Citation : 2012 Latest Caselaw 3532 Del
Judgement Date : 28 May, 2012
* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
+ Writ Petition (Civil) No. 5716 of 2008
Reserved on:29th March, 2012
% Date of Decision: 28th May, 2012
Joshi Technologies International Inc. ....Petitioner
Through Mr. Mr. S. Ganesh, Mr. Gaurav Pachnanda,
Sr. Advocate with Mr. Bharat Sangal,
Mr. Yawar Masoodi and Ms. Srijna,
Advocates.
Versus
Union of India & Ors. ...Respondents
Through Ms. Sonia Mathur, Mr. Ritesh Kumar and
Ms. Shweta Gupta, Advocates with
Mr. Ajit Jain, Dy. MGR/Fund A-DGH &
Ms. Upma Kwatra, Legal Advisor.
CORAM:
HON'BLEMR. JUSTICE SANJIV KHANNA
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE R.V. EASWAR
SANJIV KHANNA, J.
Joshi Technologies International Inc., a company incorporated in
the United States of America seeks mandamus that they are entitled to
benefit under Section 42 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (Act, for short) in
respect of the two Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs, in short) both
dated 20th February, 1995 for Oil Fields in Dholka and Wavell, Gujarat.
2. The factual background in brief is that the petitioner along with
Larsen & Toubro Ltd., (who subsequently assigned and transferred their
rights in favour of the petitioner), were successful bidders in the Notice
Inviting Tender, dated 31st December, 1992 ("1992 NIT"). The
"petroleum profit" was/is to be shared as per the terms of the PSC
between the Government of India, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas and the petitioner. The two PSCs have duration of 18 years from
their effective date and have extension provisions.
3. The petitioner in the returns for the Assessment Years 2001-02,
2003-04 and 2004-05, claimed and was allowed deductions under
Section 42 of the Act. However, in respect of the assessment year 2005-
06, the Assessing Officer denied benefit under Section 42 vide order
dated 31st December, 2007. Several other additions were made. This
had resulted in an additional demand of Rs.1,24,45,509/-. The petitioner
has filed an appeal against the assessment order before the appellate
authority. It appears that the appeal is pending.
4. The Assessing Officer has also issued notices for re-assessment in
respect of Assessment years 2001-02, 2002-03, 2003-04 and 2004-05, on
the ground that the petitioner was wrongly given benefit of deduction
under Section 42 of the Act in the said years.
5. Section 42 of the Act reads as under:-
"42. Special provision for deductions in the case of business for prospecting, etc., for mineral oil.-- [1]For the purpose of computing the profits or gains of any business consisting of the prospecting for or extraction or production of mineral oils in relation to which the Central Government has entered into an agreement with any person for the association or participation of the Central Government or any person authorised by it in such business (which agreement has been laid on the table of each House of Parliament), there shall be
made in lieu of, or in addition to, the allowances admissible under this Act, such allowances as are specified in the agreement in relation--
(a) to expenditure by way of infructuous or abortive exploration expenses in respect of any area surrendered prior to the beginning of commercial production by the assessee;
(b) after the beginning of commercial production, to expenditure incurred by the assessee, whether before or after such commercial production, in respect of drilling or exploration activities or services or in respect of physical assets used in that connection, except assets on which allowance for depreciation is admissible under Section 32:
Provided that in relation to any agreement entered into after the 31st day of March, 1981, this clause shall have effect subject to the modification that the words and figures "except assets on which allowance for depreciation is admissible under Section 32" had been omitted; and
(c) to the depletion of mineral oil in the mining area in respect of the assessment year relevant to the previous year in which commercial production is begun and for such succeeding year or years as may be specified in the agreement, and such allowances shall be computed and made in the manner specified in the agreement, the other provisions of this Act being deemed for this purpose to have been modified to the extent necessary to give effect to the terms of the agreement.
Explanation.--For the purposes of this section, "mineral oil" includes petroleum and natural gas. [(2) Where the business of the assessee consisting of the prospecting for or extraction or production of petroleum and natural gas is transferred wholly or partly or any interest in such business is transferred in accordance with the agreement referred to in sub-section (1), subject to the
provisions of the said agreement and where the proceeds of the transfer (so far as they consist of capital sums)--
(a) are less than the expenditure incurred remaining unallowed, a deduction equal to such expenditure remaining unallowed, as reduced by the proceeds of transfer, shall be allowed in respect of the previous year in which such business or interest, as the case may be, is transferred;
(b) exceed the amount of the expenditure incurred remaining unallowed, so much of the excess as does not exceed the difference between the expenditure incurred in connection with the business or to obtain interest therein and the amount of such expenditure remaining unallowed, shall be chargeable to income tax as profits and gains of the business in the previous year in which the business or interest therein, whether wholly or partly, had been transferred:
Provided that in a case where the provisions of this clause do not apply, the deduction to be allowed for expenditure incurred remaining unallowed shall be arrived at by subtracting the proceeds of transfer (so far as they consist of capital sums) from the expenditure remaining unallowed.
Explanation.--Where the business or interest in such business is transferred in a previous year in which such business carried on by the assessee is no longer in existence, the provisions of this clause shall apply as if the business is in existence in that previous year;
(c) are not less than the amount of the expenditure incurred remaining unallowed, no deduction for such expenditure shall be allowed in respect of the previous year in which the business or interest in such business is transferred or in respect of any subsequent year or years:
Provided that where in a scheme of amalgamation or demerger, the amalgamating or the demerged company sells or otherwise transfers the business to the amalgamated or the resulting company (being an Indian Company), the provisions of this sub-section--
(i) shall not apply in the case of the amalgamating or the demerged company; and
(ii) shall, as far as may be, apply to the amalgamated or the resulting company as they would have applied to the amalgamating or the demerged company if the latter had not transferred the business or interest in the business."
6. The contention of the petitioner is that by mistake, due to
inadvertent oversight and error on the part of the Ministry of Petroleum
and Natural Gas, the petitioner has been denied benefit under Section 42
of the Act. On account of their mistake, Section 42 was not incorporated
and mentioned in the two PSCs and the contracts were not tabled/laid
before the Parliament. It is submitted that the petitioner is not
responsible for the said lapse and, therefore, should not be punished and
penalized by being denied benefit under the said Section. The aforesaid
contention of the petitioner is pressed on the following
averments/allegations:-
(a) Terms and conditions of the Model Production Share Contract
(MPSC, for short), were a part of 1992 NIT. The terms and conditions
of MPSC served as a basis for bid evaluation process. Article 16 of
MPSC dealt with taxes, royalties, rental etc and Article 16.2 provided for
the benefits under Section 42 of the Act. Thus, the MPSC was a part of
notice of 1992 NIT and was a part of the contracts in questions i.e. the
two PSCs.
(b) On 22nd June, 1992, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, had
sought opinion of the Ministry of Law, Justice and Company Affairs,
whether benefit under Section 42 could be availed of and granted under
contracts involving public-private participation. Ministry of Law,
Justice and Company Affairs, vide their written opinion dated 21st July,
1992, affirmed and stated that the language of Section 42 was pari
materia with the language of Section 293A and that vide the PSCs,
which involved participation of the Government in the form of share in
production, concessions as to tax could be granted under Sections 293A
and 42 of the Act.
(c) Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas had written the letter dated
23rd February, 1998, for submission of Hindi translations of the contracts
in view of the requirement that English and Hindi versions of the PSCs
must be placed before the Parliament. In this letter, it was specifically
stated that in order to give effect to provisions in the contract as per
Section 42 of the Act, 50 copies each, of both Hindi and English
versions, of the PSCs were required. The case of the petitioner assessee
is that the necessary translation was made and the documents as required
were furnished.
(d) Reconciliation of financial statements between petitioner and the
Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas shows that Government of
India‟s "petroleum profit" has been calculated with the benefit under
Section 42 of the Act. The Comptroller of Audits & Accounts has also
verified and accepted the said computation.
(e) Benefit under Section 42 of the Act has been granted to 216 PSCs
of various oil fields before initiation of New Exploration Licence Policy
(NELP) w.e.f. 1st January, 1999. Reference to benefit under the said
Section was inadvertently missed out in 13 PSCs, which relate to six
different parties including the petitioner and M/s NIKO Resources
Limited, who have also been denied benefit under Section 42 of the Act.
(f) Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, in office memorandum
dated 17th June, 2005, had stated and accepted the position that it was
inequitable and unfair not to grant benefit under Section 42 to the 13
PSCs in question. The Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, in their
letter dated 11th April, 2007, had again justified the grant of benefit
under Section 42 of the Act to the petitioner and the fact that the
Assessing Officer/authorities had questioned the claim/deduction raising
the doubt. Petroleum operations were a high risk business and it would
not be fair if benefits under Section 42 were not given to the 13 PSCs. It
was further stated that due to an oversight, the said PSCs did not contain
a specific provision for allowance and deduction under Section 42
though this condition or benefit was mentioned in two other contracts,
details of which were mentioned. The Ministry of Finance was requested
to issue necessary clarification.
(g) Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas in their letter dated 28 th
April, 2008, had again reiterated that non-failure to refer to Section 42 in
the 13 PSCs was an oversight in isolated cases, as in all other PSCs
signed till then under pre-NELP, included stipulation for benefit under
Section 42 of the Act. It was further stated that in the case of 7 PSCs, 2
operated by the petitioner and 5 operated by NIKO Resources Ltd.
located in the State of Gujarat, the Assessing Officer/tax authorities had
disallowed the claim/benefit under Section 42 of the Act and levied tax.
Ministry of Finance was requested to concur with the
suggestion/recommendation of the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas with regard to applicability of the benefit under Section 42 to these
13 PSCs.
(h) The requirement under Section 42 of the Act is that the contract
should be laid before the Parliament, as a condition subsequent and is
not a prior condition and, therefore, even now the PSCs can be placed
before the Parliament. Reliance was placed on Atlas Cycle Industries
Limited vs. State of Haryana, (1979) 2 SCC 196, wherein it has been
held as under:-
22. Now at p. 317 of the aforesaid Edition of Craies on Statute Law, the questions whether the direction to lay the rules before Parliament is mandatory or merely directory and whether laying is a condition precedent to their operation or may be neglected without prejudice to the effect of the rules are answered by saying that "each case must depend on its own circumstances or the wording of the statute under which the rules are made". In the instant case, it would be noticed that sub- section (6) of Section 3 of the Act merely provides that every order made under Section 3 by the Central Government or by any officer or authority of the Central Government shall be laid before both Houses of Parliament, as soon as may be, after it is made. It does not provide that it shall be subject to the negative or the affirmative resolution by either House of Parliament. It also does not provide that it shall be open to the Parliament to approve or disapprove the order made under Section 3 of the Act. It does not even say that it shall be subject to any modification which either House of Parliament may in its wisdom think it necessary to provide. It does not even specify the period for which the order is to be laid before both Houses of Parliament nor does it provide any penalty for non-observance of or non-compliance with the direction as to the laying of the order before both Houses of Parliament. It would also be noticed that the requirement as to the laying of the order before both Houses of Parliament is not a condition precedent but subsequent to the making of the order. In other words, there is no prohibition to the making of the orders without the approval of both Houses of Parliament. In these circumstances, we are clearly of the view that the requirement as to laying contained in sub-section (6) of Section 3 of the Act falls within the first category i.e. "simple laying" and is directory not mandatory. We are fortified in this view by a catena of decisions, both English and Indian. In Bailey v. Williamson [ 1873LRVIII QB 118] where by Section 9 of the Parks Regulations Act, 1872 passed on June 27, 1872 "to protect the royal parks from injury, and to protect the public in the enjoyment of those royal parks and other royal possessions for the purpose of innocent recreation and exercise" it was provided that any rules made in
pursuance of the first schedule to the Act shall be forthwith laid before both Houses of Parliament, if Parliament be sitting, or if not, then within three weeks after the beginning of the then next ensuing session of Parliament; and if any such rules shall be disapproved by either House of Parliament within one month of the laying, such rules, or such parts thereof as shall be disapproved shall not be enforced and rules for Hyde Park were made and published on September 30, 1872 when Parliament was not sitting and in November 18, 1872, the appellant was convicted under Section 4 of the Act for that he did unlawfully act in contravention of Regulation 8 contained in the first Schedule annexed thereto by delivering a public address not in accordance with the rules of the said Park but contrary to the Statute, and it was inter alia contended on his behalf that in the absence of distinct words in the statute stating that the rules would be operative in the interval from the time they were made to the time when Parliament should meet next or if Parliament was sitting then during the month during which Parliament had an opportunity of expressing its opinion upon them, no rule made as supplementing the schedule could be operative so as to render a person liable to be convicted for infraction thereof unless the same had been laid before the Parliament, it was held overruling the contention that the rules became effective from the time they were made and it could not be the intention of the Legislature that the laying of the rules before Parliament should be made a condition precedent to their acquiring validity and that they should not take effect until they are laid before and approved by Parliament. If the Legislature had intended the same thing as in Section 4, that the rules should not take effect until they had the sanction of the Parliament, it would have expressly said so by employing negative language.
7. Separate counter affidavits/affidavits have been filed by the
Ministry of Finance and by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas.
In the counter affidavit/ affidavit filed by the Ministry of Finance, they
have raised preliminary objections regarding territorial jurisdiction, as
well as alternative remedy as the assessment order is appealable. The
territorial jurisdiction has been challenged on the ground that the
assessment order, in case of the petitioner, was passed in Ahmedabad in
the State of Gujarat and this writ petition has been filed in the Delhi
High Court. We may at the outset note that the Additional Solicitor
General did not press the said objections and rightly, in our opinion.
The petitioner is not challenging/questioning the assessment order,
which is already a subject matter of the appellate proceedings. The
issue in present writ petition is whether the failure to incorporate a
clause for grant of benefit u/s 42 of the Act was a result of an error or
oversight or the grant of the said benefit was never intended and agreed.
This question cannot be decided by the Assessing Officer or by the
authorities under the Act or in the appellate proceedings pursuant to the
assessment order. The two PSCs in question were executed and signed
in Delhi by the respondent No. 1 i.e. Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas and, therefore, this court has jurisdiction to examine the contention
as the cause of action or subject/issue raised in the writ petition has
arisen or arises in Delhi. Even if a part of the cause of action arises
within the jurisdiction of this Court, the writ petition is maintainable and
can be entertained by this Court. The question of forum convenience, in
the present case, does not arise, as the issue raised, is limited and
substantially arises in Delhi, as the PSCs were executed in Delhi.
Further the two Ministries, the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of
Petroleum & Natural Gas, have been made parties and their files/relevant
records are in Delhi.
8. Similarly, preliminary objection that the writ petition should not
be entertained, as it relates to a contractual dispute, has to be rejected.
The dispute or the cause of action raised pertains to what was allegedly
agreed and accepted between the petitioner and the Ministry of
Petroleum and Natural Gas. The dispute does not pertain to the
interpretation of the two PSCs. The writ courts have jurisdiction to
entertain contractual issues when justified and necessary, as per the ratio
expounded and explained by the Supreme Court in Kumari Shrilekha
Vidyarthi and Ors. Vs. State of U.P. and Ors., (1991) 1 SCC 212 and
ABL International Limited & Anr. Vs. Export Credit Guarantee
Corporation of India & Ors., (2004) 3 SCC 553. We note that the writ
petition has remained pending before this Court since August, 2008 and
it may not be proper and appropriate to dismiss the same and ask the
petitioner to file a Civil Suit at this stage. The dispute, though factual,
can be decided on the facts and material on record and on the basis of
official records.
9. This brings us to the core or the main issue: Whether benefit under
Section 42 of the Act was envisaged in the 1992 NIT and in the PSCs,
but due oversight or mistake, the same was not included and mentioned
in the written contract, and if so, the effect thereof? If the question is
decided in favour of the petitioner, the second aspect is whether a
direction can be issued for grant of benefit under Section 42 of the Act to
the petitioner, with a further direction that the contract should be laid
before the Parliament after incorporating the said clause?
10. The petitioner, in the writ petition, has stated that the 1992 NIT
included and referred to the MPSC. This is not correct. The 1992 NIT
did not refer to the MPSC and did not stipulate that MPSC shall form
part of the tender documents. In 1992 NIT, there was no reference to
MPSC or that the terms and conditions of the MPSC shall be included
in, or be a part of, the PSCs. We do not also find any document or
clause in the bid given by the petitioner under the 1992 NIT to the effect
that the MPSC or clause 16.2 of the same would be applicable and
should a part of the PSCs. The tender given by the petitioner did not
specifically stipulate or include any clause with regard to benefit under
Section 42 of the Act.
11. Written PSCs were signed and executed between the petitioner
and the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas in the name of the
President on 20.2.1995. Article 15 of the said two PSCs had specific
stipulations and clauses under the head "Taxes, Royalties, Rentals,
Customs duties, etc." In clause 15.1, it was stated as under:-
"15.1 All the Companies and operations under this Contract shall be subject to all fiscal legislation in India except where, pursuant to any authority granted under any applicable law, they are exempted wholly or partly from the application of the provisions of a particular law or as otherwise provided herein."
Clauses 15.3 and 15.4 read as under:-
"15.3 If any change in or to any Indian Law, rule or regulation by any authority dealing with income tax or other corporate tax, export/import tax, custom duty or tax imposed on Petroleum or dependent upon the value of Petroleum results in a material change to the economic benefits accruing to the parties after the Effective Date of the Contract, the parties to this contract shall consult promptly to make necessary revisions and adjustment to the contract in order to maintain such expected economic benefits to the Parties."
15.4 (a) No custom duties or other import duties are applicable on equipment and materials imported solely for use in Petroleum Operations in the Contract Area.
(b) The Contractor shall not be liable for payment of sales tax on sale of Crude oil to the Government/ its nominee, which shall be payable by the buyer."
There is no reference to Section 42 of the Act.
13. There is no letter or correspondence written by the petitioner from
1995 onwards stipulating that, by mistake or due to oversight, Section 42
benefit was not mentioned in the written PSCs. Letter dated 23rd
February, 1998, written by the Desk Officer, Ministry of Petroleum and
Natural Gas refers to the Section 42 and the requirement to table the
contract in both Houses of Parliament and therefore, 50 copies of Hindi
and English version were required. However, this letter can be
explained as having been written in routine as in several PSCs benefit
under Section 42 was granted and thus contracts were required to be
placed before the Parliament. This letter by itself or even with other
letters, etc. does not justify the claim of the petitioner. Learned counsel
for the petitioner is justified in relying upon the three letters written by
Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas to the Ministry of Finance being
letters dated 17th June, 2005, 11th April, 2007 and 28th April, 2008.
However, these letters are internal inter- ministerial correspondence and
were written, as it is apparent, on the request of the petitioner or NIKO
Resources Limited. These are not contemporaneous letters written at
the time when the PSCs were signed. These letters use the word
„oversight‟, but the question is whether or not there was an oversight at
the time of execution and signing of the PSCs in 1992-1995. The
question is whether or not, at that stage, the parties had envisaged and
were ad idem that the petitioner would be entitled to benefit under
Section 42 under the PSCs. The categorical and emphatic stand taken
by the respondent, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, in the counter
affidavit, is that no such benefit was envisaged, considered or granted at
the time when the PSCs were negotiated and awarded. Their stand is as
under:-
"4. That the contents of Para 4 are matter of record. However, it is submitted that Notice Inviting Offer (referred as NIT in the Petition) issued by the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, in 1992, did not contain any Model Production Sharing Contract (MPSC). The NIT was issued for inviting bids for offering of small size discovered fields. The MPSC places at Annexure P-1 in the petition is for the exploratory blocks offered during the same period and not for the discovered fields as that of the petitioner. It is also submitted that if the position taken by the petitioner is accepted as correct that the MPSC used for purposes of bid evaluation and execution of contract included Article 16 and Section 42, the Petitioner, at the time of negotiating the PSC, should have prevailed upon the Government for including the relevant Section in the executed contract, which was not done by the petitioner. It is therefore submitted that the petitioner cannot put the onus on the respondent for not including the relevant section of Income Tax Act in the PSC. It is pertinent to state that the signed PSC did not specifically provide for applicability of Section 42 of the Income Tax Act.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
9. That it is submitted that as against the 1992 NIT, only 13 PSCs for small sized fields were signed, out of which the two PSCs signed with Petitioner are part of these PSCs. The other PSCs mentioned by the petitioner were signed under different NITs.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
11. That the referred position was observed from the scrutiny of records by Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, after another contractor of similarly placed Hazira PSC i.e. M/s NIKO Resources brought to the notice of this ministry in May 2005 that the revenue authorities
had started disallowing the benefit of Section 42 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 to the said PSC. It may be stated here that no contractor out of these 13 small size fields as referred in Para 9 above, including the Petitioner, made any representation to the respondent ministry earlier about incorporating the clause pertaining to Section 42 of Income Tax Act in respective PSC. It is also submitted that as already stated in Para 4, if the position taken by Petitioner is taken to be correct that the MPSC used for purposes of bid evaluation & execution of contract included Article 16 and Section 42, the Petitioner, at the time of negotiating the PSC, should have prevailed upon the respondent for incorporating the relevant Section in the executed contract, which was not done by the Petitioner. In this view of the matter it is stated that the Petitioner cannot put the onus on the respondents for not including the relevant section of Income Tax Act in the PSC."
14. In order to verify and examine the correct factual position, we had
asked the respondent Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas to produce
the original files relating to preparation and finalization of tender
documents. They were produced before us on 21 st February, 2012. We
examined the original records and found that under the terms and
conditions, as well as in the notes, no benefit under Section 42 of the Act
was envisaged or was required to be granted. We also recorded the
statement of the learned Additional Solicitor General that the three
letters mentioned above were factually incorrect and, therefore, no legal
right on the basis of the letters accrues/arises. Thus, no statement or
promise, that advantage under Section 42 would be available to the
successful bidder, was promised or made.
15. On the question of discrimination between 13 PSCs who are not
being given benefit under Section 42 of the Act and other PSCs where
benefit has been given, the respondents have stated that the 13 PSCs
were in respect of small oil fields which had already been discovered
and, therefore, the risk factor was less. The other PSCs were in respect
of undiscovered oil fields, and therefore, the respondents had agreed and
accepted that the benefit under Section 42 should be granted. In view of
the explanation given by the respondents, it cannot be said that the
respondent Ministry of Petroleum or Natural Gas, in the present case,
had deliberately withdrawn the benefit, which was initially envisaged
but due to an oversight was not recorded or mentioned in the written
contract. The respondents have stated that the benefit under Section 42
was granted in respect of undiscovered oil fields and not in respect of
discovered small oil fields.
16. The petitioner in their affidavit dated 3rd August, 2009, have tried
to controvert the said statement/ averments and stated that in 1994-95,
PSCs were signed for Rawa Oil Field and Panna Mukta oil fields. The
respondents have contested and pointed out that these fields were not
small scale discovered fields. The petitioner has stated that in 2000,
Assam Company Limited was granted benefit of Section 42 in respect of
Amguri oil field, which was a discovered field. However, in the present
case we are concerned with the year 1993-94 and not with the year 2000
and in 1999 NELP was adopted. We may note here that the petitioner
along with the said affidavit has filed on record an extract from their
tender/bid. In the tender/bid, the petitioner had stated as under: -
"In the absence of formal terms & conditions, the following clarifications/qualifications are necessary based on a reading of the "Model Contract" :-
1) The model covers all aspects of petroleum operations, including exploration, discovery and development of oilfields, and it will have to be radically pruned to suit the present purpose, viz. development of a discovered oilfield.
2) The various provisions of the model are so interlinked that it will be difficult to delink exploration/discovery from development. In the event Government/ONGC require us to adopt a contract as per the model, deletions and additions have to be made by mutual agreement to cover/address only the development acitivities.
xxxxxxxxxxxxx
l) Article 16 requires contractor to be liable for payment to Government Central & State and local bodies of taxes, royalties, cess etc. We assume that in the event of any change in laws and regulations, either through amendment or interpretation, resulting in additional cost implications which the Contractor could not have foreseen or allowed for, then all such additional costs shall be reimbursed to Contractor, either by
direct payment from Government or through suitable amendment of contract terms."
16. The petitioner was, therefore, aware of clause 16.2 of MPSC,
which specifically makes reference to benefit under Section 42 of the
Act, but did not advert to and refer to the same in their tender bid. They
did not ask for the said benefit.
17. In these circumstances, it is not possible to accept the contention
of the petitioner that benefit under Section 42 of the Act was
inadvertently missed out, or due to an oversight, not included in the
written contract. In these circumstances, we need not examine the
second question/issue referred to above.
18. We must, however, express our displeasure and anguish over the
averments made in the additional affidavit dated 23rd March, 2012, filed
by the respondent No. 1. It was stated in the additional affidavit that
"Petroleum profit" is shared between the Government of India and the
petitioner at the rates agreed under Article 14.2.1 and it does not include
income tax as a contract cost. This is not fully factually correct as the
petitioner has filed before us copy of the reconciliation and financial
statement for the year 2006-07, with and without benefit under Section
42 and it is pointed out that "petroleum profit" has been calculated with
reference to benefit under Section 42. Our attention is rightly drawn by
the petitioner to the letter dated 11th November, 2009, written by the
Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue. In paragraph (I), of the
said communication, it is stated that the government‟s share of
"petroleum profit" may be impacted due to changes in the investment
multiple/post tax rate of return but the extent of impact can not be
predicted reliably. Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas should have
been careful while filing and making the said averment. Even if the
factual position was uncomfortable, they should have admitted and
accepted the true facts and should not have been ambivalent. We do
not, however, proceed on this aspect, as the learned senior counsel for
the petitioner on instructions had stated that they do not want the
Government of India to return or repay the "excess" "petroleum profit"
paid to them.
19. In view of the aforesaid reasoning, we do not find any merit in the
present writ petition and the same is dismissed. In the facts of the case,
there will be no orders as to costs.
(SANJIV KHANNA) JUDGE
(R.V. EASWAR ) JUDGE May 28th , 2012 kkb
Publish Your Article
Campus Ambassador
Media Partner
Campus Buzz
LatestLaws.com presents: Lexidem Offline Internship Program, 2026
LatestLaws.com presents 'Lexidem Online Internship, 2026', Apply Now!