Does a conditional Letter of Intent in public procurement create binding contractual rights, or can its cancellation be judicially reviewed for arbitrariness?

 

Summary

Category Data
Court Supreme Court of India
Case Number C.A. No.-014199-014199 – 2025
Diary Number 49695/2024
Judge Name HON’BLE THE CHIEF JUSTICE
Bench HON’BLE THE CHIEF JUSTICE; HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE JOYMALYA BAGCHI; HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE ATUL S. CHANDURKAR
Precedent Value Binding authority
Overrules / Affirms Affirms existing precedent on conditional LoIs
Type of Law Administrative law; contract law; public procurement
Questions of Law
  • Nature of a Letter of Intent in government tenders
  • Legality of cancelling a LoI under Article 14
Ratio Decidendi An LoI expressing intent with explicit preconditions does not create binding rights until such conditions are fulfilled by testing, demonstration, formal agreement and cost disclosure; cancellation is subject to review for arbitrariness under Article 14 and, where reasons are traceable, withdrawals for non-compliance are lawful.
Judgments Relied Upon
  • Rajasthan Cooperative Dairy Federation Ltd. v. Maha Laxmi Mingrate Marketing Service (P) Ltd. (1996) 10 SCC 405
  • Dresser Rand S.A. v. Bindal Agro Chem Ltd. (2006) 1 SCC 751
  • Level 9 Biz Pvt. Ltd. v. HP Housing & Urban Development Authority (2024 SCC OnLine SC 480)
  • Tata Cellular v. Union of India (1994) 6 SCC 651
  • Jagdish Mandal v. State of Orissa (2007) 14 SCC 517
  • M.P. Power Management Co. Ltd. v. Sky Power Southeast Solar India Pvt. Ltd. (2023) 2 SCC 703
Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon by the Court Distinction between LoIs and concluded contracts; principles of contract law on conditional acceptance; Article 14 arbitrariness test from Tata Cellular and Jagdish Mandal; analysis of tender-document conditions; review of administrative reasoning for cancellation.
Facts as Summarised by the Court The State repeatedly tendered for upgraded ePoS devices with biometric integration, cancelled four processes, issued a conditional LoI requiring technical tests, demonstration and cost disclosure, then withdrew it without reasons, prompting challenge on grounds of arbitrariness.

Practical Impact

Category Impact
Follows
  • Rajasthan Cooperative Dairy Federation Ltd. v. Maha Laxmi Mingrate Marketing Service (P) Ltd.
  • Dresser Rand S.A. v. Bindal Agro Chem Ltd.
  • Level 9 Biz Pvt. Ltd. v. HP Housing & Urban Development Authority
  • Tata Cellular v. Union of India
  • Jagdish Mandal v. State of Orissa
  • M.P. Power Management Co. Ltd. v. Sky Power Southeast Solar India Pvt. Ltd.

What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note

  • Confirms that a LoI containing explicit technical and procedural conditions remains provisional and non-binding until all prerequisites—such as compatibility testing, live demonstration, formal agreement and cost breakdown—are satisfied.
  • Affirms that cancellation of a conditional LoI is subject to Article 14 review for arbitrariness and does not require the issue of an LoA or contract to be lawful.
  • Holds that reliance by a bidder on unfulfilled pre-award conditions does not convert a tentative LoI into a vested contractual right.
  • Clarifies that post-hoc invocation of grounds (e.g., blacklisting complaints) previously adjudicated is impermissible and inconsistent with administrative fairness.
  • Emphasises the State’s discretion to re-tender when a bidder fails to fulfil tender-document conditions, so long as the decision is reasoned and bona fide.

Summary of Legal Reasoning

  1. LoI as Precursor, Not Contract
    A Letter of Intent is a provisional communication, not a concluded contract, unless all conditions precedent are satisfied (Rajasthan Cooperative Dairy Federation; Dresser Rand; Level 9 Biz).
  2. Conditional Pre-Award Steps
    The LoI required (i) NICSI compatibility testing; (ii) live demonstration; (iii) formal agreement post-verification; (iv) itemised cost-breakdown. None were completed.
  3. Judicial Review under Article 14
    Cancellation orders need not state reasons verbatim but must be traceable to bona fide considerations. Absence of contemporaneous reasons demands review; post-hoc justifications are tested for consistency with record.
  4. Grounds for Cancellation
    • Blacklisting complaint was already adjudicated and fell outside the tender clause’s scope (Clause 5.13.1).
    • Non-compliance with explicit LoI conditions persisted despite reminders (Clause 4.9(m)).
  5. Arbitrariness Test Applied
    Cancellation for non-compliance was neither irrational nor mala fide; it advanced public interest in a secure, Aadhaar-enabled PDS infrastructure (Tata Cellular; Jagdish Mandal). Legitimate expectation cannot override explicit disclaimers.
  6. Conclusion
    The LoI imparted no binding rights; its cancellation was a lawful exercise of administrative discretion. High Court’s direction to enforce the LoI was unsustainable.

Arguments by the Parties

Petitioner (Appellant-State)

  • The LoI was conditional, non-binding and required fulfilment of specified technical and procedural prerequisites.
  • A Letter of Intent alone confers no enforceable contractual rights without a formal contract or LoA.
  • The bidder failed to provide itemised cost details, complete compatibility testing and live demonstrations despite multiple reminders.
  • A competitor’s blacklisting allegation—though previously litigated—justified re-tendering to safeguard transparency and technical reliability.
  • Judicial interference in administrative tender decisions is confined to cases of palpable arbitrariness or mala fide.

Respondent-Company

  • The State’s conduct—phased deployments, training, and negotiations—confirmed the LoI’s finality in substance.
  • All preconditions were met through cost submissions, software integration, pilot deployments and training.
  • Cancellation without reasons or hearing breached Article 14 and principles of natural justice.
  • The blacklisting allegation was stale, concerned a dissolved predecessor entity and was irrelevant at bid submission.
  • Substantial investments and manufacturing in reliance on the LoI caused serious financial prejudice, warranting equitable relief.

Factual Background

The State’s Department of Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs sought to modernise its Public Distribution System via biometric-enabled ePoS devices, issuing four successive tenders in 2021–22. Only one bidder qualified technically in the final round and received a conditional LoI on 02.09.2022 requiring compatibility tests, demonstrations and cost disclosure. The LoI remained unfulfilled and was cancelled without reasons on 06.06.2023, leading to High Court intervention and subsequent appeal to the Supreme Court.

Statutory Analysis

  • Article 14, Constitution of India: arbitrariness test for state action in contract cancellations.
  • Contract Law Principles: distinction between a provisional Letter of Intent and a binding contract; conditions precedent necessary for contract formation (Rajasthan Cooperative Dairy Federation; Dresser Rand).
  • Tender-Document Clauses:
    • Clause 5.13.1 – bidders must declare any subsisting blacklisting as on bid-submission date.
    • Clause 4.9(m) – requirement for itemised cost-breakdown and landing price disclosure.

Procedural Innovations

  • Directed a fact-finding enquiry in consultation with the bidder to quantify and reimburse costs on a quantum meruit basis for assets and services appropriated under the cancelled LoI.
  • Ordered vesting in the State of all pilot-stage devices, technology and software infrastructure, subject to payment of verified installation and cost expenses, streamlining asset transfer in procurement disputes.

Alert Indicators

  • ✔ Precedent Followed

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