Polity

Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel – Protecting Reliance on a Promise

Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel – Protecting Reliance on a Promise
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Why in news?

On 25 May 2026 the Supreme Court of India ruled in the case of State of Himachal Pradesh & Others v. M/s Kundlas Loh Udyog that an existing industrial unit could not claim tax concessions under a new government policy because the policy was never meant for its category. The judgment emphasised that the doctrine of promissory estoppel cannot be invoked to obtain benefits beyond the clear intention of the government.

Background

Promissory estoppel is an equitable principle developed by courts to prevent injustice when one party relies on another’s promise. It arose in English common law in the 20th century and was articulated in the celebrated case of Central London Property Trust v. High Trees House (1947). In India, the Supreme Court recognised the doctrine in Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills v. State of Uttar Pradesh (1979), holding that the government cannot withdraw a promise if a party has acted on it to its detriment and unless overriding public interest demands otherwise.

Key elements of the doctrine

  • Clear promise: The promisor must make an unambiguous representation of future intent. General policy statements or conditional offers do not qualify.
  • Reliance and detriment: The promisee must have relied on the promise and altered its position—by investing resources, incurring expenses or otherwise—to its prejudice.
  • Inequity of withdrawal: It must be unfair to allow the promisor to go back on the promise. Courts weigh whether enforcing the promise serves justice and does not conflict with law or public interest.
  • Defensive use: Promissory estoppel is usually used as a “shield” rather than a “sword”. It cannot create a cause of action where none exists but can bar a promisor from denying a promise when sued.

2026 ruling and implications

  • Scope limited: The Court held that only those intended to benefit from a government scheme can claim protection under promissory estoppel. An existing industrial unit cannot demand incentives meant for new units by simply showing it made investments.
  • Public interest: The doctrine cannot force the government to act contrary to law, exceed statutory powers or ignore overriding public interest. Policies can be modified if circumstances change.
  • Equitable nature: Because promissory estoppel arises from fairness rather than contract, courts apply it cautiously. Each case depends on the facts, and relief may be denied if enforcement harms the public.

Conclusion

The doctrine of promissory estoppel balances individual reliance with state policy. The 2026 judgment reaffirms that while governments must honour clear promises on which people act, the courts will not extend benefits beyond the scheme’s scope or undermine public interest. Parties entering into investments should therefore seek explicit assurances rather than assume policy continuity.

Sources

Live Law

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