In the judgment of State of H.P. & Others v. Mars Bottlers Una & Another, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed a review petition filed by the State, upholding a previous order that quashed the cancellation of a distillery’s license. The Court reaffirmed that the State’s refusal to renew the license was based on a misapplication of excise rules and that the penalties imposed were highly disproportionate given the “doubtful” nature of the alleged offenses.
- Applicability of Rules: Old Himachal vs. Una
A central conflict in the case was which version of the Punjab Distillery Rules, 1932 applied to the Una area.
- The State’s Argument: The State contended that a 1994 notification amended the rules to prohibit license renewals if an application was not filed at least 90 days before expiry.
- The Court’s Finding: The Court ruled that because Una was transferred from Punjab to Himachal Pradesh via the Punjab Reorganisation Act, 1966, it remained governed by the laws in force at the time of the transfer unless specifically modified.
- The 1963 Rules: The Court found that the 1994 amendment applied only to “Old Himachal”. For the Una area, the 1963 version of the Punjab Distillery Rules remains in force, which expressly allows the Commissioner to renew a license even if the application is filed late, provided a new license fee is paid.
- Disproportionate Penalties and Doubtful Evidence
The State challenged the Court’s earlier direction to compound the offenses, arguing that the recovery of over 4,274 bulk liters of illicit liquor was a non-compoundable offense under the H.P. Excise Act. The Court rejected this for several reasons:
- Unreliable Recovery: The Court found the story of the liquor recovery “highly improbable” and “unreliable”. There was no physical evidence of the liquor being recovered from the truck, which was found abandoned, and the quantity of liquor was reported missing even before the police took action.
- Contradictions in Reports: There were irreconcilable differences between the raiding party’s initial report (which claimed the liquor was bottled at the plant) and the FIR registered ten days later (which claimed it was not).
- Judicial Review: The Court exercised its inherent powers under Article 226 to interfere with administrative actions that are found to be “highly disproportionate” and based on “faulty investigation”.
- Final Ruling and Directives
The High Court concluded that there was no error in its original judgment that warranted a review.
- Dismissal of Review: The State’s petition was dismissed, though a clerical error in the previous judgment (para 36) was ordered to be deleted.
- Direction for Renewal: The Commissioner, State Taxes and Excise, was directed to determine an appropriate compounding fee and renew the respondent’s license without requiring a fresh application.
- Equitable Relief: The Court emphasized that a business should not suffer “irreparable hardship” due to the State’s administrative errors or unreliable allegations.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 156
State Of H.P. & Others V. Mars Bottlers Una & Another (D.O.J.08-04-2026)
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