American International University - Bangladesh (AIUB)
American International University - Bangladesh (AIUB)
American International University - Bangladesh (AIUB)
University
– Bangladesh (AIUB)
Assignment 1
Application of
Contract Act 1872
In
Bangladesh
Submitted To: Zakir Abu Mohd. Syed
Faculty of Business Administration
American International University
Bangladesh (AIUB)
Void Contract
Literally the word void means ‘not binding in law’. Accordingly the term
‘void contract’ implies a useless contract which has no legal effect at all.
Under the Transfer of Property Act, all mortgages, other than equitable
mortgages, where the principal money secured is Tk. 100.00 or upwards and
gifts-of immovable property, unless they are in writing and registered.
Special Types of contract
Quasi contract
Contingent contract
Constructive or Quasi-
Contract
• Contractual obligations are generally created voluntarily. But there are
obligations, which lack voluntariness such as the obligation to repay a
sum of money paid under a mistake of fact. In such cases, therefore,
there is no contract but, nevertheless, the law treats them as such. Such
contracts, existing in Jaw but not in fact, are called quasi-contract.
Contingent contract
Offer
+ Acceptance Agreement
Enforced by law
Contract
Proposal or Offer
Proposal or offer is the starting point to form an agreement.
An expression of willingness to contract on certain terms, made with
the intention that it shall become binding as soon as it is accepted by
the person to whom it is addressed.
According to Contract Act 1872, proposal or offer is-
“where one person signifies to another his willingness to do or abstain
from doing something with a view of obtaining the assent of that other
to such act or abstinence he is said to said a proposal.” If the above
mentioned definition is analyzed, the following elements of a proposal
or off are found:
2. Implied: The acts of the parties show that the offer has been
accepted, such as when both parties to a contract begin to
perform the terms of the contract.
a. it will be promise
b. it will form a consideration
c. the consideration will be formed for each other of the parties
Classification of Agreement
Agreement
Voidable Agreement
A voidable agreement is one that is capable of being affirmed or rejected at the
option of one of the parties, but which is binding on the other. It is binding if he
chooses to affirm it and is of no effect if he chooses to reject it. The other party
has no say in the manner.
For example, there may be a contract into which one of the parties has induced
the other to enter by means of fraud. The latter may repudiate the contract, or
if he sees fit, he may waive the fraud, and hold the former to his bargain.
Unenforceable Agreement
• An unenforceable contract is one that is valid, but incapable of being sued
upon or proved. A contract which is unenforceable cannot be set aside at
the option of one of the parties to it. The obstacles to its enforcement do
not touch the existence of the contract, but only set difficulties in the way
of action being brought or proof given.
Illegal Agreement
• An illegal agreement, under the common law of contract, is one
that the court will not enforce because the purpose of the
agreement is to achieve an illegal end. The illegal end must result
from performance of the contract itself, however. A contract that
requires only legal performance, such as the sale of packs of cards
to a known gambler, where gambling is illegal, will nonetheless be
enforceable.
Free consent
Section 10 of the Contract Act outlines the elements of a valid contract thus: "All
agreements are contracts if they are made by the free consent of parties competent to
contract, for a lawful consideration and with a lawful object, and are not hereby expressly
declared to be Void."
Section 13 of the Contract Act defines consent thus: "Two or more persons are said to
consent when they agree upon the same thing in the same sense."
Section 14 of the Act says that consent is free when it is not caused by:
• Mistake
• Misrepresentation
• Fraud
• Coercion and
• Undue influence
(1) Mistake
Section 20 of the Contract Act lays down thus: "When both the parties to an
agreement are under a mistake as to a matter of fact essential to the agreement, the
agreement is void".
The mistake which is necessary to make a contract void must be mutual and not of
one of the parties.
Every mistake does not vitiate a contract. The following among others may be
picked up:
The Contract Act provides that, "where both the parties to an agreement are under a
mistake as to a matter of fact essential to the agreement, the agreement is void ".
Misrepresentation is the positive assertion of something, which is not true though the person
making it believes it to be true.
Bangladeshi Law:
In Bangladeshi Law, as laid down by Section 18 of the Contract Act, misrepresentation means and
includes:
I. "The positive assertion, in a manner not warranted by the information of the person making it,
of that which is not true, though he believes it to be true".
II. "Any breach of duty which, without an intent to deceive, gains an advantage to the person
committing it, or any one claiming under him by misleading another to his prejudice or to the
prejudice of any one claiming under him".
III. "Causing, however innocently, a party to an agreement to make a mistake as to the substance
of the thing which is the subject of the agreement".
(3) Fraud
Fraud has been defined by Anson as "a false representation of fact made with the knowledge of its falsehood or recklessly without
belief in its truth, with the intention that it should be acted upon by the complaining party and actually inducing him to act upon it". So,
Bangladeshi Law:
In Bangladeshi law, as laid down by Section 17 of the Contract Act, fraud means and includes any of the following acts:
"The suggestion as a fact of that which is not true by one who does not believe it to be true ".
"The active concealment of a fact by one having knowledge or belief of the fact". This duty to disclose is not enforceable in all cases of
contract. It arises only in the following cases:
a) Statutory obligation to disclose.
b) Contracts uberrimae fidei.
• Bangladeshi Law
Section 15 of the Contract Act defines coercion as "the committing or threatening
to commit, any act forbidden by the Penal Code or the unlawful detaining or
threatening to detain any property to the prejudice of any person whatever with the
intention of causing any person to enter into an agreement''.
Undue influence is a subtle and improper pressure brought to bear upon a person to induce him
to enter into a contract which, in the absence of the said pressure, he would not do.
Bangladeshi law:
Section 16(1) of the Contract Act lays down thus: "A contract is said to be induced by 'undue
influence' where the relation subsisting between the parties are such that one of the parties is in
a position to dominate the will of the other and uses that position to obtain an unfair advantage
over the other".
According to Section 16(2) of the Contract Act, "a person is deemed to be in a position to
dominate the will of another":
I. Where he holds real or apparent authority over the other, or where he stands in a fiduciary
relation to the other; or
II. Where he makes a contract with a person, whose mental capacity is temporarily or
permanently affected by reason of age, illness or mental or bodily distress.
Burden of proof
Contract with a Pardanashin lady
Consideration (Bangladeshi Law)
• Section 2 of the Contract Act :
When at the desire of the promissor, the promise or any other person, has
done or abstained from doing, does or abstains from doing, promises to
do or to abstain from doing something, such act, abstinence or promise is
called a consideration for the promise"
Consideration Rules in English Law
• Real and not sham.
• Must not be illegal.
• Must not be past.
• Move from the promise
• Need not be adequate
Legality of Object
It is essential to the validity of a contract that its object is lawful, a
contract, otherwise is void if the object of the agreement is
unlawful. It can happen that the object of a contract is illegal
though its consideration is perfectly lawful.
Example:
A takes the lease of a house belonging to B for monthly rent of Tk.
15,000. There is nothing unlawful in this. But if A intends to set up
an illicit distillery in the house, the contract is void as its object is
unlawful.
Unlawful objects (Bangladeshi law)
• When the object of an agreement contravenes provisions of any Act, the
object becomes illegal.
• A contract the object of which is to be defraud others, becomes illegal.
• An object that contravenes public policy.
a) Valid
b) Voidable
c) Void
Parties competent to contract
By Performance.
By Agreement or Consent
By Frustration or Impossibility of Performance
By Breach of Contract.
By Operation of Law
Discharge by Performance
Performance is the most natural and common mode of discharging a
contractual liability.
Contract Continues
Waiver of Breach as Though There Were No Breach
Aggrieved party
would have one Suit for
Rescission of or more, but not specific
contract all, of these performance
remedies against
the guilty party
Suit for damages
Nominal Damages
General Special
Penalty
Damages Damages
General Damages
Back
Special Damages
Special damages (also called “consequential damages”)
cover any loss incurred by the breach of contract
because of special circumstances or conditions that are
not ordinarily predictable.
Where the contract is made by a company in excess of its powers as laid down in
its Memo of Association
Suit for injunction
An aggrieved party can sue for an injunction i.e., an order of the court restraining
the wrong doer from doing or continuing the wrongful act complained of.
Injunctions are usually granted to enforce negative stipulations in cases where
damages are not adequate relief.
Injunction is a preventive relief.
It is particularly appropriate in cases of anticipatory breach of contract.
Example: N, a film actress agreed to act exclusively for Warner Bros for one year.
During the year she contracted to act for X. It was held that she could be restrained
by an injunction from acting for X. [Warner Bros. v. Nelson. (1937) I.K.B. 209J.
THANK YOU FOR
YOUR ATTENTION