PROMISSORY ESTOPPEL: A FADING ENIGMA IN FISCAL SPACE?
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NLU Jodhpur
Abstract
Promissory estoppel is an equitable doctrine which has found roots in the Indian
jurisprudence. Its application has witnessed a passionate contest in the discourse regarding
the Government’s power to curtail or deny fiscal exemptions promised to the citizens. The
article attempts to sketch the five-decades of judicial opinion, which reveals a flip-flop and
discordant treatment meted to the doctrine. On one hand, we have decisions such as Indo-
Afghan, Motilal Padampat, Nestle, Manuelson Hotels, etc., which mark the high points
of the doctrine’s delineation and highlight its expansive scope. Conversely, the decisions in
Kasinka Trading, Shrijee Sales, and more recent ones, such as Unicorn Industries,
VVF, etc., reveal how the ‘public interest’ test overwhelmingly interjects and arrests the
pragmatic application of this doctrine. This sketch also manifests the current trends which
point towards dwindling fortunes of the doctrine. The underlying objective of the article is
to picturise the struggles of a commentator attempting a coherent description of this doctrine
and its concomitant variables. Presenting the prevailing dichotomy in the judicial approach
to this doctrine, the article reinforces the imminent need for a categorical enunciation, lest
the doctrine fades into obsolescence.
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NLUJ Law Review (2020)
