Government of India Act, 1935, applies with equal force to Article 299(1) of the Constitution. Two consequence follow from these decisions. The first ... that in view of Article 299(1) there can be no implied contract between the Government and another person, the reason being that if such
between the plaintiff and the defendants and in the light of Article 299(1) of the Constitution of India, no contract at all exists ... that there is no concluded valid contract in accordance with Article 299(1) of the Constitution, the learned Subordinate Judge, Mayuram by judgment and decree
mining lease shall be made by a statutory contract, as
per Article 299 (1) of the Constitution of India.
49.The Hon'ble Supreme ... relating to the Government contracts is provided under
Article 299 of the Constitution of India. Article 299 (1) reads as follows:
“All the contracts made
Government after the auction was over as required by Article 299 (1) of the Constitution. The Full Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court held ... that there was an implied contract which would not hit Article 299 (1) of the Constitution, resulting from the appellant accepting the conditions
into the contract of sale and that if the requirements of Article 299 of the Constitution are not complied with, there cannot be an enforceable ... Lordships of the Supreme Court pointed out that in view of Article 299 (1) of the Constitution, there can be no implied contract between
such contracts by implication are ruled out by the operation of Article 299 of the Constitution of India, it is said that the plaintiff cannot ... parties to this litigation regarding the notification and applicability of Article 299 of the Constitution of India. Article 299 itself provides for contracts made
void for non-compliance with the mandatory provision of Article 299 of the Constitution, and that as the work done by the plaintiff ... correspondence between the parties after conforming, to the requirements of Article 299 of the Constitution and that an agreement by which the plaintiff agreed
well settled that Article 299(1) applies to a contract made in exercise of the executive power of the Union or the State ... contract made in exercise of statutory power. Article 299(1) has no application to a case where a particular statutory authority as distinguished from
that it was not in accordance with the requirements of Article 299(1) of the Constitution of India the Supreme Court held:
It would ... Government could not have been sued on them by reason of Article 299(1).
Referring to Section 7(d) of the Representation of the People
Haryana quashed the notice on demand. The Apex Court, while interpreting Article 299 (1) of the Constitution of India, at Paragraphs ... executive powers and contracts which are statutory in nature. Under Article 299(1) three conditions have to be satisfied before a binding contract