Indian Contract Act 1872
Indian Contract Act 1872
Indian Contract Act 1872
ESSENTIALS OF A `CONTRACT`
Offer and Acceptance
Agreement Intention to create legal relationship Free and genuine consent Parties competent to contract Lawful consideration Lawful object Agreement not declared void and illegal Certainty of meaning Possibility of performance
CLASSIFICATION OF CONTRACT
Validity Formation Performance
Classification according to Validityvoidable contract void contract Classification according to formation Express contract Implied contract Quasi contract Classification according to Performance Executed contract Executory contract Unilateral contract
CAPACITY TO CONTRACT
Who may not contract
Minor Mental incompetency Insolvent Incompetency thru status
VOID AGREEMENTS
Not competent to contract Mutual mistake of material fact Unlawful consideration Without consideration (Exception Gift to a near relative) Restraint of marriage/trade/legal proceedings Uncertainty Wager Against public policy To do impossible act
COERCION (Section15)
When a person is compelled to enter into a contract by
the use of force by the other party or under a threat, coercion is said to be employed. Example A threatens to shoot B if he (B)does not release him from a debt which A owes to B . B releases A under the threat. The release has been brought about by coercion.
MISREPRESENTATION (Section18)
Misrepresentation is a false statement which the
person making it honestly believes to be true or which he does not know to be false. It also includes nondisclosure of a material fact or facts without any intent to decieve the other party. Example- A, while selling his mare to B, tells him that the mare is thoroughly sound. A genuinely believes the mare to be sound although he has no sufficient ground for the belief. Later on B finds the mare to be unsound. The representation made by A is a misrepresentation.
FRAUD
Fraud means and includes any of the following acts committed by a party to a contract, or with his connivance, or by his agent with intent to deceive or to induce a person to enter into a contract: 1.The suggestion that a fact is true when it is not true and the person making the suggestion does not believe it to be true. 2.The active concealment of a fact by a person having knowledge or belief of the fact 3.A promise made without any intention of performing it. 4.Any other act fitted to deceive 5. Any such act or omission as the law specially declares to be fraudulent. Example- A informs B fraudulently that As property is free from encumbrance. B therefore buys the property. The property in fact is subject to mortgage. B may either avoid the contract or may insist on its being carried out and the mortgage deed redeemed.
CONSIDERATION
Consideration [Ss.2(d), 23-25,185]
The term consideration is used in the sense of quid pro que, i.e., something in return. This something or consideration need not be in terms of money. Abstinence or promise is called a consideration for the promise. No Consideration, No Contract [Ss.10 and 25]. A promise without consideration cannot create a legal obligation. The benefit so received or the loss, damage or inconvenience so caused is regarded in law as the consideration for the promise. Rules Regarding Consideration 1. Consideration must move at the desire of the promisor 2. Consideration may move either from the promisee or any other person 3. Consideration need not be adequate 4. Consideration must be real and competent 5. Consideration must be legal 6. A consideration may be present, past or future
CONTINGENT CONTRACT
Contingent Contract Defined (s.31). A contingent contract is a contract to do or not to do something, if some event, collateral to such contract does or does not happen. Examples. (i) A contracts to pay B Rs 10,000 if Bs house is burnt. This is a contingent contract. A contingent contract may be: contingent upon (i) the happening or non-happening; (ii) the happening or non-happening of some
event within a specified time. (ii) A contracts to pay B a sum of money when B marries C. Essential Characteristics of a Contingent Contract. (i) The performance of a contingent contract. (ii) The event must be uncertain. (iii) The event must be collateral, i.e., incidental to the contract. Types of Contingent Contracts. Example. A promises to pay B Rs 1,000, if A left Delhi for Mumbai, it is a contingent contract, because going to Mumbai is an event within As will, but is not merely his will.
QUASI CONTRACT
Quasi
Relations
Meaning of Quasi Contracts. Quasi Contracts are so-called because the obligations associated with such transactions could neither be referred as tortious nor contractual, but are still recognised as enforceable like contracts, in courts. According to Dr Jenks, quasi contract is a situation in which law imposes upon one person, on grounds of natural justice, an obligation similar to that which arises from a true contract, although no contract, express or implied, has in fact been entered into by them.
Example. X supplies goods to his customer Y who receives and consumes them. Y is bound to pay the price. Ys acceptance of the goods constitutes an implied promise to pay. This kind of contract is called a tacit contract. In this very illustration, if the goods are delivered by a servant of X to Z, mistaking Z for Y, then Z will be bound to pay compensation to X for their value. This is a quasi contract. A quasi contract rests on the ground of equity that a person shall not be allowed to enrich himself unjustly at the expense of another.
DISCHARGE OF CONTRACTS
Different modes of Discharge of Contracts [Sec73-75]
Discharge of Contracts by Performance
i.
ii. iv.
v.
Anticipatory breach of contracts Actual breach of contracts Breach during the performance of the contract Partial breach of a contract
CONTRACT OF GUARANTEE
Definition and Nature of the Contract of Guarantee (s.126). A contract
of guarantee is defined as a contract to perform the promise, or discharge the liability, of a third person in case of his default. The person who gives the guarantee is called surety; the person for whom the guarantee is given is called the principal debtor, and the person to whom the guarantee is given is called the creditor. A contract of guarantee may be either oral or in writing.
the goods, and if he does not pay, I will. This is a contract of guarantee.
CONTRACT OF INDEMNITY
Contract of Indemnity
Meaning of Indemnity. Sections 124 and 125 provide for a contract of
indemnity. Section 124 provides that a contract of indemnity is a contract whereby one party promises to save the other from loss caused to him (the promisee). A contract of indemnity may arise either by (i) an express promise or (ii) operation of law, e.g.
Rights of the Indemnified (i.e., the Indemnity holder). (i) All damages
which he may be compelled to pay in any suit in respect of any matter to which the promise to indemnify applies; (ii) All costs of suit which he may have to pay to such third party, (iii) All sums which may have been paid under the terms of any compromise of any such suit,
indemnifier. However, his rights, in such cases, are similar to the rights of a surety under s.141, viz, he becomes entitled to the benefit of all the securities which the creditor has against the principal debtor whether he was aware of them or not.
3.Number of contracts
4.Request mode
BAILMENT(SECTION148)
Definition of Bailment and Its Kinds
Definition of Bailment . Bailment is defined as the delivery of
goods by one to another person for some purpose. The person delivering the goods is called the bailor and the person to whom the goods are delivered is called the bailee. From the definition of bailment, the following characteristics should be noted:
1. 2. 3.
gratuitous bailment. Where the title of the bailor is defective and the bailee suffers as a consequence, the bailor is responsible to the bailee for any loss. Duties of a Bailee To take care of the goods bailed (s.151) Not to make unauthorised use of goods (s.154) Not to mix bailors goods with his own (Ss. 155-157) To return the goods bailed without demand (s.160) To return any accretion to the goods bailed (s.163) Rights of a Bailee The duties of the bailor Another right of bailee is the right of lien (Ss. 170-171) Right of action against trespassers.(Ss.180-181)
and is charged with the responsibilities of a bailee, besides the responsibility of exercising reasonable efforts in finding the real owner.
Right to retain the goods (s.168). A finder of lost goods may retain the
goods until he receives the compensation for money spent in preserving the goods and/or amount spent in finding the true owner.
Right to sell (s.169). When a thing which is commonly the subject of
sale is lost, if the owner cannot with reasonable diligence be found or if he refuses, upon demand, to pay the lawful charges of the finder, the finder may sell it. (i) when the thing is in danger of perishing or of losing the greater part of its value; (ii) when the lawful charges of the finder in respect of the thing found, amount to two-third of its value.
CONTRACT OF AGENCY
Definition of Agent and Agency
Meaning of Agent and Agency (s.182). Agent is a person employed to do any act for another or to represent another in dealings with third person. The function of agent is to bring about contractual relation between the principal and a third party. The agent is only a connecting link between the principal and the third party and is rightly called as conduit pipe. Who can Employ Agent? Any person who is of the age of majority according to the law to which he is subject and who is of sound mind, may employ agent (s.183). Who may be Agent? Since agent is a mere connecting link or a conduit pipe between the principal and the third party, it is immaterial whether or not the agent is legally competent to contract. Example. Rahim appoints Kiran, a minor, to sell his car for not less than Rs 90,000. Kiran sells it for Rs 80,000. Rahim will be held bound by the transaction and further shall have no right against Kiran for claiming the compensation for having not obeyed the instructions, since Kiran is a minor and a contract wit
agreement or by implication (implied agreement) or by ratification. Thus, there are different kinds of agencies.
Express Agency (s.187) Implied Agency (s. 187) Agency by Estoppel (s. 237) Agency by Holding Out Agency of Necessity (s.189) Agency by Ratification (Ss.196-200) Agency Coupled with Interest