Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
FATEH CHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BALKISHAN DAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/01/1963
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1405 1964 SCR (1) 515
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1970 SC1955 (3,5)
E&D 1970 SC1986 (34)
RF 1971 SC 422 (20)
ACT:
Contract-Compensation for breach of contract where penalty
stipulated for-"the contract contains any other stipulation
by way of penalty", if applicable, to all stipulation by way
of penalty-Indian Contract Act, 1872 (Act IX of 1872), i. 74
--Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act 5 of 1908), s. 2 (12)
and O. 20 r. 12(1) (c).
HEADNOTE:
By agreement dated March 21, 1949, the plaintiff contracted
to sell leasehold rights in a piece of land and in the
building constructed thereon to the defendant. The
plaintiff received Rs. 25,000/- under the agreement and
delivered possession of the building and the land in his
occupation to the defendant, but the sale was not completed
before the expiry of the period stipulated in the agreement,
and for this default each party blamed the other. The
plaintiff instituted a suit in the court of the Subordinate
judge claiming to forfeit the amount of Rs. 25,000/-
received by him, and praying for a decree for possession of
the land and building and for compensation for use and
occupation of the building from the date of delivery of
possession to the defendant of the property. The defendant
contended that the plaintiff having broken the contract
could not forfeit the amount of Rs. 25,000/- received by him
nor claim any compensation. The trial judge held that the
plaintiff had failed to put the defendant in possession and
could not therefore retain Rs. 25,000/- and accordingly
directed that on the plaintiff depositing Rs. 25,000/- less
Rs. 1,400/- the defendant do put the plaintiff in possession
and awarded to the plaintiff future mesne profits at the
rate of Rs. 140/- permitters from the date of the suit until
delivery of possession. On appeal the High Court modified
the decree of the trial court and declared ,that the
plaintiff was entitled to retain out of Rs. 25,000/- paid by
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the defendant under the sale agreement, a sum of Rs.
11,250/- and directed that the plaintiff do get from the
defendant compensation for use at the rate of Rs. 265/- per
mensem.
Held, that the High Court was right in holding that the
defendant had committed breach of the contract;
516
Held, further that the expression "the contract contains any
other stipulation by way of penalty" comprehensively applies
to every covenant involving a penalty-whether it is for
payment on breach of contract of money, or delivery of
property in future, or for forfeiture of right to money or
other property already delivered. Duty not to enforce the
penalty clause but only to award reasonable compensation is
statutorily imposed upon courts by s. 74 of the Indian
Contract Act. In all cases, therefore, where there is a
stipulation in the nature of penalty for forfeiture of an
amount deposited pursuant to’ the terms of a contract which
expressly provides for forfeiture, the court has
jurisdiction to award such sum only as it considers
reasonable, but not exceeding the amount specified in the
contract as liable to forfeiture.
In the present case in the absence of any proof of damage
arising from the breach of contract, the amount of Rs.
1,000/which had been forfeited and liability to forfeiture
whereof was not challenged and the advantage that the
plaintiff derived by retaining the sum of Rs. 24,000/- was
sufficient compensation to the plaintiff For loss suffered
by him. In the absence of evidence to show that the value
of the property had depreciated, since the dateof the
contract, the decree passed by the High Court awarding10%
of the contract price to the plaintiff as compensation could
not be sustained.
Abdul Gani & Co. v. Trustees of the Port Bombay, I. L. R.
1952 Bom. 747 and Natesa Aiyar v. Appavu Padayachi, (1913)
I. L. R. 38 Mad. 178, distinguished
Held, further, that the plaintiff was not only entitled to
mesne profits at the rate fixed by the trial court, but was
also entitled to interest on such profits : vide s. 2(12) of
the Code of Civil Procedure.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 287 of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated August 22, 1957 of
the Punjab High Court in (Circuit Bench) at Delhi in Civil
Regular First Appeal No. 37-D of 1960.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney General of India,
M. L. Bagai, S. K. Mehta and K. L. Mehta, for the
appellant.
Mohan Behari Lal, for the respondent.
517
1963. January 15. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-By a registered deed of lease dated May 19, 1927,
which was renewed on January 30, 1947, the Delhi Improvement
Trust granted leasehold rights for 90 years to one Dr. M.
M.Joshi in respect of a plot of land No. 3, ’E’ Block:’
Qarol Bagh, Delhi, admeasuring 2433 sq. yards. Dr. Joshi
constructed a building on the land’ demised to him.
Chandrawati, widow of Dr. Joshi, as guardian of her minor
son Murli Manohar, by sale-deed dated April 21, 1947, sold
the leasehold rights in the land together with the building
to Lala Balkishan Daswho will hereinafter be referred to as
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’the plaintiff’for Rs. 63,000/-. By an agreement dated
March 21, 1949-the plaintiff contracted to sell this rights
in the land and the building to Seth Fateh Chand-hereinafter
called ’the defendant’. It was recited in the agreement
that the plaintiff agreed to sell the building together with
’pattern’ rights appertaining to the land admeasuring 2433 ’
sq. yards for Rs. 1,12,500/-, and that Rs. 1,000/- wire paid
to him as earnest money at the time of the execution of the
agreement. The conditions of the agreement were :
"(1) I, the executant, shall deliver the
actual possession, i. e. complete vacant
possession of kothi (bungalow) to the vendee
on March 30, 1949, and the vendee shall have
to give another cheque for Rs. 24,000/- to me,
out of the sale price.
(2) Then the vendee shall have to get the
sale (deed) registered by the 1st of June,
1949. If, on account of any reason, the
vendee fails to get the said sale-deed
registered by June, 1949, then this sum of Rs.
25,000/- (twenty-five thousand) mentioned
above shall be deemed to be forfeited and the
agreement cancelled.
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Moreover, the vendee shall have to deliver
back the complete vacant possession of the
kothi (bungalow) to me, the executant. if due
to certain reason, any delay takes place on my
part in the registration of the sale-deed, by
1st June 1949, then 1, the executant, shall be
liable to pay a further sum of Rs. 25,000/- as
damages, apart from the aforesaid sum of Rs.
25,000/- to the vendee, and the bargain shall
be deemed to be cancelled."
The southern boundary of the land was described in the
agreement "Bungalow of Murli Manohar Joshi."
On March 25, 1949, the plaintiff received Rs. 24,000/- and
delivered possession of the building and the land in his
occupation to the defendant, but the sale of the property
was not completed before the expiry of the period stipulated
in the agreement. Each party blamed the other for failing
to complete the sale according to the terms of the
agreement. Alleging that the agreement was rescinded
because the defendant had committed default in performing
the agreement and the sum of Rs. 25,000/- paid by the
defendant stood forfeited, the plaintiff in an action filed
in the Court of the Subordinate judge, Delhi, claimed a
decree for possession of the land and building described in
the plaint and a decree for Rs. 6,5001 as compensation for
use and occupation of the building from March 25, 1949, to
January 24, 1950, and for an order directing enquiry as to
compensation for use and occupation of the land and building
from the date of the institution of the suit until delivery
of possession to the plaintiff. The defendant resisted the
claim contending inter alia that the plaintiff having
committed breach of the contract could not forfeit the
amount of Rs. 25,000/received by him nor claim any
compensation. The trial judge held that the plaintiff bad
failed to put
519
the defendant in possession of the land agreed to be sold
and could not therefore retain Rs. 25,000/received by him
under the contract. He accordingly directed that on the
plaintiff depositing Rs. 25,000/less Rs. 1,400/- (being the
amount of mesne profits prior to the date of the suit) the
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defendant do put the plaintiff in possession of the land and
the building, and awarded to the plaintiff future mesne pro-
fits at the rate of Rs. 140/- per mensem from the date of
the suit until delivery of possession or until expiration of
three years from the date of the decree whichever event
first occurred. In appeal the High Court of Punjab modified
the decree passed by the trial Court and declared "that the
plaintiff was entitled to retain out of Rs. 25,000/- paid by
the defendant under the sale agreement, a sum of Rs.
11,250/-" being compensation for loss suffered by him and
directed that the plaintiff do get from the defendant
compensation for use and occupation at the rate of Rs. 265/-
per mensem. The defendant has appealed to this Court with
certificate under Art. 133(1)(a) of the Constitution.
The first question which falls to be determined in this
appeal is as to who committed breach of the contract. The
plaintiff’s case as disclosed in his pleading and evidence
was that he had agreed to sell to the defendant the
leasehold rights in the land and building thereon purchased
by him from Murli Manoharjoshi by sale-deed dated April 21,
1947, that at the time of execution of the agreement the
defendant had inspected the sale deed and the lease executed
by the Improvement Trust dated January 30, 1947 and the
sketch plan annexed to the lease, that the plaintiff had
handed over to the defendant a copy of that plan and had put
the defendant in possession of the property agreed to be
sold, but the defendant despite repeated requests failed and
neglected to pay the balance remaining due by him and to
obtain the sale deed in his favour.
520
The defendant’s case on the other hand was that the
plaintiff had agreed to sell the area according to the
measurement and boundaries in the plan annexed to the lease
granted by the Improvement Trust and had promised to have
the southern boundary demarcated and to have a boundary wall
built, that at the time of the execution of the agreement of
sale the plaintiff did not show him the sale deed by which
he had purchased the property, nor the lease obtained from
the Improvement Trust in favour of Dr. Joshi nor even the
’sketch plan,’ that the plaintiff had given him a copy of
the ’sketch plan’ not at the time of the execution of the
agreement, but three or four days after he was put in
possession of the premises and that on measuring the site in
the light of the plan lie discovered that there was a
"shortage on the southern side opposite to Rohtak Road",
that thereupon lie approached the plaintiff and repeatedly
called upon him to put him in possession of the land as
shown in the plan and to get the boundary wall built in his
presence but the plaintiff neglected to do so. We have been
taken through the relevant evidence by counsel and we agree
with the conclusion of the High Court that the defendant and
not the plaintiff committed breach of the contract.
The defendant’s case is founded primarily on two pleas
(i)that the plaintiff offered to sell land
not according to the description in the
written agreement, but according to the plan
appended to the Improvement Trust lease, and,
that he--the defendant-accepted that offer,
and
(ii)The plaintiff had undertaken to have the
southern boundary demarcated and a boundary
wall built thereon,
If the case of the defendant be true, it is a singular
521
circumstance that those covenants are not found incorporated
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in the written agreement nor are they referred to in any
document prior to the date fixed for completion of the sale.
The defendant was put-in possession on March 25, 1949 and he
paid Rs. 24,000/- as agreed. If the plaintiff did not put
the defendant in possession of the entire area which the
latter had agreed to buy, it is difficult to believe that
the defendant would part with a large sum of money which
admittedly was to be paid by him at the time of obtaining
possession of the premises, and in any event he would have
immediately raised a protest in writing that the plaintiff
had not put him in posses-,ion of the area agreed to be
delivered. It is implicit in the plea of the defendant that
lie knew that the southern boundary was irregular and that
the plaintiff was not in possession of the area agreed to be
sold under the agreement. Why then did the defendant not
insist that the terms pleaded by him be incorporated in the
agreement ? We find no rational answer to that question ;
and none has been furnished. The story of the defendant
that he agreed to purchase the land according to ’the
measurement and boundaries’ in the Improvement Trust Plan
without even seeing that plan, is impossible of acceptance.
It is common ground that according to this plan the land
demised was rectangular in shape admeasuring 140’ x 160’
though the conveyance was in respect of 2433 sq. yards only.
Manifestly if the land conveyed to the predecessor-in-
interest of the plaintiff was a perfect rectangle the length
of the boundaries must be inaccurate, for the area of a
rectangular plot of land 140’ x 160’ would be 248 sq. yards
and 8 sq. feet and not 2433 sq. yards. The plaintiff had
purchased from his predecessor-ininterest land admeasuring
2433 sq. yards and by the express recital in the agreement
the plaintiff agreed to sell that area to the defendant. At
the request
522
of the plaintiff the trial Court appointed a Commissioner
for measuring the land of which possession was delivered to
the defendant, and according to the Commissioner the land
"admeasured 141/142’ feet by 157/158 feet". The
Commissioner found, that two constructions-a latrine and a
garage-on the adjacent property belonging to Murli Manohar
Joshi "broke the regular line of the southern boundary. The
fact that the southern boundary was irregular must have been
noticed by the defendant at the time of the agreement of
sale, and in any event soon after he obtained possession of
the property. But for nearly three months after he obtained
possession the defendant did not raise any objections in
that behalf. His story that he had orally called upon the
plaintiff repeatedly to put him in possession of the land as
shown in the Improvement Trust Plan cannot be believed. The
defendant’s case that a part of the land agreed to be
conveyed was in the possession of Murli Manohar Joshi was
set up for the first time by the defendant in his letter
dated June 17, 1949. On June 1, 1949, the defendant
informed the plaintiff by a telegram that the latter was
responsible for damages as he had failed to complete the
contract. The plaintiff by a telegram replied that he was
ready and willing to perform his part of the contract and
called upon the defendant to obtain a sale deed. The
defendant then addressed a letter on June 9, 1949, to the
plaintiff informing him that the ’latter had to get the
document executed and registered after giving clear title by
June 1, 1949. To that letter the plaintiff replied that the
defendant had inspected the title-deeds before he agreed to
purchase the property and had satisfied himself regarding
the plaintiff’s title thereto and that the defendant had
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never raised any complaint about any defect in the title of
the plaintiff. The defendant’s Advocate replied by letter
dated June 17, 1949 :
"This is true that my client paid Rs. 25,000/-
and got possession of the Kothi on the clear
523
understanding that your client has clear title
of the entire area mentioned in the agreement
of sale and sketch map attached to it. Long
before 1st June, my client noticed that a cer-
tain area of the Kothi under sale is under the
possession of Shri Murli Manohar Joshi on
which his garage stands. Again on the same
side Shri Murli Manohar Joshi has got latrines
and there is clear encroachment on the land
included in the sale. It was clearly
understood at the time of bargain that vacant
possession of the entire area under sale will
be given by your client. My client was
anxious to put a wall on the side of Shri
Murli Manohar " joshi and when he was actually
starting the work this difficulty of garage
and latrine came in. Your client was
approached x x x."
One thing is noticeable in this letter : according to the
defendant, there was a sketch-plan attached to the agreement
of sale, and that it was known to the parties at the time of
the agreement that a part of the land agreed to be sold had
been encroached upon before the agreement by Murli
Manoharjoshi. If there had been an "understanding" as
suggested by the defendant and if the plaintiff had, in
spite of demands made in that behalf by the defendant.,
failed to carry out the agreement or understanding, we would
have expected this version to be set up in the earliest
communication and not reserved to be set up as a reply to
the plaintiff’s assertion that the defendant had never
complained about any defect in the title of the plaintiff.
According to the written agreement the area agreed to be
conveyed was 2433 sq. yards and the land was on the south
bounded by the Bungalow of Murli Manohar Joshi. It is
common ground that the defendant was put in possession of an
area exceeding 2433 sq.yards, and the land is within the
four boundaries set out in the agreement, But the defendant
sought to make out
524
the case at the trial that he had agree to purchase land
according to the Improvement Trust plan a fact which is not
incorporated in the agreement, and which has not been
mentioned even in the letter dated June 17, 1949). The
assertions made by the defendant in his testimony before the
Court, show that not much reliance can be placed upon his
word. He stated that the terms of the contract relating to
forfeiture of Rs. 25,000/- paid by him in the event of
failure to carry out the terms of the contract were never
intended to be acted upon and were incorporated in the,
agreement at the instance of the writer who wrote the deed.
This plea was never raised in the written statement and the
writer of the deed was not questioned about it. The
defendant is manifestly seeking to add oral terms to the
written agreement which have not been referred to in the
Correspondence at the earliest opportunity. We therefore
agree with the High Court that the plaintiff out his part of
the contract to put the defendant in possession of the land
agreed to be sold, and was willing to execute the sale-deed,
but the defendant failed to pay the balance of the price,
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and otherwise to show his willingness to obtain a
conveyance.
The claim made by the plaintiff to forfeit the sum of Rs.
25,000/- received by him from the defendant must next be
considered. This sum of Rs. 25,000/- consist of two items-
Rs.1,000/- received on March 21, 1949 and referred to in the
agreement as ’earnest money’ and Rs. 24,000/- agreed to be
paid by the defendant to plaintiff as "out of the sale
price" against delivery of possession and paid by the
defendant to the plaintiff on March 25, 1949 when possession
of the land and building was delivered to the defendant.
The plaintiff submitted that the entire amount of Rs,
25,000/- was to be regarded as earnest money, and he claimed
to forfeit it on the defendant’s failure to carry out his
part of
525
the contract. This part of the case Of the plaintiff was
denied by the defendant.
The Attorney-General appearing on behalf of the defendant
has not challenged the plaintiff’s right to forfeit Rs.
1,000/- which were expressly named and paid as earnest
money. He has, however, contended that the covenant which
gave to the plaintiff the right to forfeit Rs. 24,000/- out
of the amount paid by the defendant was stipulation in the
nature of penalty, and the plaintiff can retain that amount
or part thereof only if he establishes that in consequence
of the breach by the defendant, he suffered loss, and in the
view of the Court the amount or part thereof is reasonable
compensation for that loss. We agree with the Attorney-
General that the amount of Rs. 24,000/- was not of the
nature of earnest money. The agreement expressly provided
for payment of Rs. 1,000/- as earnest money, and that amount
was paid by the defendant. The amount of Rs. 24,000/was to
be paid when vacant possession of the land and building was
delivered, and it was expressly referred to as "out of the,
sale price." If this amount was also to be regarded as
earnest money, there was no reason why the parties would not
have so named it in the agreement of sale. We are unable to
agree with the High Court that this amount was paid as
Security for due performance of the contract. No such case
appears to have been made out in the plaint and the finding
of the High Court on that point is based on no evidence. It
cannot be assumed that because there is a stipulation for
forfeiture the amount paid must bear the character of a
deposit for due performance of the contract.
The claim made by the plaintiff to forfeit the amount of Rs.
24,000/- may be adjudged in the light of s. 74 of the Indian
Contract Act, which in its material part provides :-
"When a contract has been broken, if a sum is
526
named in the contract as the amount to be paid
in case of such breach, or if the contract
contains any other stipulation by way of
penalty, the party complaining of the breach
is entitled, whether or not actual damage or
loss is proved to have been caused thereby, to
receive from the party who has broken the
contract reasonable compensation not exceeding
the amount so named or, as the case maybe, the
penalty stipulated for."
The section is clearly an attempt to eliminate the somewhat
elaborate refinements made under the English common law in
distinguishing between stipulations providing for payment of
liquidated damages and stipulations in the nature of
penalty. Under the common law a genuine preestimate of
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damages by mutual agreement is regarded as a stipulation
naming liquidated damages and binding between the parties: a
stipulation in a contract in terrors is a penalty and the
Court refuses to enforce it, awarding to the aggrieved party
only reasonable compensation. The Indian Legislature has
sought to cut across the web of rules and presumptions under
the English common law, by enacting a uniform principle
applicable to all stipulations naming amounts to be paid in
case of breach, and stipulations by way of penalty.
The second clause of the contract provides that if for any
reason the vender fails to get the sale-deed registered by
the date stipulated, the amount of Rs. 25,000/- (Rs. 1,000/-
paid as earnest money and Rs. 24,000/- paid out of the price
on delivery of possession) shall stand forfeited and the
agreement shall be deemed cancelled. The covenant for for-
feiture of Rs. 24,000/- is manifestly a stipulation by way
of penalty.
Section 74 of the Indian Contract Act deals with the measure
of damages in two classes of cases
527
(i) where the contract names a sum to be paid in case of
breach and ‘ii) where the contract contains any other
stipulation by way of penalty. We are in the present case
not concerned to decide whether a covenant of forfeiture of
deposit for due performance of a contract falls within the
first class. The measure of damages in the case of breach
of a stipulation by way of penalty is by s. 74 reasonable
compensation not exceeding the penalty stipulated for. In
assessing damages the Court has, subject to the limit of the
penalty stipulated, jurisdiction to award such compensation
as it deems reasonable having regard to all the
circumstances of tile case. jurisdiction of the Court to
award compensation in case of breach of contract is
unqualified except as to the maximum stipulated; but
compensation has to be reasonable, and that imposes upon the
Court duty to award compensation according, to settled
principles. The section undoubtedly says that the aggrieved
party is entitled to receive compensation from the party who
has broken the contract, whether or not actual damage or
loss is proved to have been caused by the breach. Thereby
it merely dispenses with proof of "actual loss or damages";
t does not justify the award of compensation when in
consequence of the breach no legal injury at all has
resulted, because compensation for breach of contract can be
awarded to make good loss or damage which naturally arose in
the usual course of things, or which the parties knew when
they made the contract, to be likely to result from the
breach.
Before turning to the question about the compensation which
may be awarded to the plaintiff, it is necessary to consider
whether s. 74 applies to stipulations for forfeiture of
amounts deposited or paid under the contract. It was urged
that the section deals in terms with the right to receive
from the party who has broken the contract reasonable
compensation and not the right to forfeit what has
528
already been received by the party aggrieved. There is
however no warrant for the assumption made by some of the
High Courts in India, that s. 74 applies only to cases where
the aggrieved party is seeking to receive some amount on
breach of contract and not to cases where upon breach of
contract an amount received under the contract is sought to
be forfeited. In our judgment the expression "the contract
contains any other stipulation by way of penalty" comprehen-
sively applies to every covenant involving a penalty whether
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it is for payment on breach of contract of money or delivery
of property in future, or for forfeiture of right to money
or other property already delivered. Duty not to enforce
the penalty clause but only to award reasonable compensation
is statutorily imposed upon courts by s. 74. In all cases,
therefore, where there is a stipulation in the nature of
penalty for forfeiture of an amount deposited pursuant to
the terms of contract which expressly provides for forfei-
ture, the court has " jurisdiction to award such sum only as
it considers reasonable, but not exceeding the amount
specified in the contract as liable to forfeiture. We may
briefly refer to certain illustrative cases decided by the
High Courts in India which have expressed a different view.
In Abdul Gani & Co. v. Trustees of the Port of Bombay (1),
the Bombay High Court observed as follows :-
"It will be noticed that the sum which is
named in the contract either as penalty or as
liquidated damages is a sum which has not
already been paid but is to be paid in case of
a breach of the contract. With regard to the
stipulation by way of penalty, the Legislature
has chosen , to qualify "stipulation’ as any
other stipulation’. indicating that the
stipulation must be of the nature of an amount
to be paid and not an amount already
(1) I.L.R. 1952 Bom. 747.
529
paid prior to the entering into of the
contract. The section further provides that a
party complaining of a breach is entitled to
receive from the party who has broken the
contract reasonable compensation not exceeding
the amount so named or the penalty stipulated
for. Therefore, the section clearly
contemplates that the party aggrieved has to
receive from the party ’in default some amount
or something in the nature of a penalty : it
clearly rules out the possibility of the
amount which has already been received or the
penalty which has already been provided for."
In Natesa Aiyar v. Appavu Padeyschi (1), the Madras High
Court seems to have held that s. 74 applies where a sum is
named as penalty to be paid in future in case of breach, and
not to cases where a sum is already paid and by a covenant
in the contract it is liable to forfeiture.
In these cases the High Courts appear to have concentrated
upon the words "to be paid in case of such breach" in the
first condition in s. 74 and did not consider the import of
the expression "the contract contains any other stipulation
by way of penalty", which is the second condition mentioned
in the section. The words "’to be paid" which appear in the
first condition do not qualify the second condition relating
to stipulation by way of penalty. The expression "if the
contract contains any other stipulation by way of penalty"
widens the operation of the section so as to make it
applicable to all stipulations by way of penalty, whether
the stipulation is to pay an amount of money, or is of
another character, as, for example, providing for forfeiture
of money already paid. There is nothing in the expression
which implies that the stipulation must be one for rendering
something after the contract is broken. There is no ground
for holding that the expression "contract contains any
(1) (1913) I.L.R. 38 Mad. 178.
530
other stipulation by way of penalty" is limited to cases of
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stipulation in the nature of an agreement to pay money or
deliver property on breach and does not comprehend covenants
under which amounts paid or property delivered under the
contract which by the terms of the contract expressly or by
clear implication are liable to be forfeited.
Section 74 declares the law as to liability upon breach of
contract where compensation is by agreement of the parties
predetermined, or where there is a stipulation by way of
penalty. But the application of the enactment is not
restricted to cases where the aggrieved party claims relief’
as a plaintiff. The section does not confer a special
benefit upon any party; it merely declares the law that
notwithstanding any term in the contract predetermining
damages or providing for forfeiture of any property by way
of penalty, the court will award to the party aggrieved only
reasonable compensation not exceeding the amount named or
penalty stipulated. The jurisdiction of the court, is not
determined by the accidental circumstance of the party in
default being a plaintiff or a defendant in a suit. Use of
the expression "to receive from the party who has broken the
contract" does not predicate that the jurisdiction of the
court to adjust amounts which have been paid by the party in
default cannot be exercised in dealing with the claim of the
party complaining of breach of contract. The court has to
adjudge in every case reasonable compensation to which the
plaintiff is entitled from the defendant on breach of the
contract. Such compensation has to be ascertained having
regard to the conditions existing on the date of the breach.
There is no evidence that any loss was suffered by the
plaintiff in consequence of the default by the defendant
save as to the loss suffered by him by being kept out of
possession of the property.
531
There is no evidence that the property had depreciated in
value since the date of the contract; nor wag there evidence
that any other special damage had resulted. The contract
provided for forfeiture of Rs. 25,000/- consisting of Rs.
1000/-paid as earnest money and Rs. 24,000/- paid as part of
the purchase price. The defendant has conceded that the
plaintiff was entitled to forfeit the amount of Rs. 1,000/-
which was paid as earnest money. We cannot however agree
with the High Court that 10 per cent of the price may be
regarded as reasonable compensation in relation to the value
of the contract as a whole, as that in our opinion is
assessed on arbitrary assumption. The plaintiff failed to
prove the loss suffered by him in consequence of the breach
of the contract committed by the defendant, and we are
unable to find any principle on which compensation equal to
ten percent of the agreed price could be awarded to the
plaintiff. The plaintiff has been allowed Rs. 1,000/-which
was the earnest money as part of the damages. Besides he
had use of the remaining sum of Rs. 24,000/-, and we can
rightly presume that lie must have been deriving advantage
from that amount throughout this period. In the absence
therefore of any proof of damage arising from the breach of
the contract we are of opinion that the amount of Rs.
1,000/- (earnest money) which has been forfeited, and the
advantage that the plaintiff must have derived from the
possession of the remaining sum of Rs. 24,000/-during all
this period would be sufficient compensation to him. It may
be added that the plaintiff has separately claimed mesne
profits for being kept out of possession for which he has
got a decree and therefore the fact that the plaintiff was
out of possession cannot be taken into account in
determining damages for this purpose.’ The decree passed by
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the High Court awarding Rs. 11,250/- as damages to the
plaintiff must therefore be set aside.
532
The other question which remains to be determined relates to
the amount of mesne profits which the plaintiff is entitled
to receive from the defendant who kept the plaintiff out of
the property after the bargain had fallen through. It is
common ground that the defendant is liable for retaining
possession to pay compensation from June 1, 1949 till the
date of the suit and thereafter under O. 20, r. 12 (c) C.
P. Code till the date on which the possession was delivered.
The trial Court assessed compensation at the rate of Rs.
140/- per mensem. The High Court awarded compensation at
the rate of Rs. 265/-per mensem. In arriving at this rate
the High Court adopted a highly artificial method. The High
Court observed that even though-the agreement for sale of
the property was for a consideration of Rs. 1,12,500/the
plaintiff had purchased the property in 1947 for Rs.
63,000/- and that at the date of the suit that amount could
be regarded as "the value for which the property could be
sold at any time." The High Court then thought that the
-proper rate of compensation for use and occupation of the
house by the defendant when he rufused to give up possession
after failing to complete the contract should have some
relation to the value of the property and not to the price
agreed as sale price between the parties, and computing
damages at the rate of five per cent on the value of the
property they held that Rs. 3,150/- was the annual loss
suffered by the plaintiff by being kept out of possession,
and on that footing awarded mesne profits at the rate of Rs.
265/-per mensem prior to the date of the suit and
thereafter. The plaintiff is undoubtedly entitled to mesne
profits from the defendant and ’mesne profits’ as defined in
s. 2 (12) of the Code of Civil Procedure are profits which
the person in wrongful possession of property actually
received or might with ordinary diligence have received
therefrom, together with interest on such profits, but do
not include profits due to improvements made by the person
in wrongful
533
possession. The normal measure of mesne profits is
therefore the value of the user of land to the person in
wrongful possession. The assessment made by the High Court
of compensation at the rate of five per cent of what they
regarded as the fair value of the property is based not on
the value of the user, but on an estimated return on the
value of the property, cannot be sustained. The Attorney-
General contended that the premises were governed by the
Delhi & Ajmer-Merwara Rent Control Act XIX of 1947 and
nothing more than the ’standard rent’ of the property
assessed under that Act could be awarded to the plaintiff as
damages. Normally a person in wrongful possession of
immovable property has to pay compensation computed on the
basis of profits he actually received or with ordinary
diligence might have received. It is not necessary to
consider in the present case whether mesne profits at a rate
exceeding the rate of standard rent of the house may be
awarded, for there is no evidence as to what the ’standard
rent’ of the house was. From the evidence on the record it
appears that a tenant was in occupation for a long time
before 1947 of the house in dispute in this appeal and
another house for an aggregate rent of Rs. 150/- per
mensem, and that after the house in dispute was sold, the
plaintiff received rent from that tenant at the rate of Rs.
80/- per mensem, and to the vendor of the plaintiff at the
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rate of Rs. 106/per mensem. But this is not evidence of
standard rent within the meaning of the Delhi and Ajmer-
Merwara Rent Control Act, XIX of 1947.
The Subordinate judge awarded mesne profits at the rate of
Rs. 140/- per mensem and unless it is shown by the defendant
that was excessive we would not be justified in interfering
with the amount awarded by the Subordinate judge. A slight
modification, however, needs to be made. The plaintiff is
not only entitled to mesne profits at the monthly rate fixed
by the Trial Court, but is also entitled to
534
interest on such profits vide s. 2(12) of the Code of Civil
Procedure. We, therefore, direct that the mesne profits be
computed at the rate of Rs. 140/per mensem from June 1, 1949
till the date on which possession was delivered to the
plaintiff (such period not exceeding three years from the
date of decree) together with interest at the rate of six
percent on the amount accruing due month after month.
The decree passed by the High Court will therefore be
modified. It is ordered that the plaintiff is entitled to
retain out of Rs. 25,000/- only Rs. 1,000/received by him as
earnest money, and that he is entitled to compensation at
the rate of Rs. 140/- per mensem and interest on that sum at
the rate of six percent as it accrues due month after month
from June 1, 1949, till the date of delivery of possession,
subject to the restriction prescribed by O,20 r. 12 (i) (c)
of the Code of Civil Procedure. Subject to these s, this
appeal will be dismissed. In view of the divided success,
we direct that the parties will bear their own costs in this
Court.
Decree modified.
Appeal dismissed.
535