1 - The Indian Contract Act - 1872
1 - The Indian Contract Act - 1872
1 - The Indian Contract Act - 1872
CHAPTER-1
THE INDIAN CONTRACT ACT - 1872
NATURE OF CONTRACT
- Most important branch of Business Law
- Circumstances created by parties shall be legally binding on them
- Sir William Anson - ‘What a man has been led to expect shall
come to pass’
- Realization of the reasonable expectation of man
- Defines legal remedies available in Court of Law
- Rights in personum as against rights in rem
- Limiting principles
- Salmond - ‘Not the whole law of agreements, nor the
whole law of obligations. It is the law of
agreements which create obligations and
those obligations which have their sources
in agreements’
- Torts, civil wrongs, quasi contracts, judgements of courts
DEFINITION
1. Sec. 2(h) - INDIAN CONTRACT ACT
“A contract is an agreement enforceable at Law”
2. POLLOCK
“Every agreement and promise enforceable at law is a contract”
4. SALMOND
“An agreement creating and defining obligations between parties”
5. HALSBURY
“An agreement between two or more persons which is intended to
be enforceable at law and is constituted by the acceptance by one
party of an offer made to him by the other party to do or abstain from
doing some act”
CONSENSUS AD-IDEM
Eg. Hansraj and Rajhans
Therefore “All agreements are not contracts but all contract are
agreements”
3. Lawful consideration
4. Capacity of Parties
5. Free and Genuine Consent
6. Lawful Object:
- Forbidden by law
- Defeats the provisions of law
- Fraudulent
- Involves injury to person and property
- Immoral and opposed to public policy
9. Legal formalities
CLASSIFICATION OF CONTRACTS
OFFER
- Inception of every Contract
- Definite Proposal
- Unqualified Acceptance
- Concluded Contract
DEFINITION
Sec. 2(a) : A person is said to have made a proposal, when he “signifies
to another his willingness to do or to abstain from doing
anything with a view to obtaining the assent of the that other
to such Act or Abstinence.”
Eg.: ‘A’ says to ‘B’ “Will you purchase my car for Rs.1 Lakh?”
9. Lapse of an Offer
- Death
- Not accepted Specified Time
Reasonable Time
- Counter Offer
- Revocation
CROSS OFFERS
COUNTER OFFERS
ACCEPTANCE
- Contract emerges from acceptance of an offer
- Act of assenting
- Expression of willingness to be bound
- A lighted match to a trail of gun powder
DEFINITION
Sec. 2(b) : When the Offeree signifies his assent to the Offeror, the offer
is said to be accepted.
An offer when accepted becomes a promise.
ACCEPTANCE HOW MADE
1. Express Acceptance
2. Implied Acceptance
2. Acceptance to be communicated
Case Law - Felthouse Vs. Bindley
MODE OF COMMUNICATION
- Act
- Omission
Eg. : Weighing Machine
WHEN COMMUNICATION IS COMPLETE (Sec. 4) ?
COMMUNICATION OF OFFER (Sec. 4 Pr1)
- Is complete when it comes to the knowledge of the person to whom
it is made
- Essential element
- Contract without consideration - Nudum Pactum Bare agreement
- No action arises
- Law will not enforce it
- Foundation of every contract
- Quid Pro Quo Something in return
- Pollock “Price at which the promise of the other is bought and
the promise thus given for value is enforceable”
- Consideration may take any form - Money, Goods, Services,
Promise to Marry, Forbear from Suing
- Sign and symbol of every bargain
DEFINITION
A. CURIE Vs. MISA - JUSTICE LUSH
- “A valuable consideration in the sense of law may consist either in
some right, interest, profit or benefit accruing to one party, or some
forbearance, detriment, loss or responsibility given, suffered of
undertaken by the other.”
To be added :
“The benefit accruing or the detriment sustained was in return for a
promise given or received.”
Eg. : Lending of bicycle
Therefore, consideration is
a) An Act i.e. doing Something
b) An Abstinence or Forbearance
c) A Return promise
i.e. Something for Something
EXCEPTIONS
1. Trust or Charge
2. Marriage Settlement, Partition or other Family Arrangement
3. Acknowledgement or Estoppel
4. Assignment of a Contract
5. Contracts entered through an Agent
6. Covenants running with land