Essential Elements of a Valid ContractIndian Contract Act 1872 Notes
Meaning of Contract and Its essentials or (“All contracts are agreements, but all agreements are not contracts.” [Essentials of a Valid Contract] or “A Contract is an agreement enforceable by Law”)
Section 2 (h) defines ‘Contract’ as an agreement enforceable by
law. If we analyse the definition it has
two components viz.
1. An agreement
between two or more persons "To Do" or "Not to Do"
something.
2. An
enforceability of such an agreement at law i.e. personal rights and personal
obligations created and defined by agreement must be recognized by law.
Section 2 (e) defines ‘agreement’ as “every promise and set of
promises forming consideration for each other”. For a contract to be
enforceable by law there must be an agreement which should be enforceable by
law. To be enforceable, the agreement must be coupled with obligation.
Obligation is a legal duty to do or abstain from doing what one promised to do
or abstain from doing. All contracts are
agreements but for agreement to be a contract it has to be legally enforceable.
Section10 of the Act provide “All agreements are contracts if they
are made by the free consent of the parties competent to contract for lawful
object & are not hereby expressly declared void.”
An agreement in
order to become a contract must be enforceable by law. Agreements, which do not
fulfill the essential requirements of a contract, are not enforceable.
Thus when an
agreement enables a person to compel another to do something or not to do
something it is called a contract. Thus all contracts are agreements but all
agreements are not contracts. In order to become a valid contract an
agreement must possess the following essential elements:
a)
Offer
& Acceptance: There must be two parties to an agreement
i.e. one making the offer & other party accepting it. Acceptance of must be
unconditional & absolute. A part of an offer cannot be accepted. The terms
of an offer must be definite. The acceptance must be in the mode as prescribed
& must be communicated. The acceptor of an offer must accept it in the same
way & same sense & at the same time as offered by the offeror i.e.
there must be consensus ad idem.
b)
Intention
to create legal relationship: When two parties enter into a
contract their intention must be to create legal relationship. If there is no
such intention between the parties, there is no contract between them.
Agreements of a social or domestic nature to do not constitute contracts.
c)
Lawful
consideration: An agreement to be enforceable by law must be
supported by consideration. “Consideration” means an advantage or benefit which
one party receives from another. It is the essence of bargain. The agreement is
legally enforceable only when both parties give something or get something in
return. An agreement to do something without getting anything in return is not
a contract. Contract must be in cash or kind.
d)
Capacity
to Contract-Competency: The parties competent to contract must
be capable of contracting i.e. they must be of the age of majority, they must
be of sound mind & they must not be disqualified from contracting by any
law to which they are subject to. An
agreement with minors, lunatics, drunkards, etc. is not contract & does not
get a legal title.
e)
Free
Consent: It is necessary between the contracting
parties to have a free & genuine consent to an agreement. The consent of
parties is said to be free when the contracting parties are of the same mind on
the materials of a contract. They must mean the same thing at the same time the
parties must not enter into a contract under undue influence, coercion,
misrepresentation etc. If these flaws are present in an agreement, it does not
become a contract.
f)
Lawful
object: The object of an agreement must be lawful. It
should not be illegal, immoral or it should not oppose public policy. If an
agreement suffers from a legal flaw with respect to object it is not
enforceable by law & so it is not a contract.
g)
Agreement
not declared void: For an agreement to be a contract it is
necessary for the agreement must not be expressly declared void by any law in
force in the country.
h)
Possibility
& Certainty of performance: The terms of an agreement must not be
vague or indefinite. It should be certain. The agreement must be to do a thing
which is possible. For e.g. an agreement to sell a car for Rs. 100/- if sun
does not rise tomorrow. This agreement is impossible & so not enforceable
by law.
Thus,
agreement is the genus of which contract is the specie.
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