Business - Law PGDMM Whole
Business - Law PGDMM Whole
Business - Law PGDMM Whole
Continuing Education
Business Law
Mario Sequeira
Chapter 1 : Indian Contract Act, 1872-Part 1
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- Evolution and Meaning of Contracts
- Standard Forms of Contracts
- Kinds of Agreement
- Privity of Contract
- Consent and Free Consent
- Consideration
Evolution and Meaning of Contracts
Evolution of Contracts
- Contract is derived from latin word “Contractum” (Drawing Together)
- Contract law's history was heavily influenced by Ancient Greek and Roman thought
- Contract and Contract Law gained importance as trade increased in Middle Ages
- Merchant of Venice- Contract Enforcement
- Contractual law in India is derived from the Common Law
- In 1872, a statutory law was enacted titled “Contract Act, 1872”
- The Contract Act, 1872 was made effective on 1 st September, 1872
- The Contract Act, 1872 applies to whole territory of India
- It was a codified law that touched on formation, enforcement, breach and special types of
contract
- The lays down basic principles or key ingredients to determine thy validity of contract
Evolution and Meaning of Contracts (…contd)
Meaning of contract
- Contract implies a promise “enforceable by law”
- Object of Contract law is to determine circumstances in which promises made will be
legally binding
- Enforceability of the contact by law is the sole criteria to determine validity of a Contract
- Section 2(h) of the Contract Act, 1872 states contract is, “An Agreement enforceable by
law”
- Section 2 (e) of the Contract Act, 1872 states, “Agreement means every set of promises that
forms a consideration for each other”.
- Concept of Contract => Contract = Promise + Consideration+ Legal Validity
- “All Contracts are Agreements but all Agreements are not Contract”
Evolution and Meaning of Contracts (…contd)
Formation of Contract
Promise
Consideration
Agreement
Not enforceable by
Enforceable by law
law
Lawful Free
Consideration
and Object Consent
Evolution and Meaning of Contract (…contd)
Nature of Contract
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- A contract creates a legal obligation on the party that accepts the proposal or had agreed
to perform the valid task.
- It also creates a right with the other party to ensure that the task accepted must be
performed.
- Each party is placed with an obligation to perform as per the terms of the Agreement.
- Two basics concepts are involved (i) Plurality of Contracts and (ii) Consensus-ad-idem
- Contract arises from culmination of Offer and its acceptance
Types of Contract
- Express or Written
- Oral
- Implied by Conduct
Evolution and Meaning of Contract (…contd)
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Distinction between Contractual Obligation and Legal Obligation
- An obligation is a requirement to some task or a course of action, whether legal
or contractual.
- We all have some obligations to our society, family, nation, and environment.
But we are not forced to perform these obligations.
- Contractual obligations are those obligations that are enforced to be carried out
under a contract. For example, for constructing a building, the builder is under
contractual obligation to construct as he is bound to do so in the contract
entered with the administration or purchaser of flats of the building.
- On the other hand, legal obligation refers to those obligations that are
enforceable by the law. For example, parent’s obligation to take care of
children etc.
Evolution and Meaning of Contract (…contd)
Concepts of Contract
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- Invitation of Offer: It’s the precursor to start of the contract. It has no legal binding.
- Offer (Section 2(a) of Contract Act, 1872: “A Person is said to make an offer when he
signifies to the other person his willingness to do or to abstain from doing anything with
a view to obtain the assent of the other person.”
Offer is the first step of Contract and triggers the chain of obligations arising through the
Contract. The terms “Offer” and “Proposal” are used interchangeably. Two important
aspects in the definition (i) One person signifying to do something or to abstain from
doing something and (ii) The expression is made to obtain the assent of that other person.
- Difference between Invitation to Offer and Offer
- An Invitation to Offer being a preceding step to creating obligations only leads to
an offer for further negotiations; while an Offer leads to and Agreement
- In Invitation to Offer, there is no willingness to contract; while Offer implies
willingness to contract
Evolution and Meaning of Contract (…contd)
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Communication of Offer: Section 4 of the Contract Act, 1872 states that,
“Communication of Offer is complete when it comes to the knowledge of the person to
whom the offer is made”
Communication is complete when the person to whom the offer is made is in knowledge
of the Offer
Kinds of Agreements
Valid Agreements
Void Agreements Voidable Agreements
(Contract)
Privity of Contract
- The Doctrine of Privity of Contract states, that a contract cannot create any legal
obligations or cannot create any right in the hands of persons or parties other than
the parties to it. The rules and the terms and conditions of the contract are
applicable only to the parties who have entered the contract.
- Under the Roman Law, a third party was neither liable nor entitled under a
contract. Similarly, under the French Civil Code, contracts bind only contracting
parties.
- Only the parties who are entering into or for whom they are being entered into in
the contract can sue or can be sued by the party in the agreement.
- However, there exists some problems in the doctrine of privity when the contract
is entered for the benefit of any third party who is unable to enforce any
obligation on to the parties involved in such a contract.
Privity of Contract
- It is essential to the creation of every contract that there must be a free and
genuine consent of the parties to the agreement.
- The consent of the parties is said to be free when they are of the same mind on
all the material terms of the conduct.
- The parties are said to be of the same mind when they agree about the subject-
matter of the contract in the same sense and at the same time.
- Consent is said to be free when it is not caused by:
- (i) Coercion,
- (ii) Undue influence,
- (iii) Fraud,
- (iv) Misrepresentation, or
- (v) Mistake.
- Absence of Free Consent makes the Agreement Voidable
Consent and Free Consent
Types of Remedies
Meaning
• According to the Section 2(d) of the Indian Contract Act “When at the desire of the
promisor, the promise or any other person has done or has abstained from doing or
does or abstains from doing promises to do or to abstain from doing something, such an
act, abstinence or promise is called as a Consideration for the promise”.
• For example: If A agrees to pay B Rs. 5,000 on the promise that B will wash and paint
his car, then the amount of Rs. 5,000 is the consideration for the work that B will do for
A. Consideration means compensation to be paid by a party to another party for
performing the promise. It means something in return for doing anything or even
abstaining from doing anything. The consideration should be lawful and should not be
against the law.
Consideration