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Printed Books |
Book Language |
English |
Faculty Name |
Aditya Ajgaonkar, Ashok Saraf |
Package Details |
2026 Edition (March 2026). The Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel: A Public Law Perspective, authored by Dr Ashok Saraf (Senior Advocate) and Adv. Aditya Ajgaonkar, is the first dedicated public law treatise on one of Indian jurisprudence's most litigated yet least systematically examined doctrines. Moving decisively away from the conventional treatment of promissory estoppel as a contract law appendage, the work positions it as a mature principle of administrative and constitutional accountability—one that has been shaped, tested, and refined through landmark Supreme Court rulings from Indo-Afghan Agencies to Motilal Padampat, and applied across taxation, land reform, governmental incentives, and political promises. Across ten rigorously structured chapters, the book maps the doctrine's intellectual lineage from English equity, analyses its cardinal limitations, and delivers a nuanced comparative treatment of promissory estoppel and legitimate expectation that clarifies where each doctrine offers a stronger remedy against the State. The final chapter stands apart for its rare candour—raising pointed questions about judicial inconsistency, doctrinal conflation, and the pressing need for certainty in Indian public law. Paperback Book |
Item Code |
9789375619642 |
Exams |
PROFESSIONAL BOOKS |
Delivery |
Home Delivery within 7-10 days from the date of Payment Confirmation. |
Brand |
Taxmann |
No of Pages |
236 |
The Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel - A Public Law Perspective By Taxmann
The Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel: A Public Law Perspective provides a thorough and careful analysis of the doctrine as it has developed and been applied within Indian public law. Authored by two practitioners with extensive backgrounds in taxation, commercial law, and constitutional litigation, the work intentionally moves away from the traditional view of promissory estoppel as solely a private contract law tool or a loose equitable remedy. Instead, it considers the doctrine as a fully developed principle of administrative and constitutional law—one that operates at the junction of governmental promises, executive power, citizen reliance, and judicial oversight.
The doctrine, as the authors describe it, is neither an unconditional weapon against the State nor just a moral appeal. It is an equitable principle that has been examined, shaped, and refined through decades of Supreme Court jurisprudence—starting with UOI v. Indo-Afghan Agencies Ltd. and established in Justice Bhagwati's landmark ruling in Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills Ltd. v. State of U.P.—into a distinctive tool of constitutional accountability. The book traces this history: from the doctrine's roots in English equity and its transition into Indian law as what the authors call a 'colonial stowaway,' to its modern application in areas such as fiscal policy, land reform, government incentives, and political promises.
With a foreword by Justice Ujjal Bhuyan, Judge of the Supreme Court of India, the book is characterised, in his words, by 'doctrinal discipline and sustained engagement with public law principles. ' It is a work that invites practitioners, judges, scholars, and policymakers alike to seriously engage with one of the most complex and important doctrines in Indian public law.
The book is designed for a professional and academic audience with substantive engagement with Indian public and administrative law. Its primary readership includes:
The writing is accessible in tone without sacrificing depth, making it useful to a practising advocate preparing a brief as much as to a scholar mapping the evolution of the doctrine.
The Present Publications is the Latest Edition, authored by Dr Ashok Saraf (Senior Advocate) and Adv. Aditya Ajgaonkar, with the following noteworthy features:
The book covers the following core substantive themes:
The book is organised into ten chapters, each introduced with a carefully chosen judicial epigraph that frames the chapter's central inquiry. The authors describe the jurisprudence of promissory estoppel as 'a ball of wool, tightly jumbled up and knotted,' and the structure of the book is designed to unravel that tangle methodically.
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