numerous cases where the
doctrine of promissory estoppel has been applied against the
Government where
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the interest of justice, morality and common fairness
clearly dictated such a course. We shall refer to these
cases when we discuss the applicability of the doctrine of
equitable estoppel against the Government. Suffice it to
state for the present that the doctrine of promissory
estoppel has been taken much further in the United States
than in English and Commonwealth jurisdictions and in some
States at least, it has been used to reduce, if not to
destroy, the prestige of consideration as an essential of
valid contract. Vide Spencer Bower and Turner’s Estoppel by
Representation (2d) page 358.
We now go on to consider whether and if so to what
extent is the doctrine of promissory estoppel applicable
against the Government. So far as the law in English is
concerned, the position cannot be said to be very clear.
Rowlett J., in an early decision in Rederiaktiebolaget
Amphitrite v. The King(1) held that an undertaking given by
the British Government to certain neutral ship owners during
the First World War that if the shipowners sent a particular
ship to the United Kingdom with a specified cargo, she shall
not be detained, was not enforceable against the British
Government in a court of law and observed that his main
reason for taking this view was that:
"--it is not competent for the Government to
fetter its future executive action, which must
necessarily be determined by the needs of the community
when the question arises. It cannot by contract hamper
its freedom of action in matters which concern the
welfare of the State."
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This observation has however not been regarded by jurists as
laying down the correct law on the subject since it is "very
wide and it is difficult to determine its proper scope".
Anson’s English Law of Contract, 22d. 174. The doctrine of
executive necessity propounded by Rowlatt, J., was in fact
disapproved by Denning, J., as he then was, in Roberston v.
Minister of Pensions (supra) where the learned Judge said:
The Crown cannot escape by saying that estoppels
do not bind the Crown for that doctrine has long been
exploded. Nor can the Crown escape by praying in aid
the doctrine of executive necessity, that is, the
doctrine that the Crown cannot bind itself so as to
fetter its future executive action. That doctrine was
propounded by Rowlatt, J., in Rederiak-tiebolaget
Amphitrite v. The King but it was unnecessary for the
decision because the statement there was not a promise
which was intended to be binding but only an expression
of intention. Rowlatt, J., seems to have been
influenced by
674
the cases on the right of the Crown to dismiss its
servants at pleasure, but those cases must now all be
read in the light of the judgment of Lord Atkin in
Reily v. The King-(1954) A.C. 176, 176).-In my opinion
the defence of executive necessity is of limited scope.
It only avails the Crown where there is an implied term
to that effect or that is the true meaning of the
contract."
It is true that the decision of Denning J., in this case was
overruled by the House of Lords in Howell v. Falmouth Boat
Construction Co. Ltd. (1) but that was on the ground that
the doctrine of promissory estoppel cannot be invoked to
"bar the Crown from enforcing a statutory prohibition or
entitle the subject to maintain that there has been no
breach of it". The decision of the House of Lords did not
express any disapproval of the applicability of the doctrine
of promissory estoppel against the Crown nor did it overrule
the view taken by Denning J., that the Crown cannot escape
its obligation under the doctrine of promissory estoppel by
"praying in aid the doctrine of executive necessity." The
statement of the law by Denning, J., may, therefore, still
be regarded as holding the field and it may be taken to be a
judicially favoured view that the Crown is not immune from
liability under the doctrine of promissory estoppel.
The courts in America for a long time took the view
that the doctrine of promissory estoppel does not apply to
the Government but more recently the courts have started
retreating from that position to a sounder one, namely, that
the doctrine of promissory estoppel may apply to the
Government when justice so requires. The second edition of
American Jurisprudence brought out in 1966 in paragraph 123
points out that "equitable estoppel will be invoked against
the State when justified by the facts", though it does warn
that this doctrine "should not be lightly invoked against
the State." Later in the same paragraph it is stated that
"as a general rule, the doctrine of estoppel will not be
applied against the State in its governmental, public or
sovereign capacity", but a qualification is introduced that
promissory estoppel may be applied against the State even in
its governmental, public or sovereign capacity if "its
application is necessary to prevent fraud or manifest
injustice". Since 1966 there is an increasing trend towards
applying the doctrine of promissory estoppel against the
State and the old law that promissory estoppel does not
apply against the government is definitely declining. There
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have been numerous cases in the State courts where it has
been held that promissory estoppel may be applied even
against the Govern-
675
ment in its governmental capacity where the accommodation of
the needs of justice to the needs of effective government so
requires.
The protagonists of the view that promissory estoppel
cannot apply against the Government or a public authority
seek to draw inspiration from the majority decision of the
United States Supreme Court in Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation v. Merrill.(1) But we do not think that decision
can be read as laying down the proposition that the doctrine
of promissory estoppel can never be invoked against the
Government. There the County Committee acting as the agent
of the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation which was a wholly
Government-owned corporation constituted under the Federal
Crop Insurance Act, advised the respondents that their
entire 460 acres of spring wheat crop which included spring
wheat reseeded. On winter wheat acreage was insurable and
acting upon it, the respondents made an application for
insurance which was forwarded by the County Committee to the
Denver office of the Corporation with a recommendation for
acceptance. The application did not mention that any part of
the insured crop was reseeded and it was accepted by the
Denver office of the Corporation. There were at this time
wheat crop insurance regulations framed by the Corporation
and published in the Federal Register which prohibited
insurance of spring wheat reseeded on winter wheat acreage
but neither the respondents nor the County Committees which
was acting as the agent of the Corporation was aware of
them. A few months later, most of the respondent’s crop was
destroyed by drought and on a claim being made by the
respondents under the policy of insurance, the Corporation
refused to pay the loss on the ground that the wheat crop
insurance regulations expressly prohibited insurance of
reseeded wheat. The refusal was upheld by the Supreme Court
by a majority of five to four. The majority observed:
"It is too late in the day to urge that the
Government is just another private litigant, for
purposes of charging it with liability, whenever it
takes over a business theretofore conducted by private
enterprises or engages in competitions with private
ventures. Whatever the form in which the Government
functions, anyone entering into an arrangement with the
Government takes the risk of having accurately
ascertained that be who purports to act for the
Government stays within the bounds of his authority And
this is so even though as here, the agent himself may
have been unaware of the limitations upon his autho-
676
rity.-"Man must turn square corners when they deal with
the Government", does not reflect a callous outlook. It
merely expresses the duty of all courts to observe the
conditions defined by Congress for charging the public
treasury."
It will be seen that the Corporation was held entitled
to repudiate its liability because the wheat crop insurance
regulations prohibited insurance of reseeded wheat and the
assurance given by the County Committee as the agent of the
Corporation that the reseeded wheat was insurable being
contrary to the wheat crop insurance regulations, could not
be held binding on the Corporation. It was not within the
authority of the County Committee to give such assurance
contrary to the wheat crop insurance regulations and hence
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no promissory estoppel against the Corporation could be
founded upon it. This decision did not say that even if an
assurance given by an agent is within the scope of his
authority and is not prohibited by law, it could still not
create promissory estoppel against the Government. But, it
may be pointed out, even this limited holding has come in
for considerable criticism at the hands of jurists in the
United States. See Davis on Administrative Law (3rd d.)
pages 344-345. Referring to the observation of the majority
that "Men must turn square corners when they deal with the
Government", Maguire and Zimet have poetically responded by
saying: "It is hard to see why the Government should not be
held to a like standard of rectangular rectitude when
dealing with its citizens." (Maguire and Zimet, Hobson’s
Choice and Similar Practices in Federal Taxation, 48 Harv.
L. Rev. 1287 at 1299).
There has so far not been any decision of the Supreme
Court of the United States taking the view that the doctrine
of promissory estoppel cannot be invoked against the
Government. The trend in the State courts, of late, has been
strongly in favour of the application of the doctrine of
promissory estoppel against the Government and public bodies
"where interests of justice, morality and common fairness
clearly dictate that course." It is being increasingly felt
that "that the Government ought to set a high standard in
its dealings and relationships with citizens and the word of
a duly authorised Government agent, acting within the scope
of his authority ought to be as good as a Government bond".
Of course, as pointed out by the United States Court of
Appeals, Third Circuit in Valsonavich v. United States, (1)
the Government would not be estopped "by the acts of its
officers and agents who without authority enter into
677
agreements to do what the law does not sanction or permit"
and "those dealing with an agent of the Government must be
held to have notice of limitations of his authority" as held
in Merrill’s case. This is precisely what the House of Lords
also held in England in Howell v. Falmouth Boat Construction
Co. Ltd. (supra) where Lord Simonds stated the law to be:
"The illegality of an act is the same whether or
not the actor has been misled by an assumption of
authority on the part of a Government officer however
high or low in the hierachy. The question is whether
the character of an act done in face of a statutory
prohibition is affected by the fact that it has been
induced by a misleading assumption of authority. In my
opinion the answer is clearly no."
But if the acts or omissions of the officers of the
Government are within the scope of their authority and are
not otherwise impermissible under the law, they "will work
estoppel against the Government."
When we turn to the Indian law on the subject it is
heartening to find that in India not only has the doctrine
of promissory estoppel been adopted in its fullness but it
has been recognized as affording a cause of action to the
person to whom the promise is made. The requirement of
consideration has not been allowed to stand in the way of
enforcement of such promise. The doctrine of promissory
estoppel has also been applied against the Government and
the defence based on executive necessity has been
categorically negatived. It is remarkable that as far back
as 1880, long before the doctrine of promissory estoppel was
formulated by Denning, J., in England, A Division Bench of
two English Judges in the Calcutta High Court applied the
doctrine of promissory estoppel and recognised a cause of
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action founded upon it in the Ganges Manufacturing Co. v.
Surajmuli and other(1). The doctrine of promissory estoppel
was also applied against the Government in a case
subsequently decided by the Bombay High Court in Municipal
Corporation of Bombay v. The Secretary of State.(2)
The facts of this last-mentioned case in Municipal
Corporation of Bombay v. The Secretary of State (supra) are
a little interesting and it would be profitable to refer to
them. The Government of Bombay, with a view to constructing
an arterial road, requested the Municipal Commissioner to
remove certain fish and vegetable
678
markets which obstructed the construction of the proposed
road. The Municipal Commissioner replied that the markets
were vested in the Corporation of Justices but that he was
willing to vacate certain municipal stables which occupied a
portion of the proposed site if the Government would rent
other land mentioned in his letter, to the Municipality at a
nominal rent, the Municipality undertaking to bear the
expenses of levelling the same and permit the Municipality
to erect on such land "stables of wood and iron with nobble
foundation to be removed at six months’ notice on other
suitable ground being provided by Government". The
Government accepted the suggestion of the Municipal
Commissioner and sanctioned the application of the Municipal
Commissioner for a site for stabling on the terms set out
above and the Municipal Commissioner thereafter entered into
possession of the land and constructed stables, workshops
and chawls on the same at considerable expense. Twenty-four
years later the Government served a notice on the Municipal
Commissioner determining the tenancy and requesting the
Municipal Commissioner to deliver possession of the land
within six months and in the mean time to pay rent at the
rate of Rs.12,000/- per month. The Municipal Corporation
declined to hand over possession of the land or to pay the
higher rent and the Secretary of State for India thereupon
filed a suit against the Municipal Corporation for a
declaration that the tenancy of the Municipality stood
determined and for an order directing the municipality to
pay rent at the rate of Rs. 12,000/- per month. The suit was
resisted by the Municipal Corporation on the ground then the
events which had transpired had created an equity in favour
of the Municipality which afforded an answer to the claim of
the Government to eject the Municipality. This defence was
upheld by a Division Bench of the High Court and Jenkins
C.J., speaking on behalf of the Division Bench, pointed out
that, in view of the following facts, namely:
"-the Municipality gave up the old stables,
levelled the ground, and erected the moveable staibles
in 1866 in the belief that they had against the
Government an absolute right not to be turned out until
not only the expiration of six months notice, but also
other suitable ground was furnished: that this belief
is referable to an expectation created by the
Government that their enjoyment of the land would be in
accordance with this belief: and that the Government
knew that the Municipality were acting in this belief
so created:"
679
an equity was created in favour of the Municipality which
entitled it "to appeal to the Court for its aid in assisting
them to resist the Secretary of State’s claim that they
shall be ejected from the ground". The learned Chief Justice
pointed out that the doctrine which he was applying took its
origin "from the jurisdiction assumed by Courts of Equity to
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intervene in the case of or to prevent fraud" and after
referring to Ramsden v. Dyson(1) observed that the Crown
also came within the range of this equity. This decision of
the Bombay High Court is a clear authority for the
proposition that it is open to a party who has acted on a
representation made by the Government to claim that the
Government shall be bound to carry out the promise made by
it, even though the promise is not recorded in the form of a
formal contract as required by the Constitution. That is how
this decision has in fact been interpreted by this court in
Union of India v. Indo-Afghan Agencies:(2)
We don’t find any decision of importance thereafter on
the subject of promissory estoppel until we come to the
decision of this Court in Collector of Bombay v. Municipal
Corporation of the City of Bombay & Ors.(3). The facts
giving rise to this case were that in 1865 the Government of
Bombay called upon the predecessor in title of the Municipal
Corporation of Bombay to remove old markets from a certain
site and vacate it and on the application of the Municipal
Commissioner, the Government passed a resolution approving
and authorizing the grant of another site to the
Municipality. The resolution stated further that "the
Government do not consider that any rent should be charged
to the Municipality as the markets will be like other public
buildings, for the benefit of the whole community". The
Municipal Corporation gave up the site on which the old
markets were situated and spent a sum of Rs. 17 lakhs in
erecting and maintaining markets on the new site. In 1940
the Collector of Bombay assessed the new site to land
revenue and the Municipal Corporation there upon filed a
suit for a declaration that the order of assessment was
ultra vires and it was entitled to hold the land for ever
without payment of any assessment. The High Court of Bombay
held that the Government had lost its right to assess the
land in question by reason of the equity arising on the
facts of the case in favour of the Municipal Corporation and
there was thus a limitation on the right of the Government
to assess under section 8 of the Bom
680
bay City Land Revenue Act. On appeal by the Collector to
this Court, the majority Judges held that the Government was
not, under the circumstances of the case, entitled to assess
land revenue on the land in question because the Municipal
Corporation had taken possession of the land in terms of the
Government resolution and had continued in such possession
openly, uninterruptedly and of right for over seventy years
and thereby acquired the limited title it had been
prescribing for during the period, that is to say, the right
to hold the land in perpetuity free of rent. Chandrasekhra
Aiyar, J., agreed with the conclusion reached by the
majority but rested his decision on the doctrine of
promissory estoppel. He pointed out that the Government
could not be allowed to go back on the representation made
by it and stressed the point in the form of an interrogation
by asking: "if we do so, would it not amount to our
countenancing the perpetration of what can be compendiously
described as legal fraud which a court of equity must
prevent being committed?" He observed that even if the
resolution of the Government amounted merely to "the holding
out of a promise that no rent will be charged in the future,
the Government must be deemed in the circumstances of this
case to have bound themselves to fulfil it. Whether it is
the equity recognised in Ramsden’s case (supra) or it is
some other form of equity, is not of much importance. Courts
must do justice by the promotion of honesty and good faith,
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as far as it lies in their power." This was of course the
solitary view of Chandrasekhara Aiyer, J., but it was
approved by this Court in no uncertain terms in Indo-Afghan
Agencies case (supra).
Then we come to the celebrated decision of this Court
in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case (supra). It was in this
case that the doctrine of promissory estoppel found its most
eloquent exposition. We may briefly state the facts in order
to appreciate the ratio of the decision. Indo-Afghan
Agencies Ltd. who were the respondents before the Court,
acting in reliance on the Export Promotion Scheme issued by
the Central Government, exported woollen goods to
Afghanistan and on the basis of their exports claimed to be
entitled to obtain from the Textile Commissioner import
entitlement certificate for the full F.O.B. value of the
goods exported as provided in the scheme. The Scheme was not
a statutory Scheme having the force of law but it provided
that an export of woollen goods would be entitled to import
raw-material of the total amount equal to 100% of the F.O.B.
value of his exports. The respondents contended that,
relying on the promise contained in the Scheme, they had
exported woollen goods to Afghanistan and were,. therefore,
entitled to enforce the promise against the Government and
to obtain import entitlement
681
certificate for the full F.O.B. value of the goods exported
on the principle of promissory estoppel. This contention was
sought to be answered on behalf of the Government by
pleading the doctrine of executive necessity and the
argument of the Government based on this doctrine was that
it is not competent for the Government to fetter its future
executive action which must necessarily be determined by the
needs of the community when the question arises and no
promise or undertaking can be held to be binding on the
Government so as to hamper its freedom of executive action.
Certain observations of Rowlatt, J., in Rederiektiabolaget
Amphitrite v. The King (supra) were sought to be pressed
into service on behalf of the Government in support of this
argument. We have already referred to these observations
earlier and we need not reproduce them over again. These
observation undoubtedly supported the contention of the
Government but it was pointed out by this Court that these
observations were disapproved by Denning J., in Robertson v.
Minister of Pensions (supra) where the learned Judge said
that "the Crown cannot escape by praying in aid the doctrine
of executive necessity, that is the doctrine that the Crown
cannot bind itself so as to fetter its future executive
action.The defence of executive necessity is of limited
scope. It only avails the Crown where there is an implied
term to that effect or that is the true meaning of the
contract" and this statement of Denning, J., was to be
preferred as laying down the correct law of the subject.
Shah, J., speaking on behalf of the Court, observed at p.
376:
"We are unable to accede to the contention that
the executive necessity releases the Government from
honouring its solemn promises relying on which citizens
have acted to their detriment. Under our constitutional
set-up no person may be deprived of his right or
liberty except in due course of and by authority of
law; of a member of the Executive seeks to deprive a
citizen of his right or liberty otherwise than in
exercise of power derived from the law-common or
statute-the Courts will be competent to and indeed
would be bound to, protect the rights of the aggrieved
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citizen."
The defence of executive necessity was thus clearly
negatived by this Court and it was pointed out that it did
not release the Government from its obligation to honour the
promise made by it, if the citizen, acting in reliance on
the promise, had altered his position. The doctrine of
promissory estoppel was in such a case applicable against
the Government and it could not be deteated by invoking the
defence of executive necessity.
682
It was also contended on behalf of the Government that
if the Government were held bound by every representation
made by it regarding its intention, when the exporters have
acted in the manner they were invited to act, the result
would be that the Government would be bound by a contractual
obligation even though no formal contract in the manner
required by Article 299 was executed. But this contention
was negatived and it was pointed out by this Court that the
respondents "are not seeking to enforce any contractual
right: they are seeking to enforce compliance with the
obligation which is laid upon the Textile Commissioner by
the terms of the Scheme, and we are of the view that even if
the Scheme is executive in character, the respondents who
were aggrieved because of the failure to carry out the terms
of the Scheme were entitled to seek resort to the Court and
claim that the obligation imposed upon the Textile
Commissioner by the Scheme be ordered to be carried out". It
was thus laid down that a party who has, acting in reliance
on a promise made by the Government, altered his position,
is entitled to enforce the promise against the Government,
even though the promise is not in the form of a formal
contract as required by Article 299 and that Article does
not militate against the applicability of the doctrine of
promissory estoppel against the Government.
This Court finally, after referring to the decision in
the Ganges Manufacturing Co. v. Surujmull (supra). The
Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay v. The Secretary
of State for India (supra) and Collector of Bombay v.
Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay & Ors. (supra),
summed up the position as follows:
"Under our jurisprudence the Government is not
exempt from liability to carry out the representation
made by it as to its future conduct and it cannot on
some undefined and undisclosed ground of necessity or
expediency fail to carry out the promise solemnly made
by it, nor claim to be the Judge of its own obligation
to the citizen on an ex parte appraisement of the
circumstances in which the obligation has arisen."
The law may, therefore, now be taken to be settled as a
result of this decision that where the Government makes a
promise knowing or intending that it would be acted on by
the promises and, in fact, the promisee, acting in reliance
on it, alters his position, the Government would be held
bound by the promise and the promise would be enforceable
against the Government at the instance of the promises,
notwithstanding that there is no consideration for the
promise and the promise is not recorded in the form of a
formal contract
683
as required by Article 299 of the Constitution. It is
elementary that in a Republic governed by the rule of law,
no one, howsoever high or low, is above the law. Every one
is subject to the law as fully and completely as any other
and the Government is no exception. It is indeed the pride
of constitutional democracy and rule of law that the
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Government stands on the same footing as a private
individual so far as the obligation of the law is concerned:
the former is equally bound as the latter. It is indeed
difficult to see on what principle can a Government,
committed to the rule of law, claim immunity from the
doctrine of promissory estoppel. Can the Government say that
it is under no obligation to act in a manner that is fair
and just or that it is not bound by considerations of
"honesty and good faith"? Why should the Government not be
held to a high "standard of rectangular rectitude while
dealing with its citizens"? There was a time when the
doctrine of executive necessity was regarded as sufficient
justification for the Government to repudiate even its
contractual obligations, but let it be said to the eternal
glory of this Court, this doctrine was emphatically
negatived in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case and the supremacy
of the rule of law was established. It was laid down by this
Court that the Government cannot claim to be immune from the
applicability of the rule of promissory estoppel and
repudiate a promise made by it on the ground that such
promise may fetter its future executive action. If the
Government does not want its freedom of executive action to
be hampered or restricted, the Government need not make a
promise knowing or intending that it would be acted on by
the promisee and the promisee would alter his position
relying upon it. But if the Government makes such a promise
and the promises acts in reliance upon it and alters his
position, there is no reason why the Government should not
be compelled to make good such promise like any other
private individual. The law cannot acquire legitimacy and
gain social acceptance unless it accords with the moral
values of the society and the constant endeavor of the
Courts and the legislatures must, therefore, be to close the
gap between law and morality and bring about as near an
approximation between the two as possible. The doctrine of
promissory estoppel is a significant judicial contribution
in that direction.
But it is necessary to point out that since the
doctrine of promissory estoppel is an equitable doctrine, it
must yield when the equity so requires. If it can be shown
by the Government that having regard to the facts as they
have transpired, it would be inequitable to hold the
Government to the promise made by it, the Court would not
raise an equity in favour of the promisee and enforce the
promise against the
684
Government. The doctrine of promissory estoppel would be
displaced in such a case because, on the facts, equity would
not require that the Government should be held bound by the
promise made by it. When the Government is able to show that
in view of the facts as have transpired, public interest
would be prejudiced if the Government were required to carry
out the promise, the Court would have to balance the public
interest in the Government carrying out a promise made to a
citizen which has induced the citizen to act upon it and
after this position and the public interest likely to suffer
if the promise were required to be carried out by the
Government and determine which way the equity lies. It would
not be enough for the Government just to say that public
interest requires that the Government should not be
compelled to carry out the promise or that the public
interest would suffer if the Government were required to
honour it. The Government cannot, as Shah, J., pointed out
in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case, claim to be exempt from
the liability to carry out the promise "on some indefinite
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and undisclosed ground of necessity or expediency", nor can
the Government claim to be the sole judge of its liability
and repudiate it "on an ex-parte appraisement of the
circumstances". If the Government wants to resist the
liability, it will have to disclose to the Court what are
the facts and circumstances on account of which the
Government claims to be exempt from the liability and it
would be for the Court to decide whether these facts and
circumstances are such as to render it inequitable to
enforce the liability against the Government. Mere claim of
change of policy would not be sufficient to exonerate the
Government from the liability: the Government would have to
show what precisely is the changed policy and also its
reason and justification so that the Court can judge for
itself which way the public interest lies and what the
equity of the case demands. It is only if the Court is
satisfied, on proper and adequate material placed by the
Government, the over-riding public interest requires that
the Government should not be held bound by the promise but
should be free to act unfettered by it, that the Court would
refuse to enforce the promise against the Government. The
Court would not act on the mere ipse dixit of the
Government, for it is the Court which has to decide and not
the Government whether the Government should be held exempt
from liability. This is the essence of the rule of law. The
burden would be upon the Government to show that the public
interest in the Government acting otherwise than in
accordance with the promise is so overwhelming that it would
be inequitable to hold the Government bound by the promise
and the Court would insist on a highly rigorous standard of
proof in the discharge of this burden. But even where there
is no such over-riding public interest, it may still be
competent to
685
the Government to resile from the promise "on giving
reasonable notice which need not be a formal notice, giving
the promisee a reasonable opportunity of resuming his
position" provided of course it is possible for the promisee
to restore status quo ante. If however, the promisee cannot
resume his position, the promise would become final and
irrevocable. Vide Emmanuel Ayodeji Ajayi v. Briscoe.(1)
The doctrine of promissory estoppel was also held
applicable against a public authority like a Municipal
Council in Century Spinning & Manufacturing Co. Ltd. & Anr.
v. The Ulhasuagar Municipal Council & Anr.(2) The question
which arose in this case was whether the Ulhas Nagar
Municipal Council could be compelled to carry out a promise
made by its predecessor municipality that the factories in
the industrial area within its jurisdiction would be exempt
from payment of octroi for seven years from the date of the
levy. The appellant company, in the belief induced by the
assurance and undertaking given by the predecessor
municipality that its factory would be exempt from octroi
for a period of seven years, expanded its activities, but
when the municipal council came into being and took over the
administration of the former municipality, it sight to levy
octroi duty on appellant-company. The appellant company
thereupon filed a writ petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court of Bombay to restrain the
municipal council from enforcing the levy of octroi duty in
breach of the promise made by the predecessor municipality.
The High Court dismissed the petition in limine but, on
appeal, this Court took the view that this was a case which
required consideration and should have been admitted by the
High Court. Shah, J., speaking on behalf of the Court,
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pointed out
"Public bodies are as much bound as private
individuals to carry out representations of facts and
promises made by them, relying on which other persons
have altered their position to their prejudice. The
obligation arising against an individual out of his
representation amounting to a promise may be enforced
ex contracted by a person who acts upon the promise:
when the law requires that a contract enforceable at
law against a public body shall be in certain from or
be executed in the manner prescribed by statute, the
obligation may be if the contract be not in that form
be enforced against it in appropriate cases in equity."
The learned Judge then referred to the decision in the
Indo Afghan Agencies case and observed that in that case it
was laid down by this
686
Court that "the Government is not exempt from the equity
arising out of the acts done by citizens to their prejudice
relying upon the representations as to its future conduct
made by the Government". It was also pointed out by the
learned Judge that in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case this
Court approved of the observations made by Denning, J. in
Robertson v. Minister of Pensions (supra) rejecting the
doctrine of executive necessity and held them to be
applicable in India. The learned Judge concluded by saying
in words pregnant in the hope and meaning for democracy:
"If our nascent democracy is to thrive different
standards of conduct for the people and the public
bodies cannot ordinarily be permitted. A public body
is, in our judgment, not exempt from liability to carry
out its obligation arising out of representations made
by it relying upon which a citizen has altered his
position to his prejudice."
This Court refused to make a distinction between a
private individual and a public body so far as the doctrine
of promissory estoppel is concerned.
We then come to another important decision of this
Court in Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd. v. Hungerford Investment
Trust Ltd. (1) where the doctrine of promissory estoppel was
once again affirmed by this Court. Hegde, J, speaking on
behalf of the Court, pointed out: "Estoppel" is a rule of
equity. "That rule has gained new dimensions in recent
years. A new class of estoppel i.e. promissory estoppel has
come to be recognised by the courts in this Country as well
as in England. The full implication of ’promissory estoppel’
is yet to be spelled out." The learned Judge, after
referring to the decisions in High Trees case, Robertson v.
Minister of Pensions (supra) and the Indo-Afghan Agencies
case, pointed out that "the rule laid down in these
decisions undoubtedly advanced the cause of justice and
hence we have no hesitation in accepting it.
We must also refer to the decision of this Court in M.
Ramanatha Pillai v. The State of Kerala & Anr.(1) because
that was a decision strongly relied upon on behalf of the
State for negativing the applicability of the doctrine of
estoppel against the Government. This was a case where the
appellant was appointed to a temporary post and on the post
being abolished, the service of the appellant was
terminated. The appellant challenged the validity of
termination of service, inter alia, on
687
the ground that the Government was precluded from abolishing
the post and terminating the service on the principle of
promissory estoppel. This ground based on the doctrine of
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promissory estoppel was negatived and it was pointed out by
the Court that the appellant knew that the post was
temporary, suggesting clearly that the appellant could not
possibly be led into the belief that the post would not be
abolished. If the post was temporary to the knowledge of the
appellant, it is obvious that the appellant knew that the
post would be liable to be abolished at any time and if that
be so, there could be no factual basis for invoking the
doctrine of promissory estoppel for the purpose of
precluding the Government from abolishing the post. This
view taken by the Court was sufficient to dispose of the
contention based on promissory estoppel and it was not
necessary to say anything more about it, but the Court
proceeded to cite a passage from American Jurisprudence,
Vol. 28 (2d) at 783, paragraph 123 and observed that the
High Court rightly held "that the courts exclude the
operation of the doctrine of estoppel, when it is found that
the authority against whom estoppel is pleaded has owed a
duty to the public against whom the estoppel cannot fairly
operate." It was this observation which was heavily relied
upon on behalf of the State but we fail to see how it can
assist the contention of the State. In the first place, this
observation was clearly obiter, since, as pointed out by us,
there was on the facts of the present case no scope for the
applicability of the doctrine of promissory estoppel.
Secondly, this observation was based upon a quotation from
the passage in paragraph 123 at page 783 of Volume 28 of
American Jurisprudence (2 d), but unfortunately this
quotation was incomplete and it overlooked, perhaps
inadvertently, the following two important sentences at the
commencement of the paragraph which clearly show that even
in the United States the doctrine of promissory estoppel is
applied against the State "when justified by the facts":
"There is considerable dispute as to the
application of estoppel with respect to the State.
While it is said that equitable estoppel will be
invoked against the State when justified by the facts,
clearly the doctrine of estoppel should not be lightly
invoked against the State" (emphasis supplied).
Even the truncated passage quoted by the Court
recognised in the last sentence that though, as a general
rule, the doctrine of promissory estoppel would not be
applied against the State in its governmental, public or
sovereign capacity, the Court would unhesitatingly allow the
doctrine to be invoked in cases where it is necessary in
order "to prevent fraud or manifest injustice". This passage
leaves no doubt that the
688
doctrine of promissory estoppel may be applied against the
State even in its governmental, public or sovereign capacity
where it is necessary to prevent fraud or manifest
injustice. It is difficult to imagine that the Court citing
this passage with approval could have possibly intended to
lay down that in no case can the doctrine of promissory
estoppel be invoked against the Government. Lastly, a proper
reading of the observation of the Court clearly shows that
what the Court intended to say was that where the Government
owes a duty to the public to act differently, promissory
estoppel cannot be invoked to prevent the Government from
doing so. This proposition is unexceptionable, because where
the Government owes a duty to the public to act in a
particular manner, and here obviously duty means a course of
conduct enjoined by law, the doctrine of promissory estoppel
cannot be invoked for preventing the Government from acting
in discharge of its duty under the law. The doctrine of
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promissory estoppel cannot be applied in teeth of an
obligation or liability imposed by law.
We may then refer to the decision of this Court in
Assistant Custodian v. Brij Kishore Agarwala & Ors.(1) It is
not necessary to reproduce the facts of this case, because
the only purpose for which this decision was relied upon on
behalf of the State was to show that the view taken by the
House of Lords in Howell v. Falmouth Boat Construction Co.
Ltd. (Supra) was preferred by this Court to that taken by
Lord Denning in Robertson v. Minister of Pension (supra). It
is true that in this case the Court expressed the opinion
"that the view taken by the House of Lords is the correct
one and not the one taken by Lord Denning" but we fail to
see how that can possibly help the argument of the State.
The House of Lords did not in Howell’s case negative the
applicability of the doctrine of promissory estoppel against
the Government. What it laid down was merely this, namely,
that no representation or promise made by an officer can
preclude the Government from enforcing a statutory
prohibition. The doctrine of promissory estoppel cannot be
availed to permit or condone a breach of the law. The ratio
of the decision was succinctly put by Lord Normand when he
said"- neither a minister nor any subordinate officer of the
Crown can by any conduct or representation bar the Crown
from enforcing a statutory prohibition or entitle the
subject to maintain that there has been no breach of it". It
may also be noted that promissory estoppel cannot be invoked
to compel the Government or even a private party to do an
act prohibited by law. There can also be no promissory
estoppel against the exercise of legislative power. The
Legislature can never be precluded
689
from exercising its legislative function by resort to the
doctrine of promissory estoppel. Vide State of Kerala v.
Gwalior Rayon Silk Manufacturing Co. Ltd.(1)
The next decision to which we must refer is that in
Excise Commissioner, U.P. Allahabad v. Ram Kumar.(2) This
was also a decision on which strong reliance was placed on
behalf of the State. It is true that, in this case, the
Court observed that "it is now well settled by a catena of
decisions that there can be no question of estoppel against
the Government in the exercise of its legislative, sovereign
or executive powers," but for reasons which we shall
presently state, we do not think this observation can
persuade us to take a different view of the law than that
enunciated in the Indo-Afghan Agencies’ case. In the first
place, it is clear that in this case there was factually no
foundation for invoking the doctrine of promissory estoppel.
When the State auctioned the licence for retail sale of
country liquor and the respondents being the highest bidders
were granted such licence, there was in force a Notification
dated 6th April, 1959, issued under section 4 of the U.P.
Sales Tax Act, 1948, exempting sale of country liquor from
payment of sales tax. No announcement was made at the time
of the auction whether the exemption from sales tax under
this Notification dated 6th April, 1959 was or was not
likely to be withdrawn. However, on the day following the
commencement of the licence granted to the respondents, the
Government of U.P. issued a Notification dated 2nd April,
1969 superseding the earlier Notification dated 6th April,
1959 and imposing sales tax on the turnover in respect of
country spirit with immediate effect. This notification
dated 2nd April, 1969 was challenged by the respondents by
filing a writ petition and amongst the several grounds of
challenge taken in the writ petition, one was that "since
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the State Government did not announce at the time of the
aforesaid auction that the Notification---------- dated 6th
April, 1959 was likely to be withdrawn and the sales of
country liquor were likely to be subjected to the levy of
sales tax during the excise year and in reply to the query
made by them at the time of the auction they were told by
the authorities that there was no sales tax on the sale of
country liquor, the appellants herein were estopped from
making the demand in respect of sales tax and recovering the
same from them". It was in the context of this ground of
challenge that the Court came to make the observation relied
upon on behalf of the State. Now, it is clear that, even
taking the case of the respondents at its highest, there was
no representation or promise made by the Government that
they would continue the exemp-
690
tion from sales tax granted under the Notification dated 6th
April, 1959 and would not withdraw it, and the Notification
dated 2nd April, 1969 could not, therefore, be assailed as
being in breach of any such representation or promise. There
was accordingly, no factual basis for making good the plea
of promissory estoppel and the observation made by the court
in regard to the applicability of the doctrine of promissory
estoppel against the Government was clear obiter. That
perhaps was the reason why the Court did not consider it
necessary to refer to the earlier decisions in Century
Spinning & manufacturing Co.’s case and Turner Morrison’s
case and particularly the decision in the Indo-Afghan
Agencies case where the court in so many terms applied the
doctrine of promissory estoppel against the Government in
the exercise of its executive power. It is not possible to
believe that the Court was oblivious of these earlier
decisions, particularly when one of these decisions in the
Indo-Afghan Agencies case was an epoch making decision which
marked a definite advance in the field of administrative
law. Moreover, it may be noted that though, standing by
itself, the observation made by the Court that "there can be
no question of estoppel against the Government in exercise
of its legislative, sovereign or executive powers" may
appear to be wide and unqualified, it is not so, if read in
its proper context. This observation was made on the basis
of certain decisions which the Court proceeded to discuss in
the succeeding paragraphs of the judgment. The Court first
relied on the statement of the law contained in paragraph
123 at page 783, Volume 28 of the American Jurisprudence
(2d), but it omitted to mention the two important sentences
at the commencement of the paragraph and the words "unless
its application is necessary to prevent fraud or manifest
injustice" at the end, which clearly show that even
according to the American Jurisprudence, the doctrine of
promissory estoppel is not wholly inapplicable against the
Government in its governmental, public or sovereign
capacity, but it can be invoked against the Government "when
justified by the facts" as for example where it is necessary
to prevent fraud or injustice. In fact, as already pointed
out above, there are numerous cases in the United States
where the doctrine of promissory estoppel has been applied
against the Government in the exercise of its governmental,
public or executive powers. The Court then relied upon the
decision in the Gwalior Rayon Silk Manufacturing Co.’s case,
but that decision was confined to a case where legislation
was sought to be precluded by relying on the doctrine of
promissory estoppel and it was held, and in our opinion
rightly, that there can be no promissory estoppel against
the legislature in the exercise of its legislative function.
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That decision does not negative the applicability of the
691
doctrine of promissory estoppel against the Government in
the exercise of its governmental, public or executive
powers. The decision in Howell’s case was, thereafter,
relied upon by the Court, but that decision merely says that
the Government cannot be debarred by promissory estoppel
from enforcing a statutory prohibition. It does not
countenance an absolute proposition that promissory estoppel
can never be invoked against the government. The Court also
cited a passage from the judgment of the High Court of Jammu
& Kashmir in Malhotra & Sons & Ors. v. Union of India &
Ors.,(1) but this passage itself makes it clear that the
courts will bind the Government by its promise where it is
necessary to do so in order to prevent manifest injustice or
fraud. The last decision on which the Court relied was
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation v. Morrill (supra) but
this decision also does not support the view contended for
on behalf of the State. We have already referred to this
decision earlier and pointed out that the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation in this case was held not liable on
the policy of insurance, because the regulations made by the
Corporation prohibited insurance of reseeded wheat. The
principle of this decision was that promissory estoppel
cannot be invoked to compel the Government or a public
authority to carry out a representation or promise which is
contrary to law. It will thus be seen from the decisions
relied upon in the judgment that the Court could not
possibly have intended to lay down an absolute proposition
that there can be no promissory estoppel against the
Government in the exercise of its governmental, public or
executive powers. That would have been in complete
contradiction of the decisions of this Court in the Indo-
Afghan Agencies Case, Century Spinning and Manufacturing
Co.’s case and Turner Morrison’s case and we find it
difficult to believe that the Court could have ever intended
to lay down any such proposition without expressly referring
to these earlier decisions and over-ruling them. We are,
therefore, of the opinion that the observation made by the
Court in Ram Kumar’s case does not militate against the view
we are taking on the basis of the decisions in the Indo-
Afghan Agencies’ case, Century Spinning & Manufacturing
Co.’s case and Turner Morrison’s case in regard to the
applicability of the doctrine of promissory estoppel against
the Government.
We may then refer to the decision of this Court in
Bihar Eastern Gangetic Fishermen Co-operative Society Ltd.
v. Sipahi Singh & Ors.(2) It was held in this case in
paragraph 12 of the judgment that the respondent could not
invoke the doctrine of promissory estoppel because he was
unable to show that, relying on the representation of the
Govern-
692
ment, he had altered his position by investing moneys and
the allegations made by him in that behalf were "much too
vague and general" and there was accordingly no factual
foundation for establishing the plea of promissory estoppel.
On this view, it was unnecessary to consider whether the
doctrine of promissory estoppel was applicable against the
Government, but the Court proceeded to reiterate, without
any further discussion, the observation in Ram Kumar’s case
that "there cannot be any estoppel against the Government in
the exercise of its sovereign, legislative and executive
functions". This was clearly in the nature of obiter and it
cannot prevail as against the statement of law laid down in
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the Indo-Afghan Agencies case. Moreover, it is clear from
paragraph 14 of the judgment that this Court did not intend
to lay down any proposition of law different from that
enunciated in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case because it
approved of the decision in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case
and distinguished it on the ground that in that case there
was not enforcement of contractual right but the claim was
founded upon equity arising from the Scheme, while in the
case before the Court, a contractual right was sought to be
enforced. There is, therefore, nothing in this decision
which should compel us to take a view different from the one
we are otherwise inclined to accept.
We may point out that in the latest decision on the
subject in Radha Krishna Agarwal v. State of Bihar & Ors.(1)
this Court approved of the decisions in the Indo-Afghan
Agencies case and Century Spinning and Manufacturing Co’s
case and pointed out that these were cases where it could be
held that public bodies or the State are as much bound as
private individuals are to carry out obligations incurred by
them because parties seeking to bind the authorities have
altered their position to their disadvantage or have acted
to their detriment on the strength of the representations
made by these authorities". It would, therefore, be seen
that there is no authoritative decision of the Supreme Court
which has departed from the law laid down in the celebrated
decisions in the Indo-Afghan Agencies case and the Century
Spinning & Manufacturing Co’s case. The law laid down in
these decisions as elaborated and expounded by us continues
to hold the field.
We may now turn to examine the facts in the light of
the law discussed by us. It is clear from the letter of the
4th respondent dated 23rd January, 1969 that a categorical
representation was made by the 4th respondent on behalf of
the Government that the proposed vanaspati factory of the
appellant would be entitled to exemption from sales tax
693
in respect of sales of vanaspati effected in Uttar Pradesh
for a period of three years from the date of commencement of
production. This representation was made by way of
clarification in view of the suggestion in the appellant’s
letter dated 22nd January, 1969 that the financial
institutions were not prepared to regard the earlier letter
of the 4th respondent dated 22nd December, 1968 as a
definite commitment on the part of the Government to grant
exemption from sales tax. Now the letter dated 23rd January,
1969 clearly shows that the 4th respondent made this
representation in his capacity as the Chief Secretary of the
Government, and it was, therefore, a representation on
behalf of the government. It was faintly contended before us
on behalf of the State that this representation was not
binding on the Government, but we cannot countenance this
argument, because, in the first place, the averment in the
writ petition that the 4th respondent made this
representation on behalf of the government was not denied by
the State in the affidavit in reply filed on its behalf, and
secondly, it is difficult to accept the contention that the
4th respondent, who was at the material time the Chief
Secretary to the government and also advisor to the Governor
who was discharging the functions of the Government. We
must, therefore, proceed on the basis that this
representation made by the 4th respondent was a
representation within the scope of his authority and was
binding on the Government. Now, there can be no doubt that
this representation was made by the Government knowing or
intending that it would be acted on by the appellant,
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because the appellant had made it clear that it was only on
account of the exemption from sales tax promised by the
Government that the appellant had decided to set up the
factory for manufacture of vanaspati at Kanpur. The
appellant, in fact, relying on this representation of the
Government, borrowed moneys from various financial
institutions, purchased plant and machinery from M/s. De
Smith (India) Pvt. Ltd., Bombay and set up a vanaspati
factory at Kanpur. The facts necessary for invoking the
doctrine of promissory estoppel were, therefore, clearly
present and the Government was bound to carry out the
representation and exempt the appellant from sales tax in
respect out the representation and exempt the appellant from
sales tax in respect of sales of vanaspati effected by it in
Uttar Pradesh for a period of three years from the date of
commencement of the production.
The State, however, contended that the doctrine of
promissory estoppel had no application in the present case
because the appellant did not suffer any detriment by acting
on the representation made by the Government : the vanaspati
factory set up by the appellant was quite a profitable
concern and there was no prejudice caused to the
694
appellant. This contention of the State is clearly
unsustainable and must be rejected. We do not think it is
necessary, in order to attract the applicability of the
doctrine of promissory estoppel, that the promisee acting in
reliance of the promise, should suffer any detriment. What
is necessary is only that the promisees should have altered
his position in reliance on the promise. This position was
implied accepted by Denning, J., in the High Trees’ case
when the learned Judge pointed out that the promise must be
one "which was intended to create legal relations and which,
to the knowledge of the person making the promise, was going
to be acted on by the person to whom it was made and which
was in fact acted an" (emphasis supplied). If a promise is
"acted on", "such action, in law as in physics, must
necessarily result in an alteration of position." This was
again reiterated by Lord Denning in W.J. Alan & Co. Ltd. x.
El. Nasr Export and Import Co.(1) where the learned Law Lord
made it clear that alteration of position "only means that
he (the promise) must have been led to act differently from
what he would otherwise have done. And if you study the
cases in which the doctrine has been applied, you will see
that all that is required is that the one should have acted
on the belief induced by the other party." Viscount Simonds
also observed in Tool Metal Manufacturing Co. Ltd v.
Tungsten Electric Co. Ltd. (2) that "the gist of the equity
lies in the fact that one party has by his conduct led the
other to alter his position". The judgment of Lord Tucker in
the same case would be found to depend likewise on a
fundamental finding of alteration of position, and the same
may be said of that of Lord Coheb. Then again in Emmanuel
Avodeji v. Briscoe (supra) Lord Hodson said: "This equity,is
however, subject to the qualification (1) that the other
party has altered his position". The same requirement was
also emphasised by Lord Diplock in Kaminins Ballrooms Ltd.
v. Zenith Investments (Torquay) Ltd. (3) What is necessary,
therefore, is no more than that there should be alteration
of position on the part of the promisee. The alteration of
position need not involve any detriment to the promises. If
detriment were a necessary element, there would be no need
for the doctrine of promissory estoppel because in that
event, in quite a few cases, the detriment would form the
consideration and the promise could be binding as a
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contract. There is in fact not a single case in England
where detriment is insisted upon as a necessary ingredient
695
of promissory estoppel. In fact, in W. J. Alan & Co. Ltd. v.
El Nasar Export and Import Co. (supra), Lord Denning
expressly rejected detriment as an essential ingredient of
promissory estoppel, saying:
"A seller may accept a less sum for his goods than
the contracted price, thus inducing (his buyer) to
believe that he will not enforce payment of the
balance; see Central London Property Trust Ltd. v. High
Trees House Ltd. and D. & C. Builders Ltd. v. Rees
[1956] 3 All E.R. 837]. In none of these cases does the
party who acts on the belief suffer any detriment. It
is not a detriment, but a benefit to him to have an
extension of time or to pay less, or as the case may
be. Nevertheless, he has conducted his affairs on the
basis that he has had that benefit and it would not be
equitable now to deprive him of it."
We do not think that in order to invoke the doctrine of
promissory estoppel it is necessary for the promise to show
that he suffered detriment as a result of acting in reliance
on the promise. But we may make it clear that if by
detriment we mean injustice to the promisee which could
result if the promisor were to recede from his promise then
detriment would certainly come in as a necessary ingredient.
The detriment in such a case is not some prejudice suffered
by the promisee by acting on the promise, but the prejudice
which would be caused to the promisee, if the promisor were
allowed to go back on the promise. The classic exposition of
detriment in this sense is to be found in the following
passage from the judgment of Dixon, J in the Australian case
of Grundt v. The Great Boulder Pty. Gold Mines Ltd. (1):
"-It is often said simply that the party asserting
the estoppel must have been induced to act to his
detriment. Although substantially such a statement is
correct and leads to no misunderstanding, it does not
bring out clearly the basal purpose of the doctrine.
That purpose is to avoid or prevent a detriment to the
party asserting the estoppel by compelling the opposite
party to adhere to the assumption upon which the former
acted or abstained from acting. This means that the
real detriment or harm from which the law seeks to give
protection is that which would flow from the change of
position if the assumption were deserted that led to
it. So long as the assumption is adhered to, the party
who altered his situation upon the
696
faith of it cannot complain. His complaint is that when
afterwards the other party makes a different state of
affairs the basis of an assertion of right against him
then, if it is allowed, his own original change of
position will operate as a detriment. His action or
inaction must be such that, if the assumption upon
which he proceeded were shown to be wrong, and an
inconsistent state of affairs were accepted as the
foundation of the rights and duties of himself and the
opposite party, the consequence would be to make his
original act or failure to act or source of prejudice."
If this is the kind of detriment contemplated, it would
necessarily be present in every case of promissory estoppel
because it is on account of such detriment which the
promisee would suffer if the promisor were to act
differently from his promise, that the Court would consider
it inequitable to allow the promisor to go back upon his
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promise. It would, therefore, be correct to say that in
order to invoke the doctrine of promissory estoppel it is
enough to show that the promisee has acting in reliance of
the promise, altered his position and it is not necessary
for him to further show that he has acted to his detriment.
Here, the appellant clearly altered its position by
borrowing moneys from various financial institutions,
purchasing plant and machinery from M/s. De Smet (India)
Pvt. Ltd., Bombay and setting up a vanaspati plant, in the
belief induced by the representation of the Government that
sales tax exemption would be granted for a period of three
years from the date of commencement of the production. The
Government was, therefore bound on the principle of
promissory estoppel to make good the representation made by
it. Of course, it may be pointed out that if the U.P. Sales
Tax Act, 1948 did not contain a provision enabling the
Government to grant exemption, it would not be possible to
enforce the representation against the Government because
the Government cannot be compelled to act contrary to the
statute, but since section 4 of the U.P.Sales Tax Act, 1948
confers power on the Government to grant exemption from
sales tax, the Government can legitimately be held bound by
its promise to exempt the appellant from payment of sales
tax. It is true that taxation is a sovereign or governmental
function, but, for reasons which we have already discussed,
no distinction can be made between the exercise of a
sovereign or governmental function and a trading or business
activity of the Government so far as the doctrine of
promissory estoppel is concerned. Whatever be the nature of
the function which the Government is discharging, the
Government is subject to the rule of promissory estoppel and
if the
697
essential ingredients of this rule are satisfied, the
Government can be compelled to carry out the promise made by
it. We are, therefore, of the view that in the present case
the Government was bound to exempt the appellant from
payment of sales tax in respect of sales of vanaspati
effected by it in the State of Uttar Pradesh for a period of
three years from the date of commencement of the production
and was not entitled to recover such sales tax from the
appellant.
Now, for the assessment year 1970-71, that is, 2nd
July, 1970 to 31st March, 1971, the appellant collected from
its customers sales tax amounting to Rs. 6,81,178.95
calculated at the rate of 3 1/2% on the sale price. But when
the assessment was made by the Sales Tax Authorities, sales
tax was levied on the appellant at the rate of 7% and the
appellant was required to pay up a further sum of Rs.
6,80,969.42. The appellant had prayed for an interim order
in the present appeal staying further proceedings, but this
Court, by an order dated 3rd April, 1974, granted interim
stay only on the appellant paying up the amount of sales tax
due for the assessment year 1970-71 before 31st July, 1974
and so far as the assessment years 1971-72, 1972-73 and
1973-74 were concerned, the Court directed that the
assessments for those years may proceed, but only the final
order shall not be passed. The result was that the appellant
had to pay up the further sum of Rs. 6,80,949.42 for the
assessment year 1970-71. The appellant collected from the
customers for the assessment year 1971-72 an aggregate sum
of Rs. 9,91,206.17 by way of sales tax at the rate of 3 1/2%
for the period 1st April, 1971 to 1st July, 1971, 4% for the
period 2nd July, 1971 to 24th January, 1972 and 7% for the
period 25th January, 1972 to 31st March, 1972 and deposited
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this amount in the Treasury. Similarly, for the assessment
year 1972-73, the appellant collected from its customers an
aggregate sum of Rs. 19,36,597.23 as and by way of sales tax
at the rate of 7% of the sale price and this amount was
deposited by the appellant in the Treasury, and so also for
the first quarter of the assessment year 1973-74 upto the
end of which the exemption from sales tax was to continue,
the appellant collected and paid an aggregate sum of Rs.
4,84,884.05 at the rate of 7% of the sale price. It appears
that surcharge amounting to Rs. 2,83,008.09 for the period
of the exemption was also paid by the appellant into the
Treasury. The assessments for the assessment years 1971-72,
1972-73 and 1973-74 were, however, not completed in view of
the stay order granted by this Court. Now, obviously since
the Government is bound to exempt the appellant from payment
of sales tax for a period of three years from 2nd July,
1970, being the date of commencement of the production, the
appellant would not be liable to
698
pay any sales tax to the State in respect of sales of
vanaspati effected during that period and hence the State
would have to refund to the appellant the amount of sales
tax paid for the period 2nd July, 1970 to 31st March, 1971,
subject to any claim which the State may have to retain any
part of such amount under any provision of law. If the State
has any such claim, it must be intimated to the appellant
within one month from today and it must be adjudicated upon
within a further period of one month after giving proper
opportunity to be heard to the appellant. If no such claim
is made, or, if made, not adjudicated upon within the time
specified, the State will refund the amount of sales tax to
the appellant with interest thereon at the rate of 6% per
annum from the date when such refund becomes due and if such
claim is made and adjudicated upon within the specified time
and it is found that a part of this amount is liable to be
retained by the State under some provision of law, the State
will refund the balance to the appellant with interest at
the like rate. So far as the assessment years 1971-72, 1972-
73 and 1973-74 are concerned, the Sales Tax Authorities will
proceed to complete the Assessments for those assessment
years in the light of the law laid down in this judgment and
the amounts of sales tax deposited by the appellant will be
refunded to the appellant to the extent to which they are
not found due and payable as a result of the assessments,
subject to any claim which the State may have to retain
those amounts under any provision of law.
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the judgment
of the High Court and issue a writ, order or direction to
the above effect against the respondents. The State will pay
the costs of the appellant throughout.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
699