Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJA DHRUV DEV CHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARMOHINDER SINGH & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/03/1968
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1024 1968 SCR (3) 339
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC1756 (8)
ACT:
Contract Act, s. 56-Doctrine of frustration, if applies, to
leases of agricultural land.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant obtained lease of a land in the undivided
Punjab and carried on agricultural operations in it.
Following the partition of India and allotment of the
territory in which the lands were situate to Pakistan the
appellant migrated to India. The appellant commenced an
action for a decree for refund of the rent on the plea that
the consideration for the lease failed, because the
covenants of the lease had become impossible of performance
as a result of communal riots in that locality and the in-
ability of non muslims to continue to reside in that are.
The claim was decreed but the High Court reversed the
decree. Dismissing the appeal this Court,
HELD : Where the property leased is not destroyed or
rendered substantially and permanently unfit, the lessee
cannot avoid that lease even if be does not or is unable to
use the land for purposes for which it is let to him. Under
a lease of land there is a transfer of right to enjoy that
land. If any material part of the property be wholly
destroyed or tendered substantially and permanently unfit
for the purpose for which it was let out, because of fire,
tempest, flood, violence of an army or a mob, or other
irresistible force, the lease may, at the option of the
lessee, be avoided. This rule is incorporated in s. 108(e)
of the Transfer of Property Act and applies to leases of
land to which the Transfer of Property Act applies, and the
principle thereof applies to agricultural leases and to
leases in areas to which the Transfer of Property Act is not
extended. [345 D-F]
In the present case the relation between the appellant and
the respondents did not rest in contract. It is true that
the representative of the respondents-own-ars had accepted
the tender of the appellant and had granted him a lease on
agreed terms. But the rights of the parties did not after
the lease was granted rest in contract. By s. 4 of the
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Transfer of Property Act the chapters and sections of the
Transfer of Property Act which relate to contracts at.-- to
be taken as part of the Indian Contract Act, 1872. That
section however cannot be read as enacting that the
provisions of the Contract Act are to be read into the
Transfer of Property Act. There is a clear distinction
between a completed conveyance and an executory contract,
and events which discharge a contract do not invalidate a
concluded transfer. [342 E-H]
Granting that the parties at the date of the lease did not
contemplate that there may be riots in the area rendering it
unsafe for the appellant to carry on cultivation or that the
crops grown by him may be looted, there was no covenant in
the lease that in the event of the appellant being unable to
remain in possession and to cultivate the land and to
collect the crops, he will not be liable to pay the rent.
Inability of the appellant to cultivate the land or to
collect the crops because of widespread riots cannot in the
event that transpired clothe him with the right to claim
refund of the rent paid. [343 C-E]
340
Paradine v. Jane. (1647) Aleyn. 26, Denny Mott and Dickson
Ltd. v. James B. Fraser & Co. Ltd. [1944] A.C. 265,
Satybrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur & Co. & Anr. [1954]
S.C.R. 310, Abdul Hashem & Anr. v. Balahari Mondal & Ors.
A.I.R. 1952 Cal. 380, Tarabai Jivanlal Parekh v. Lala
Padamchand A.I.R. 1950 Bom. 89), Alanduraiappar Koil
Chithakkadit by its Trustee M. Ramananda Nainar & Ors. v. T.
S. A. Hamid and Anzr, A.I.R. 1963 Mad. 94, Sri Amuruvi
Perumal Devasthanam v. K. R. Sabapathi Pillai & Anr. A.I.R.
1962 Mad. 132 and Inder Pershad Singh v. Campbell, L.I.R. 7
Cal. 474, referred to.
Parshotan Das Shankar Das v. Municipal Committee, Batala
A.I.R. 1949 E.P. 301, overruled.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 407 of 1965.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 23, 1959
of the Punjab High Court in R.F.A. No. 143 of 1952.
Vikrani Chand Mahajan and Hardev Singh, for the appellant.
B. P. Maheshwari, Sobhag Mal Jain and R. K. Maheshwari,
for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. The appellant obtained from the Court of Wards,
Dada Siba Estate, a lease of five squares of land in Tahsil
Okara, District Montgomery in the undivided Punjab for the
Kharif season 1947 and Rabi season 1948. Following upon the
partition of India in July 1947 and allotment of the
territory in which the lands were situate to Pakistan, the
appellant migrated to India.
An action commenced by the appellant against the Court of
Wards in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Kangra at
Dharamsala for a decree for refund of the rent paid by him
was decreed. But the High Court of Punjab reversed the
decree holding that the doctrine of frustration of contract
did not apply to leases of immovable property and that in
any event on the facts proved there was no case of
frustration established by the appellant. With certificate
granted by the High Court, this appeal is preferred by the
appellant. Raja Harmohinder Singh and Kanwar Rajinder Singh
have now been substituted in place of the Court of Wards as
the respondents.
The appellant claimed a decree for refund of the rent on the
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ground that the consideration for the lease failed, ’because
the covenants of the lease had become impossible of
performance as a result of communal riots in the District of
Montgomery and the inability of non-Muslims to continue to
reside in that area. The High Court rejected the
contention.
The following findings of the High Court are not challenged
before us:
341
After obtaining possession of lands from the Court of Wards
the appellant carried on agricultural operations for Kharit
cultivation and "partly enjoyed benefit therefrom by taking-
fodder etc." that the right to the demised land continued to
remain vested in the appellant even after he migrated to
India, that the lands demised with neither destroyed nor had
they become permanently unfit for the purpose of
agriculture, and that there was no agreement express or
implied-that the rent was payable only if the appellant was
able personally to attend to or supervise the agricultural
operations.
Under the English common law the earlier asess laid down the
rule of "absolute contract" that when a duty was cast upon a
person who bound himself by contract absolutely to do a
thing, he could not escape liability for damages for breach
by proof that as events turned out performance was futile or
even impossible : see Paradin v. Jane(1). This rule was
later mitigated by an exception that if further fulfilment
of the contract is brought to an abrupt stop by some
irresistible and extraneous cause for which neither party is
responsible, the contract shall terminate forthwith and the
parties be discharged : see Denny, Mott and Dickson Ltd. v.
James B. Fraser & Co. Ltd. (2) . The rationale of the
doctrine of frustration under the English common law need
not be considered, for in India by the provisions of the
Indian Contract Act have turned a limited exception under
the English common law into a positive general rule in s. 56
of the Indian Contract Act. Section 56, insofar as it is
material provides
"An agreement to do an act impossible in
itself is void.
A contract to do an act which, after the
contract is made, becomes impossible, or, by
reason of some event which the promisor could
not prevent, unlawful becomes void when the
act becomes impossible or unlawful.
Under s. 56, where an event which could not reasonably have
been in the contemplation of the parties when the contract
was made renders performance impossible or unlawful, the
contract is rendered void, and the parties are excused from
performance of their respective obligations. Therefore
where performance is rendered by intervention of law
invalid, or the subject matter assumed by the parties to
continue to exist is destroyed or a state of thing assumed
to be the foundation of the contract fails, or does not
happen, or where the performance is to be rendered
personally and the person dies or is disabled, the contract
stands discharged.
(1) (1647) Aleyn, 26.
(2) [1944] A.C. 265.
342
It has ’been held by this Court that the rule in s. 56
exhaustively deals with the doctrine of frustration of
contracts, and it, cannot be extended by analogies borrowed
from the English common law. In Satyabrata Ghose v.
Mugneeram Bangur & Co. and A nr. (1), Mukherjea, J.,
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observed at p. 3 19 :
"........ the doctrine of frustration is
really an aspect or part of the law of
discharge of contract by reason of supervening
impossibility or illegality of the act agreed
to be done and hence comes within the purview
of section 56 of the Indian Contract Act. It
would be incorrect to say that section 56 of
the Contract Act applies only to cases of
physical impossibility and that where this
section is not applicable, recourse can be had
to the principles of English law on the
subject of frustration. It must be held also
that to the extent that the Indian Contract
Act deals with a particular subject, it is
exhaustive upon the same and it is not
permissible to import the principles of
English law dehors these statutory
provisions."
No useful purpose will be served by referring to the
judgments of the Supreme Court of the United States of
America and the Court of Session in Scotland to which our
attention was invited. Section 56 of the Contract Act lays
down a positive rule relating to frustration of contracts
and the Courts cannot travel outside the terms of that
section. The view expressed by the East Punjab High Court
in Parshotam Das Shankar Das v. Municipal Committee,
Batala(2), that s. 56 of the Contract Act is not exhaustive
of the law relating to frustration of contracts in India
must be deemed not to be good law to that extent.
We are unable to agree with counsel for the appellant in the
present case that the relation between the appellant and the
respondents rested in a contract. It is true that the Court
of Wards had accepted the tender of the appellant and had
granted him a lease on agreed terms of lands of Dada Siba
Estate. But the rights of the parties did not after the
lease was granted rest in contract. By S. 4 of the Transfer
of Property Act the chapters and sections of the Transfer of
Property Act which relate to contracts are to be taken as
part of the Indian Contract Act, 1872. That section however
does not enact and cannot be read as enacting that the
provisions of the Contract Act are to be read into the
Transfer of Property Act. There is a clear distinction
between a completed conveyance and an executory contract,
and events which discharge a contract do not invalidate a
concluded transfer.
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 310.
(2) A.I.R. 1949 B.P. 301.
343
By its express terms s. 56 of the Contract Act does not
apply to cases in which there is a completed transfer. The
second paragraph of s. 56 which is the only paragraph
material to cases of this nature has a limited application
to covenants under a lease. A covenant under a lease to do
an act which after the contract is made becomes impossible
or by reason of some event which the promisor could not
prevent unlawful, becomes void when the act becomes
impossible or unlawful. But on that account the transfer of
property resulting from the lease granted by the lessor to
the lessee is not declared void.
By the agreement of lease the appellant undertook to pay
rent for the year 1947-48 and the Court of Wards agreed to
give on lease the land in its management. It is not claimed
that the agreement of lease was void or voidable. Nor is it
the case of the appellant that the lease was determined in
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any manner known to law. The appellant obtained possession
of the land. He was unable to continue in effective
possession on account of circumstances beyond his control.
Granting that the parties at the date of the lease did not
contemplate that there may be riots in the area rendering it
unsafe for the appellant to carry on cultivation, or that
the crops grown by him may be looted, there was no covenant
in the lease that in the event of the appellant being unable
to remain in possession and to cultivate the land and to
collect the crops, he will not be liable to pay the rent.
Inability of the appellant to cultivate the land or to
collect the crops because of widespread riots cannot in the
events that transpired clothe him with the right to claim
refund of the rent paid.
Authorities in the Courts in India have generally taken the
view that s. 56 of the Contract Act is not applicable when
the rights and obligations of the parties arise under a
transfer of property under a lease. In Abdul Hashem and
another v. Balahari Mondal and Others(-’), the Calcutta High
Court held that in a case where during the continuance of a
tenancy, a notice was served on the tenant requiring him to
place a part of the land under his tenancy at the disposal
of the Land Acquisition Collector, and the Collector took
possession of the premises let out to him, it was held that
even though the occurrence was unforeseen and was not
contemplated by the parties when the lease was created, the
occurrence was not so fundamental as to be regarded in law
to strike at the root and destroy the basis of the
relationship of landlord and tenant.
In Tarabai Jivanlal Parekh v. Lala Padamehand(2) it was held
that monthly tenants of residential premises from whose
occupation the premises were requisitioned continued to
remain the monthly tenants of the landlord as before and
that by reason of the requisition there was no eviction by
title paramount or a
(1) A.I.R. 1952 Cal. 380.
(2) A.I.R. 1950 Bom. 89.
sup. Cl/68-9
344
frustration of adventure. The Court in that case observed
that the doctrine of frustration did not apply where there
is a lease whether the term is one for a fixed period or one
which can be terminated by notice to quit, as the estate
vested in the lessee by a lease is not extinguished by the
order of requisition which is of a temporary nature.
In Alanduraiappar Koil Chithakkadu by its Trustee M. Rama-
nanda Nainar and Ors. v. T. S. A. Hamid and Another(1), a
lessee of a shandy tope agreeing to pay an annual rent for a
period of five years was held not to be entitled to
remission merely for the reason that the shandy was hit by
two cyclones during the period of lease and that for some
period on account of the cyclone, "the shandy did not form
properly or regularly and the lessee did not get any
income". The Court held in that case that in the absence of
any provision for remission on account of losses, no such
remission can be granted by the Courts.
In Sri Amuruvi Perumal Devasthanam v. K. R. Sabapatlhi
Pillai and another(1) the plaintiff Devasthanam granted a
lease of lands in open auction to the defendant on the terms
and conditions set out in the auction notices and a deed of
lease was executed by the Devasthanam and the defendants.
The Government of Madras thereafter promulgated Ordinance IV
of 1952 which restricted the quantum of rent payable by the
tenants to the landlords. The defendants remained in
possession till after the expiry of the period of the lease,
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but neglected to pay rent and failed to comply with the
terms of the lease. It was held that the plaintiff was held
entitled to recover the stipulated rent from the defendants.
Our attention was, however, invited to certain cases in
which counsel claimed that the doctrine of frustration had
been applied to leases. In Inder Pershad Singh v.
Campbell(") the plaintiff agreed to cultivate indigo for the
defendant for a specified number of years in certain lands
with respect to a portion of which lands the plaintiff was a
sub-tenant only. During the continuance of the contract,
the plaintiff lost possession of those lands through his
immediate landlord having failed to pay the rent, and having
been in consequence ejected therefrom by the owner. In a
suit by the plaintiff to have so much of the contract as
related to those lands cancelled, on the ground that it had
become impossible of performance through no neglect on his
part, it was held that the case fell within cl. 2 of s. 56
of the Contract Act. But between the parties to the
litigation there was no relation of landlord and tenant.
The plaintiff was unable to raise indigo and supply to the
defendants because the plaintiff’s landlord failed to pay
the rent due, and the plaintiff was on that account ejected
from the land. That case’
(1).T.R. 1963 Mad. 94.
(2) A.T.R. 1962 Mad. 132.
(3) I.L.R. 7 Cal. 474.
345
does not, in our view, support the contention that the
doctrine of frustration applies to the case of a lease.
The case strongly relied upon by counsel for the appellant
was Gurdarshan Singh and Anr. v. Bishen Singh(1). In that
case a lease was executed on January 8, 1947 in respect of
agricultural land situated in an area which on partition of
India fell within West Pakistan. The Court found that
possession of the demised land was not given to the lessee,
and the landlord was on account of riots unable to deliver
possession. Obviously on that finding the tenant was
entitled to claim refund of the rent paid. But the Court
proceeded to consider the question "whether the doctrine of
frustration applies to a contract of lease of agricultural
lands" and recorded an answer that the doctrine of
frustration applies to leases. The Court observed at P. 13-
"that the doctrine of frustration does apply to leases, but
even if it does not apply in terms to a contract of lease of
agricultural land the broad principle of frustration of
contract applies to leases". We are unable to agree with
that observation, and the observation at p. 11 that
"According to Indian law, sales of land as also leases are
contracts". Under a lease of law there is a transfer of
right to enjoy that land. If any material part of the
property be wholly destroyed or rendered substantially and
permanently unfit for the purpose for which it was let out,
because of fire, tempest, flood, violence of an army or a
mob, or other irresistible force, the lease may, at the
option of the lessee, be avoided. This rule is incorporated
in s. 108(e) of the Transfer of Property Act and applies to
leases of land, to which the Transfer of Property Act
applies, and the principle thereof to agricultural leases
and to leases in areas where , the Transfer of Property Act
is not extended. Where the property leased is not destroyed
or substantially and permanently unfit, the lessee cannot
avoid the lease because he does not or is unable to use the
land for purposes for which it is let to him.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Y.P. Appeal dismissed.
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(1) I.L.R. [1962] Punjab 5.
346