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[Cites 6, Cited by 2]

Supreme Court of India

State Of Madhya Pradesh And Ors vs Orient Paper Mills Ltd on 7 December, 1989

Equivalent citations: 1989 SCR, SUPL. (2) 436 1990 SCC (1) 176, AIRONLINE 1989 SC 47, 1990 (1) SCC 176, (1990) JAB LJ 117, (1989) 4 JT 495, (1990) 1 LJR 437, 1990 UJ(SC) 1 232, (1989) 4 JT 495 (SC), 1990 UJ(SC) 232, 2004 ALL CJ 2 1924

Author: M.M. Punchhi

Bench: M.M. Punchhi

           PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND ORS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
ORIENT PAPER MILLS LTD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT07/12/1989

BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
RANGNATHAN, S.

CITATION:
 1989 SCR  Supl. (2) 436  1990 SCC  (1) 176
 JT 1989 (4)   495	  1989 SCALE  (2)1290


ACT:
    Administrative Law: Promissory  estoppel--Industrialists
generating   power   through  their   own   new	  generating
sets--Assurance given by Government--Electricity duty exemp-
tion--Effect of.
    Constitution of India,  1950: Article  136--Interference
with factual findings--Only in exceptional cases.
    Madhya  Pradesh  Electricity Duty  Act,   1949:  Section
3-B-Electricity	 duty--Exemption--Notification--High   Court
granting    relief    without	 ordering    issuance	  of
notification--Whether amounts to transgression.



HEADNOTE:
    In its industrial policy, the State Government  declared
on  1.8.1961 that where power has to be generated by  indus-
trialists themselves, exemption from electricity duty  would
be granted for a period of five years from the date of plant
goes  into  production,	 and that the  concession  would  be
applicable only to new generating sets installed during	 the
Third Plan period.
    The	 Respondent indicated to the Government on  3.5.1955
that about 5000 K.W. of electricity would be required by  it
to  run	 its paper plant and that it would  by	itself	make
arrangements  for obtaining the necessary generating  equip-
ment. It also applied for import licence for the import of a
production plant as also a power plant to run it. The import
licence	 was granted and the Respondent started	 negotiation
with  the foreign supplier. Since the price had gone  up  it
was rather impossible for the Respondent to import both	 the
production plant and the power plant, and if the power plant
was not purchased along with the production plant, it  would
make  the project unsound. Hence the Respondent was  in	 two
minds whether to have the power plant or not. Meanwhile, the
above said industrial policy was announced and the  Respond-
ent on installation of the power plant was able to start its
production w.e.f. 16.2.1965.
Thereafter  to formalise the matter, the  Respondent  corre-
sponded
437
with the appellant for the grant of the requisite exemption,
which  was rejected, and the Respondent approached the	High
Court by way of a petition under Articles 226 and 227 of the
Constitution  of India. The High Court held that  the  Peti-
tioner	was  entitled to invoke the doctrine  of  promissory
estoppel  in order to claim exemption from payment of  elec-
tricity	 duty for a period of five years from  16.2.1965  in
terms  of  the	assurance  of  the  State  Government  dated
1.8.1961.
    Against this order of the High Court the State has	come
in appeal by Special Leave.
    On behalf of the appellant-State it was urged that there
was no occasion to invoke the doctrine of promissory  estop-
pel, since the Respondent had not in any manner acted on the
assurance of the Government to its own prejudice but on	 its
own  it was taking steps to set up a generating	 plant	much
before the industrial policy was announced.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
    HELD:  1. Whether the respondent was of one	 mind  right
from the beginning to set up a power plant, with or  without
the  assurance	of the State Government dated  1.8.1961,  as
asserted by the State, is neither borne out nor is the	view
of  the High Court arrived at from the record. On  the	con-
trary, the view taken is that the respondent's indecision in
that regard ended and it became decisive on the announcement
of the assurance dated 1.8.1961. Such view of the High Court
was  a	possible  view to be taken on  the  material  placed
before	it and the inference drawn therefrom could  be	that
the  respondent	 had acted on the basis	 of  the  assurance.
[441E-F]
    2. This Court ordinarily does not interfere with factual
findings arrived at by the High Court and this case has	 not
been  shown to be an exception. The view taken by  the	High
Court  was unexceptional warranting it to be  left  uninter-
ferred with. [441F]
    3. Without commanding the State Government to issue such
a  Notification,  the High Court has granted relief  to	 the
respondent to which there was no bar. Accordingly no  provi-
sion  of  Madhya Pradesh Electricity Duty Act, 1949  or	 any
other law can be said to have been transgressed. [442A]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No 498 of 1975.

438

From the Judgment and Order dated 31.7.1974 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No. 3 16 of 1973.

Prithvi Raj, Satish K. Agnihotri and Ashok Singh for the Appellants.

Shankar Ghosh, Vivek Gambhir and Parveen Kumar for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by PUNCHHI, J. This is an appeal by special leave against the judgment and order of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur whereby the petition under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India preferred by Orient Paper Mills Ltd., the sole respondent herein, was allowed and sequally the order dated 15.3.1973 of the State Government declining to grant the respondent exemption from payment of electrici- ty duty for the period from 16.2.1965 to 15.2.1970 and pursuant demand notices dated 20.3.1973 and 3.4.1973 were quashed. The aggrieved State of Madhya Pradesh and its concerned Officers are the appellants challenging the same The respondent had need to go to the High Court to have an assurance dated 1.8.1961 regarding exemption from payment of electricity duty given by the State of Madhya Pradesh in its declared industrial policy observed, which may well be reproduced here at the outset:

"Where power has to be generated by industri- alists themselves, exemption from electricity duty shah be granted for a period of five years from the date of plant goes into produc- tion. The concession shall be applicable only to new generating sets installed during the Third Plan period."

Factually it was not disputed before the High Court, that the case of the respondent squarely fall within the scope of the assurance reproduced above since the industrial plant of the respondent had gone into production w.e.f. 16.2.1965, the generating set put up was new, and had been installed during the Third Plan period. To formalise the matter, the respondent had corresponded with the Government for the grant of the requisite exemption. Since the same was rejected and demands for payment of electricity duty creat- ed, the High Court was requested to issue suitable writs, directions and orders cancelling the 439 aforesaid orders and demand notices and granting exemption from payment of electricity duty in respect of electricity self-generated by the respondent during the said period of five years, and also commanding the State to carry out the assurance and promises made in the said industrial policy dated 1.8.1961 extracted above and then requiring the State to issue a Notification under Section 3-B of the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Duty Act, 1949 granting exemption or exception to the respondent from payment of electricity duty and other allied consequential reliefs.

Before the High Court voluminous documentary evidence was given by the parties in support of their respective pleadings. The High Court, on consideration of the entire material placed before it, spelled out a promissory estoppel in favour of the respondent and concluded as follows:

"To conclude, we are of opinion that the petitioner is entitled to invoke the doctrine of promissory estoppel in order to claim exemption from payment of electricity duty for a period of five years from 16.2.1965 to 15.2.1970 in terms of the assurance of the State Government, dated 1.8.1961. Of course, as indicated earlier it is not for us to issue any writ directing the State Government to grant the petitioner exemption in terms of S. 3-A (vii) or Section 3-B of the M.P. Electric- ity Duty (Amendment) Act, 1949. But in view of the unambiguous and unequivocal assurance given by the State Government on 1.8.1961 we can certainly quash the order of the State Government, dated 15.3.1973 as also the demand notices, dated 20.3.1973 (Petitioner's Annex- ure-48) and dated 3.4.1973 (Petitioner's Annexure 50) and leave the matter at that. It would be for the Government to work out its own course of action on that basis. ' ' Mr. Prithvi Raj, learned counsel for the appellant urged that on the facts and circumstances of the case there was no occasion to invoke the doctrine of promissory estoppel. It was asserted that though the industrial policy was published by the State Government on 1.8.1961 containing the assurance extracted above, the respondent had not in any manner acted thereon to its own prejudice, but had rather on its own been taking steps to set up a generating plant much before the industrial policy was announced and had factually set up the generating plant as per its earlier resolve. The facts highlighted were that the 440 respondent Paper Mill, had been set up at Amlai in Vindhya Pradesh, when a Part-C State under the administration of the Central Government. It had in its application dated 3.5. 1955 to the Government indicated that about 5000 K.W. elec- tricity would be required by it to run its paper plant and. it would by itself make arrangements for obtaining the necessary generating equipment. It appears that the State Government had at that time its oven project in view for installing a power plant. On that basis some correspondence ensued between the respondent and the State Government with regard to its annual requirement of electricity. That exer- cise was abandoned for some reasons which are not relevant here. Thereafter the respondent applied for import licence for the import of a production plant as also a power plant to run it. The respondent was granted an import licence on the strength of which it started negotiation with an Ameri- can supplier. While negotiations were in process the Ameri- can supplier increased the price. It became impossible for the respondent to import the production plant and the power plant within the funds allotted to it by the World Bank and in these circumstances, the American suppliers advised the appellant to drop procurement of the power plant. At the same time the American supplier warned the respondent that if the power plant was not purchased along with the produc- tion plant, it would make the project unsound and it would not be able to fulfil its guarantees as desired by the respondent. The respondent in these circumstances became of two minds, whether to have the power plant or not. When it was in that state of mind, the industrial policy was an- nounced by the Government on 1.8.1961. Thereafter, on 21.8.1961, the respondent applied to the Government of India for sanction of permission to import 3.5 million dollar worth goods more than the sanctioned amount. Finally, the respondent with the consent of the Government of India and with the aid of the World Bank was able to import the pro- duction plant and the power plant and after its installation was able to go on production w.e.f. 16.2.1965. The course of the events set out earlier were not dis- puted as such by the appellants before the High Court but it was maintained as now before us, that the respondent would have on its own gone on to install the power plant even without the announcement of the industrial policy dated 1.8.1961. Additionally, it was maintained, in the like manner, that the respondent had not acted to its prejudice on the basis of the aforesaid assurance dated 1.8.1961 and so that doctrine of promissory estoppel was not invokable. The defence of the State thus raised was rejected by the High Court in the following words:
441
"We have already dealt with that aspect earli- er and we have already held that the petition- er's action in setting up a power plant was postponed on account of certain circumstances and ultimately on the advise of the manufac- turers who refused to continue the guarantee, the petitioner decided to set up its own power plant. In the meantime, the assurance of the State Government, dated 1.8.1961 had already been given and the petitioner's action in making a final decision to set up its own power plant can be directly connected with the State Government's assurance dated 1.8. 1961. No sooner the petitioner took the final deci- sion in that behalf, it applied to the State Government for grant of an exemption, although that application was premature, because the petitioner's paper mill had not started func- tioning. As such, the petitioner would cer- tainly be entitled to claim exemption in terms of the assurance of the State Government dated 1.8.1961 with effect from the date the paper mill started functioning, namely, 16.2.1965 and the exemption would last for a period of five years upto 15.2. 1970."

Whether the respondent was of one mind right from the beginning to set up a power plant, with or without the assurance of the State Government dated 1.8.1961, as assert- ed by the State, is neither borne out nor is the view of the High Court arrived at from the record. Rather, on the con- trary, the view taken is that the respondent's indecision in that regard ended and it became decisive on the announcement of the assurance dated 1.8.1961. Such view of the High Court was a possible view to be taken on the material placed before it and the inference drawn therefrom could be that the respondent had acted on the basis of the assurance. The effort here to re-do the exercise in this regard must inevi- tably fail, for this Court ordinarily does not interfere with factual findings arrived at by the High Court and this case has not been shown to us to be an exception. In this situation, the view taken by the High Court was unexception- al warranting it to be left uninterferred with. Some attempt was made by learned counsel for the appel- lant to contend that the doctrine of promissory estoppel could not be pressed into service to command the State Government under Section 3-A (vii) (before its amendment) and Section 3-B of the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Duty Act, 1949 (as amended) to issue a Notification exempting the respondent from payment of electricity duty. The 442 answer to this argument is available in the conclusion arrived at by the High Court extracted above. Without com- manding the State Government to issue such a Notification, it has granted relief to the respondent to which there was no bar. Accordingly, no provision of Madhya Pradesh Elec- tricity Duty Act, 1949 or any other law can be said to have been transgressed. We thus reject this argument too. Thus for the foregoing reasons this appeal fails and is hereby dismissed. No costs.

G.N.						Appeal	dis-
missed
443