Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. B. K. MONDAL AND SONS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/12/1961
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1962 AIR 779 1962 SCR Supl. (1) 876
CITATOR INFO :
F 1964 SC 152 (6,11,12)
R 1966 SC 580 (9)
R 1967 SC 203 (8)
F 1968 SC1218 (6)
R 1971 SC2210 (3)
F 1973 SC1174 (6)
F 1977 SC2149 (8)
E 1980 SC1109 (3)
RF 1980 SC1285 (18)
RF 1980 SC1330 (8)
ACT:
State Government-Enjoying benefit of non-
gratuitous work-If bound to pay compensation-
Absence of valid contract, if exonerates
liability-Indian Contract Act, 1872 (9 of 1872)-s.
70 Government of India Act, 1935 (25 & 26 Geo.5.
Ch. 42), s. 175(3).
HEADNOTE:
By s. 70 of the Contract Act, "where a person
lawfully does anything for another person, or
delivers anything to him, not intending to do so
gratuitously; and such other person enjoys the
benefit thereof, the latter is bound to make
compensation to the former in respect of, or to
restore, the thing so done or delivered". Under s.
175(3) of the Government of India Act all
contracts made in the exercise of the executive
authority of a province shall be expressed to be
made by the Governor of the province and shall be
executed on behalf of the Governor by such persons
and in such manner as he may director authorise.
The respondent, a firm of building
contractors doing construction works for the
Provincial Government did certain additional
construction on the request of its officers. Its
bills for these latter works were not paid and it
sued the Government basing its claim on contract
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and in the alternative on s. 70 of the Contract
Act. The defence of the Provincial Government,
inter alia, was that there was no valid and
binding contract and s. 70 had no application. The
trial Judge
877
found that although there was no valid contract
under s.175(3) of the Government of India Act,
1935, the claim was justified under s.70 of the
Contract and decreed the suit. The Court of appeal
affirmed that decree. The State appealed by
special leave.
^
Held (Per curiam), that the courts below were
right in holding that s.70 of the Contract Act
applied to the case and the appeal must fail.
Per Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo and Ayyangar,
JJ.-Whether a mandatory provision in a statute is
merely directory or obligatory should be decided
on a careful examination of the scope of the
statute and the object of the particular
provision. In enacting s.175(3) of the Government
of India Act, 1935, the intention of the
parliament was that the state should not be
burdened with liability based on unauthorised
contracts. The provision made was in public
interest and so the word ’shall’ used therein must
be held to make it obligatory and not directory.
Seth Bhikraj Jaipuria v. Union of India,
[1962] 2 S.C.R. 880, approved.
Chatturbhuj Vithaldas Jasani v. Moreshwar
Prashram [1954] S.C.R. 817, explained.
In order that a person can invoke s.70 of the
Contract Act he must be able to show (1) that he
acted lawfully,(2) that he did not intend to act
gratuitously and (3) that the other person enjoyed
the benefit.
A claim for compensation under s.70 therefore
is not one based on any subsisting contract but
proceeds on the basis that something was done or
delivered to another who voluntarily accepted it
even though he had always the option to refuse the
same.
Recognition of the claim in the present case,
could not therefore, amount to a contravention of
s.175(3) of the Government of India Act, either
directly or indirectly.
The word ’lawfully’ in s. 70 of the Contract
Act means that after something is done or
delivered by one person to another and is
voluntarily accepted and enjoyed by the latter, a
lawful relationship arises between the two which
attracts s.70 of the Contract Act. In cases
falling under the section, there cannot, therefore
be any scope for claims for specific performance
or for damages for breach of contract, the claim
for compensation under the section being on the
footing that there has been no contract and the
conduct of parties has created a relationship
resembling that arising out of a contract.
878
There is nothing in s. 175(3) of the
Government of India Act, tested in the light of s.
23 of the Contract Act, that forbids a claim under
s. 70 of the Contract Act, There is no conflict
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between the two sections, each covering a distinct
and separate field and s. 70 Contract Act should
be regarded rather as supplementing s. 175(3) of
the Government of India Act.
Chedi Lal v. Bhagwan Das, (1889) I.L.R. 11
A11. 234, disapproved.
Held, further, that in construing a specific
statutory provision such as s. 70 of the Contract
Act it would be unreasonable to seek assistance
from English decisions on statutory provisions
contained in English law.
Ramanandi Kuer v. Kalawati Kuer, (1927) L.R.
55 I.A. 18, referred to.
The State Government, as much as an ordinary
citizen, must be subject to s. 70 of the Contract
Act and it was wrong to suggest that its position
was like that of a minor and, therefore, it was
outside the scope of s. 70 of the Act.
Suchand Ghosal v. Balaram Mardana, (1911)
I.L.R. 38 Cal. 1, referred to.
Case law referred to.
Per Sarkar and Das Gupta, JJ.- The question
in the instant case was whether the three
requisites of s. 70 of the Contract Act had been
satisfied. There was no dispute that the
Government had taken benefit of the work it
urgently needed the work and put it to its use
immediately. It was also clear that the respondent
did not intend to do the work gratuitously. What
the request made by the officers did was to inform
the respondent that the Government needed the work
immediately and would pay for it when done, and
works similar the respondent, who had previously
done and been paid for, readily acted on it.
There can also be no doubt that the work was
done lawfully. Even assuming that work done under
a contract invalid under s. 175(3) of the
Government of India Act, would be unlawful because
of evasion of it, that section does not say that
work done without any contract at all, as in the
instant case, would be work unlawfully done nor
does it make it unlawful for the Government to
take benefit of work done for it without any
contract at all.
Section 175(3) of the Government of India Act
applies to a consensual contract which the
Government makes and not to something which is
also called a contract but which the
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law brings into existence by a fiction
irrespective of the consent of the parties.
Section 70 of the Contract Act applies where its
requisites exist, if it is necessary to imply a
contract or contemplate a quasi-contract for
applying the section that must be done and neither
s. 175(3) of the Government of India Act nor any
other impediment can stand in the way.
Held, further, that a resort to English Law
is not justified for deciding a question arising
on an Indian statute unless it is such that it
cannot be reasonably understood without such
assistance.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 286 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
decree dated the January 4, 1957, of the Calcutta
High Court in Civil Appeal From Original Decree
No. 155 of 1953.
B. Sen, P. K. Chatterjee and P. K. Bose, for
the appellant.
N. C. Chatterjee, A.N. Sinha and P. K.
Mukherjee, for the respondents.
1961. December 5. The Judgment of
Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo and Ayyrangar, JJ., was
delivered by Gajendragadkar, J. The Judgment of
Sarkar and Das Gupta, JJ. was delivered by Sarkar,
J.
GAJENDRAGADKAR,J.-This appeal by special
leave arises out of a suit filed by the respondent
B. K. Mondal & Sons against the appellant the
State of West Bengal on the Original Side of the
Calcutta High Court claiming a sum of Rs. 19,325/-
for works done by it for the appellant. This claim
was made out in two ways. It was alleged that the
works in question had been done by the respondent
in terms of a contract entered into between the
parties and as such the appellant was liable to
pay the amount due for the said works. In the
alternative it was alleged that if the contract in
question was invalid then the respondent’s claim
fell under s. 70 of the Indian Contract Act. The
respondent had lawfully done such works not
880
intending to act gratuitously in that behalf and
the appellant had enjoyed the benefit thereof.
The respondent’s case was that on February 8,
1944, it offered to put up certain temporary
storage godowns at Arambagh in the District of
Hooghly for the use of the Civil Supplies
Department of the State of Bengal and that the
said offer was accepted by the said department by
a letter dated February 12, 1944. Accordingly the
respondent complete the said construction and its
bill for Rs. 39,476/- was duly paid in July 1944.
Meanwhile, on April 7, 1944, the respondent was
requested by the Sub-Divisional Officer, Arambagh,
to submit its estimate for the construction of a
kutcha road, guard room, office, kitchen and room
for clerks at Arambagh for the Department of Civil
Supplies. The respondent alleged that the
Additional Deputy Director of Civil Supplies
visited Arambagh on April 20, 1944, and instructed
the respondent to proceed with the construction in
accordance with the estimates submitted by it.
Accordingly the respondent completed the said
constructions and a bill for Rs. 2,322/8 was
submitted in that behalf to the Assistant Director
of Civil Supplies on April 27, 1944. Thereafter
the Sub-Divisional Officer, Arambagh required the
construction of certain storage sheds at Khanakul
and the Assistant Director of Civil Supplies wrote
to the respondent on April 18, 1944, asking it to
proceed with the construction of the said storage
sheds. This work also was completed by the
respondent in due course and for the said work a
bill for Rs. 17,003/- was submitted. In the
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present suit the respondent claimed that the two
bills submitted by it in which the respondent had
claimed Rs. 2,322/8/- and Rs. 17,003/-
respectively had remained unpaid and that was the
basis of the present claim.
The appellant denied all the material
allegations made by the respondent in its plaint.
It
881
alleged that the requests in pursuance of which
the respondent claims to have made the several
constructions were invalid and unauthorised and
did not constitute a valid contract binding the
appellant under s. 175(3) of the Government of
India Act, 1935 (hereafter called the Act). It
pleaded that there was no privity of contract
between the respondent and itself and it denied
its liability for the entire claim. The written
statement filed by the appellant was very vague
and general in terms and no specific or detailed
pleas had been set out by the appellant in its
pleading.
However, G.K. Mitter, J., who tried the suit,
framed five material issues on the pleadings and
recorded his findings on them. He held that having
regard to the provisions of s. 175(3) of the Act
there was no valid and binding contract between
the respondent and the appellant for the
construction of huts and sheds at Khakul and
Arambagh. This finding was in favour of the
appellant. He held that the respondent’s claim
against the appellant was, however, justified
under s. 70 of the Indian Contract Act, and he
came to the conclusion that the said claim was not
barred by limitation. He also rejected the plea of
the appellant that the liability of the Province
of Bengal had not devolved upon the appellant
under the provisions of the Indian Independence
(Rights, Property and Liabilities) Order 1947.
Thus, on these three points the findings of the
trial judge were against the appellant. It appears
that at the trial the respondent had also relied
upon s. 65 of the Indian Contract Act in support
of its claim. The learned judge held that s. 65
did not apply to the facts of the case and so the
finding on this point was in favour of the
appellant. The result was that the respondent’s
claim was upheld under s. 70 of the Contract Act
and a decree for the amount claimed by it was
accordingly passed in its favour.
882
The appellant disputed the correctness and
validity of the said decree by preferring an
appeal to the Calcutta High Court in its civil
appellate jurisdiction. The said appeal was heard
by S.R. Das Gupta and Bachawat, JJ. The two
learned Judges who heard the said appeal delivered
separate though concurring judgments and
substantially confirmed the material finding
recorded by the trial court. In the result the
appeal preferred by the appellant was dismissed.
The appellant then applied for a certificate to
come to this Court but the High Court rejected its
application. Thereupon the appellant moved this
Court for a special certificate and on obtaining
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it has come to this Court; and the principal point
which has been urged before us by Mr. Sen on
behalf of the appellant is that s. 70 of the
Contract Act does not apply to the present case.
Before dealing wit this point it is necessary
to refer briefly to the finding recorded by the
Courts below that the contract on which the
respondent relied is invalid under s. 175(3) of
the Act. Mr. Sen argues that this finding is
correct whereas Mr. Chatterjee faintly suggested
that the contract cannot be said to be invalid.
Section 175(3) provided, inter alia, that all
contracts made in the exercise of the executive
authority of a province shall be expressed to be
made by the Governor of a Province and all such
contracts made in exercise of that authority shall
be executed on behalf of the Governor by such
persons and in such manner as he may direct or
authorise. It is common-ground that the contracts
in question were not executed by any persons duly
authorised by the Governor in that behalf, and the
question is whether the said contracts can be said
to be valid inspite of the fact that they do not
comply with the mandatory requirements of s.
175(3) of the Act. In our opinion, there can be no
doubt that failure to comply with the mandatory
provisions of the said section
883
makes the contracts invalid. The question as to
whether mandatory provisions contained in statutes
should be considered merely as directory or
obligatory has often been considered in judicial
decisions. In dealing with the question no general
or inflexible rule can be laid down. It is always
a matter of trying to determine the real intention
of the Legislature in using the imperative or
mandatory words, and such intention can be
gathered by a careful examination of the whole
scope of the statute and the object intended to be
achieved by the particular provision containing
the mandatory clause. If it is held that the
mandatory clause is obligatory it inevitably
follows that contravention of the said clause
implies the nullification of the contract. There
can be no doubt that in enacting the provisions of
s. 175(3) the Parliament intended that the state
should not be burdened with liability based on
unauthorised contracts and the plain object of the
provision, therefore, is to save the State from
spurious claims made on the strength of such
unauthorised contracts. Thus the provision is made
in the public interest and so there can be no
difficulty in holding that the word "shall" used
in making the provision is intended to make the
provision itself obligatory and not directory.
This is the view taken by this Court in Seth
Bhikraj Jaipuria v. The Union of India (1), and,
with respect, we are in entire agreement with that
view.
As in the case of Bhikraj Jaipuria(1) so in
the present case too Mr. Chatterjee has attempted
to argue that the conclusion about the obligatory
character of the provisions of s. 175(3) is
inconsistent with the decision of this Court in
Chatturbhuj Vithaldas Jasani v. Moreshwar
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Parashram (2) In that case a contract for the
supply of goods had been entered into with the
Central Government by the
884
firm Moolji Scika and Company of which the
candidate Chatturbhuj was a partner. The contract
in question had not complied with the mandatory
provisions of Art. 299(1) of the Constitution
(which corresponds snbstantially to s. 175(3) of
the Act) and the question which this Court had to
consider was whether in view of the fact that the
contract in question had contravened the
provisions of Art. 299(1) the candidate
Chatturbhuj could be said to be disqualified for
being chosen as a member of Parliament by virtue
of the disqualification set out in s. 7(d) of the
Representation of the People Act 43 of 1951. In
dealing with this question Bose, J., who spoke for
the Court, observed that "s. 7(d) of the
Representation of the People Act does not require
that the contracts at which it strikes should be
enforceable against the Government; all it
requires is that the contracts should be for the
supply of goods to the Government; The contracts
in question are just that and so are hit by the
section". It would thus be seen that in the case
of Chatturbhuj(1) this Court was dealing with the
narrow question as to whether the impugned
contract for the supply of goods would cease to
attract the provisions of s.7(d) of the
Representation of the People Act on the ground
that is did not comply with the provisions of Art.
299(1), and this Court held that notwithstanding
the fact that the contract could not be enforced
against the Government it was a contract which
fell within the mischief of s. 7(d). Mr.
Chatterjee, however, contends that in considering
the effect of non-compliance of Art. 299(1) Bose,
J., has also observed that "the Government may not
be bound by the contract but that is a very
different thing from saying that the contract was
void and of no effect and that it only meant that
the principal (Government) could not be sued but
there will be nothing to prevent ratification if
it was for the benefit of the Government." Mr.
Chatterjee points out that this observation shows
that the contract
885
with which the Court was dealing was not treated
"as void and of no effect." It would be noticed
that the observation on which Mr. Chatterjee
relies has to be read in the context of the
question posed for the decision of this Court and
its effect must be judged in that way. All that
this Court meant by the said observation was that
the contract made in contravention of Art. 299(1)
could be ratified by the Government if it was for
its benefit and as such it could not take the case
of the contractor outside the purview of s. 7(d).
The contract which is void may not be capable of
ratification, but, since according to the Court
the contract in question could have been ratified
it was not void in that technical sense. That is
all that was intended by the observation in
question. We are not prepared to read the said
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observation or the final decision in the case of
Chatturbhuj(1) as supporting the proposition that
notwithstanding the failure of the parties to
comply with Art. 299(1) the contract would not be
invalid. Indeed, Bose, J., has expressly stated
that such a contract cannot be enforced against
the Government and is not binding on it.
Therefore, we do not think that Mr. Chatterjee can
successfully challenge the finding of the Courts
below that the contracts in question were invalid.
It is on this basis that we have to consider the
main question about the applicability of s. 70 to
the facts of the present case.
Mr. Sen argues that in dealing with the
question about the scope and effect of s. 70 it
would be material to remember the background of
this section. He suggests that the rule laid down
in the section is based on the notes in Smith’s
Leading Cases to Lampleigh v. Brathwaite (2), and
so he argues that in construing the said section
it would be relevant to refer to the English
decisions bearing on the point. The first decision
on which
886
Mr. Sen very strongly relies is the case of H.
Young & Co. v. The Mayor and Corporation of Royal
Leamington Spa (1). In that case, the House of
Lords had to consider the effect of the provisions
of s. 174(1) of the Public Health Act, 1875 (38 &
39 Vict c. 55). The said section enacts that
"every contract made by an urban authority whereby
the value or amount exceeds $50 shall be in
writing and sealed with the common seal of such
authority". It was held that "the provision of the
said section is obligatory and not merely
directory and it applies to an executed contract
of which the urban authority have had the full
benefit and enjoyment, and which has been effected
by their agent duly appointed under their common
seal." It appears that the Corporation of
Leamington had entered into a contract with one
Powis for the execution of certain works to supply
the district with water. Before Powis could
complete this contract it was terminated. Then the
Council, in its capacity as urban authority,
passed a resolution not under seal whereby its
engineer was authorised to enter into a contract
for completing the works left unfinished by Powis.
The said engineer employed the plaintiff who
completed the unfinished work and sued the
Corporation for the sum due to him as balance in
respect of the work executed by him. This claim
was resisted by the Corporation on the ground that
the provisions of s. 174(1) were mandatory and
since the contract on which the plaintiff’s claim
was based had not complied with the said mandatory
provision no claim could be made against the
Corporation. The Queen’s Bench Division upheld the
defence and the decision of the Queen’s Bench was
confirmed by the Court of Appeal as well as by the
House of Lords.
In dealing with the argument that the
contract in question was not void Lord Blackburn
cited
887
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with approval the observations made by Lindley,
L.J., in the Court of Appeal. "In a case like the
present before us", observed Lindley, L.J., "if we
were to hold the defendants liable to pay for what
has been done under the contract, we should in
effect be repealing the Act of Parliament and
depriving the ratepayers of that protection which
Parliament intended to secure for them". He also
added "it may be said that this is a hard and
narrow view of the law, but my answer is that
Parliament has thought expedient to require this
view to be taken, and it is not for this or any
other Court to decline to give effect to a clearly
expressed statute because it may lead to apparent
hardship". Lord Bramwell went further and in his
speech added that he did not agree in the regret
expressed at having to come to the said
conclusion. "The Legislature has made provision",
said Lord Bramwell, "for the protection of
ratepayers, shareholders and others, who must not
through the agency of a representative body, by
requiring the observance of certain solemnities
and formalities which involve deliberation and
reflection. That is the importance of the seal. It
is idle to say that there is no magio in a water".
Mr. Sen argues that the decision in the case of H.
Young & Co.(1). offers us material assistance in
dealing with the question about the effect of non-
compliance of s. 175(3) of the Act and the
applicability of s. 70 of the Indian Contract Act.
Incidentally it may be pointed out that in
England the decision in Young’s case (1) has now
become obsolete because the relevant provisions of
the Public Health Act, 1875, were repealed in 1933
by the Local Government Act, 1933. Section 266 of
the said Act authorises the local authority to
enter into contract necessary for the discharge of
their functions and provides that all contracts
made by a local authority or by a committee
thereof shall be made in accordance with the
888
standing orders of the local authority, and in the
case of contracts for the supply of goods or
materials, or for the execution of works, the
standing orders shall (a) require that, except as
otherwise provided by or under the standing
orders, notice of the intention of the authority
or the committee, as the case may be, to enter
into the contract shall be published and tenders
invited, and (b) regulate the manner in which
notice shall be published and tenders invited. The
proviso to this section lays down that a person
entering into a contract with the local authority
shall not be bound to enquire whether the standing
orders of the authority which applied to the
contract have been complied with, and all
contracts entered into with the local authority,
if otherwise valid, shall have full force and
effect not with standing that the standing orders
applicable thereto have not been complied with.
Subsequently in 1960 the Corporate Bodies Contract
Act (8 & 9 Eliz., 2 c. 46) has been passed; and s.
1 of the Act now governs the contracts entered
into by the corporate bodies wherever
incorporated. The said section provides that
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(1)(a) a contract which if made between private
persons would be by law required to be in writing,
signed by the parties to be charged therewith, may
be made on behalf of the body corporate in writing
signed by any person acting under its authority,
express or implied, and (b) a contract which if
made between private persons would by law be valid
although made by parol only, and not reduced into
writing, may be made by parol on behalf of their
body corporate by any person acting under its
authority, express or implied; (2) a contract made
according to this section shall be effectual in
law and shall bind the body corporate and its
successors and all other parties thereto. Sub-
section (4) of s. 1 provides that nothing in this
section shall be taken as preventing a contract
under seal from being made by or on behalf of
889
a body corporate. It will thus be seen that the
technical and rigorous requirement that the
contract shall be made under seal by a corporation
has now become obsolete; and so the decision in
Young’s case (1) has ceased to be a matter of any
importance.
Before these legislative changes were however
made a distinction used to be drawn between cases
where the requirement of a seal was the result of
the common law rule as to contracts by
corporations and those where the said requirement
was based on a statutory provision like the one
under s.174(1) of the Public Health Act, 1875. The
non-observance of the statutory provision
requiring that a contract of the specified type
should be in writing and sealed with the common
seal of the authority in question renders the
contract void and as such exempts the corporation
from any liability to pay compensation for the
performance of the contract even where the
corporation may have had the full benefit and
enjoyment of the said contract. On the other hand,
where the requirement as to writing and seal is
based not on statutory provision but on principles
of common law, failure to comply with the said
requirement would not afford a valid defence to
the corporation to resist a claim made by a
contractor for compensation for a work done by him
if it is shown that the corporation had the
benefit and enjoyment of the said work. This
latter principle has been laid down by the Court
of Appeal in Lawford v. The Billericay Rural
District Council (2). In that case it was held
that ’"where the purposes for which a corporation
is created render it necessary that work should be
done or goods supplied to carry those purposes
into effect and orders are given by the
corporation in relation to work to be done or
goods to be supplied to carry into effect those
purposes, if the
890
work done or goods supplied are accepted by the
corporation and the whole consideration for
payment is executed, there is a contract to pay
implied from the acts of the corporation, and the
absence of a contract under the seal of the
corporation is no answer to an action brought in
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respect of the work done or the goods supplied."
In coming to this conclusion Vaughan Williams, L.
J., followed the rule recognised by Lord Denman in
Doc v. Taniere (1) where he said that "where the
corporation have acted as upon an executed
contract, it is to be presumed against them that
everything has been done that was necessary to
make it a binding contract upon both parties, they
having had all the advantage they would have had
if the contract had been regularly made. That is
by no means inconsistent with the rule that, in
general, a corporation can only contract by deed,
it is merely raising a presumption against them,
from their acts, that they have contracted in such
a manner as to be binding upon them". In other
words, the decision was based on the ground that
reliance may be placed on an implied contract
arising from an executed consideration on an
acceptance of the benefit of the contract.
Mr. Sen’s argument is that in dealing with
the question about the effect of the contravention
of s.175(3) of the Act and the applicability of s.
70 of the Contract Act the decision in the case of
Lawford (2) is irrelevent while that in the case
of H. Young and Co. (3) is relevent and material
because we are concerned with the contravention of
a statutory provision and not with the
contravention of the provision of the rule of
common law. We are not impressed by this argument.
The question which the appellant has raised for
our decision falls to be considered in the light
of the provisions of s. 70 and has to be answered
on a fair and reasonable construction of the
relevant terms of
891
the said section. In such a case, where we are
dealing with the problem of construing a specific
statutory provision it would be unreasonable to
invoke the assistance of English decisions dealing
with the statutory provisions contained in English
Law. As Lord Sinha has observd in delivering the
judgment of the Privy Council in Ramanandi Kuer v.
Kalawati Kuer (1) "it has often been pointed out
by this Board that where there is a positive
enactment of the Indian Legislature the proper
course is to examine the language of that statute
and to ascertain its proper meaning uninfluenced
by any consideration derived from the previous
state of the law or of the English law upon which
it may be founded". If the words used in the
Indian statute are obscure or ambiguous perhaps it
may be permissible in interpreting them to examine
the background of the law or to derive assistance
from English decisions bearing on the point; but
where the words are clear and unambiguous it would
be unreasonable to interpret them in the light of
the alleged background of the statute and to
attempt to see that their interpretation conforms
to the said background. That is why, in dealing
with the point raised before us we must primarily
look to the law as embodied in s. 70 and seek to
put upon it a fair and reasonable construction.
Section 70 reads thus:
"Where a person lawfully does anything
for another person, or delivers anything to
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him, not intending to do so gratuitously, and
such other person enjoys the benefit thereof,
the latter is bound to make compensation to
the former in respect of, or to restore, the
thing so done or delivered."
It is plain that three conditions must be
satisfied before this section can be invoked. The
892
first condition is that a person should lawfully
do something for another person or deliver
something to him. The second condition is that in
doing the said thing or delivering the said thing
he must not intend to act gratuitously; and the
third is that the other person for whom something
is done or to whom something is delivered must
enjoy the benefit thereof. When these conditions
are satisfied s. 70 imposes upon the latter
person, the liability to make compensation to the
former in respect of or to restore, the thing so
done or delivered. In appreciating the scope and
effect of the provisions of this section it would
be useful to illustrate how this section it would
operate. If a person delivers something to another
it would be open to the latter person to refuse to
accept the thing or to return it; in that case s.
70 would not come in to operation. Similarly, if a
person does something for another it would be open
to the latter person not to accept what has been
done by the former; in that case again s. 70 would
not apply. In other words, the person said to be
made liable under s. 70 always has the option not
to accept the thing or to return it. It is only
where he voluntarily accepts the thing or enjoys
the work done that the liability under s. 70
arises. Taking the facts in the case before us,
after the respondent constructed the warehouse,
for instance, it was open to the appellant to
refuse to accept the said warehouse and to have
the benefit of it. It could have called upon the
respondent to demolish the said warehouse and take
away the materials used by it in constructing it;
but; if the appellant accepted the said warehouse
and used it and enjoyed its benefit then different
considerations come into play and s. 70 can be
invoked. Section 70 occurs in chapter V which
deals with certain relations resembling those
created by contract. In other words, this chapter
does not deal with the rights or liabilities
accruing from the contract. It deals with the
893
rights and liabilities accruing from relations
which resemble those created by contract. That
being so, reverting to the facts of the present
case once again after the respondent constructed
the warehouse it would not be open to the
respondent to compel the appellant to accept it
because what the respondent has done is not in
pursuance of the terms of any valid contract and
the respondent in making the construction took the
risk of the rejection of the work by the
appellant. Therefore, in cases falling under s. 70
the person doing something for another or
delivering something to another cannot sue for the
specific performance of the contract nor ask for
damages for the breach of the contract for the
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simple reason that there is no contract between
him and the other person for whom he does
something or to whom he delivers something. All
that s. 70 provides is that if the goods delivered
are accepted or the work done is voluntarily
enjoyed then the liability to pay compensation for
the enjoyment of the said goods or the acceptance
of the said work arises. Thus, where a claim for
compensation is made by one person against another
under s. 70, it is not on the basis of any
subsisting contract between the parties, it is on
the basis of the fact that something was done by
the party for another and the said work so done
has been voluntarily accepted by the other party.
That broadly stated is the effect of the
conditions prescribed by s. 70.
It is, however, urged by Mr. Sen that the
recognition of the respondent’s claim for
compensation virtually permits the circumvention
of the mandatory provisions of s. 175(3), because,
he argues, the work done by the respondent is no
more than the performance of a so-called contract
which is contrary to the said provisions and that
cannot be the true intent of s. 70. It is thus
clear that this argument proceeds on the
assumption that if a decree is passed in favour of
the respondent for
894
compensation as alternatively claimed by it, it
would in substance amount to treating the invalid
contract as being valid. In our opinion, this
argument is not well-founded. It is true that the
provisions of s. 175(3) are mandatory and if any
contract is made in contravention of the said
provisions the said contract would be invalid; but
it must be remembered that the cause of action for
the alternative claim of the respondent is not the
breach of any contract by the appellant; in fact,
the alternative claim is based on the assumption
that the contract in pursuance of which the
respondent made the constructions in question was
ineffective and as such amounted to no contract at
all. The respondent says that it has done some
work which has been accepted and enjoyed by the
appellant and it is the voluntary acceptance and
enjoyment of the said work which is the cause of
action for the alternative claim. Can it be said
that when the respondent built the warehouse, for
instance, without a valid contract between it and
the appellant it was doing something contrary to
s. 175(3)? As we have already made it clear even
if the respondent built the warehouse he could not
have forced the appellant to accept it and the
appellant may well have asked it to demolish the
warehouse and take away the materials. Therefore,
the mere act of constructing the warehouse on the
part of the respondent cannot be said to
contravene the provisions of s. 175(3). In this
connection it may be relevant to consider
illustration (a) to s. 70. The said illustration
shows that if A a tradesman leaves goods at his
house by mistake, and B treats the goods as his
own he is bound to pay A for them. Now, if we
assume that B stands for the State Government, can
it be said that A was contravening the provisions
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of s. 175(3) when by mistake he left the goods at
the house of B? The answer to this question is
obviously in the negative. Therefore, if goods are
delivered by A to the State Government by mistake
and the
895
State Government accepts the goods and enjoys them
a claim for compensation can be made by A against
the State Government, and in entertaining the said
claim the Court could not be upholding the
contravention of s. 175(3) at all either directly
or indirectly. Once it is realised that the cause
of action for a claim for compensation under s. 70
is based not upon the delivery of the goods or the
doing of any work as such but upon the acceptance
and enjoyment of the said goods or the said work
it would not be difficult to hold that s. 70 does
not treat as valid the contravention of s. 175(3)
of the Act. That being so, the principal argument
urged by Mr. Sen that the respondent’s
construction of s.70 nullifies the effect of s.
175(3) of the Act cannot be accepted.
It is true that s. 70 requires that a person
should lawfully do something or lawfully deliver
something to another. The word "lawfully" is not a
surplusage and must be treated as an essential
part of the requirement of s. 70. What then does
the word "lawfully" in s. 70 denote ? Mr. Sen
contends that the word "lawfully" in s. 70 must be
read in the light of s. 23 of the said Act; and he
argues that a thing cannot be said to have been
done lawfully if the doing of it is forbidden by
law. However, even if this test is applied it is
not possible to hold that the delivery of a thing
or a doing of a thing the acceptance and enjoyment
of which gives rise to a claim for compensation
under s. 70 is forbidden by s. 175(3) of the Act;
and so the interpretation of the word "lawfully"
suggested by Mr. Sen does not show that s. 70
cannot be applied to the facts in the present
case.
Another argument has been placed before us on
the strength of the word "lawfully" and that is
based upon the observations of Mr. Justice
Straight in Chedi Lal v. Bhagwan Dass (1). Dealing
with the construction of s. 70 Straight, J.,
observed:
896
"I presume that the legislature intended something
when it used the word "lawfully" and that it had
in contemplation cases in which a person held such
a relation to another as either directly to create
or by implication reasonably to justify an
inference that by some act done for another person
the party doing the act was entitled to look for
compensation for it to the person for whom it was
done." It is urged that in the light of this test
it cannot be said that the respondent held such a
relation to the appellant as to be able to claim
compensation from the appellant. With respect, we
are not satisfied that the test laid down by
Straight, J., can be said to be justified by the
terms of s. 70. It is of course true that between
the person claiming compensation and person
against whom it is claimed some lawful
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relationship must subsist, for that is the
implication of the use of the word "lawfully" in
s. 70; but the said lawful relationship arises not
because the party claiming compensation has done
something for the party against whom the
compensation is claimed but because what has been
done by the former has been accepted and enjoyed
by the latter. It is only when the latter accepts
and enjoys what is done by the former that a
lawful relationship arises between the two and it
is the existence of the said lawful relationship
which gives rise to the claim for compensation.
This aspect of the matter has not been properly
brought into the picture when Straight, J., laid
down the test on which Mr. Sen’s argument is
based. If the said test is literally applied then
it is open to the comment that if one person is
entitled by reason of the relationship as therein
contemplated to receive compensation from the
other s. 70 would be hardly necessary. Therefore,
in our opinion, all that the word "lawfully" in
the context indicates is that after something is
delivered or something is done by one person for
another and that thing is accepted and enjoyed by
the latter, a lawful relationship is born between
the two which
897
under the provisions of s. 70 gives rise to a
claim for compensation.
There is no doubt that the thing delivered or
done must not be delivered or done fraudulently or
dishonestly nor must it be delivered or done
gratuitously. Section 70 is not intended to
entertain claims for compensation made by persons
who officiously interfere with the affairs of
another or who impose on others services not
desired by them. Section 70 deals with cases where
a person does a thing for another not intending to
act gratuitously and the other enjoys it. It is
thus clear that when a thing is delivered or done
by one person it must be open to the other person
to reject it. Therefore, the acceptance and
enjoyment of the thing delivered or done which is
the basis for the claim for compensation under s.
70 must be voluntary. It would thus be noticed
that this requirement affords sufficient and
effective safeguard against spurious claims based
on unauthorised acts. If the act done by the
respondent was unauthorised and spurious the
appellant could have easily refused to accept the
said act and then the respondent would not have
been able to make a claim for compensation. It is
unnecessary to repeat that in cases falling under
s. 70 there is no scope for claims for specific
performance or for damages for breach of contract.
In the very nature of things claims for
compensation are based on the footing that there
has been no contract and that the conduct of the
parties in relation to what is delivered or done
creates a relationship resembling that arising out
of contract.
In regard to the claim made against the
Government of a State under s. 70 it may be that
in many cases the work done or the goods delivered
are the result of a request made by some officer
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or other on behalf of the said Government. In such
a case, the request may be in effective or invalid
for
898
the reason that the officer making the request was
not authorised under s. 175(3), or, if the said
officer was authorised to make the said request
the request becomes inoperative because it was not
followed up by a contract executed in the manner
prescribed by s. 175 (3). In either case the thing
has been delivered or the work has been done
without a contract and that brings in s. 70. A
request is thus not an element of s. 70 at all
though the existence of an invalid request may not
make s. 70 inapplicable. An invalid request is in
law no request at all, and so the conduct of the
parties has to be judged on the basis that there
was no subsisting contract between them at the
material time. Dealing with the case on the basis
we have to enquire whether the requisite
conditions prescribed by s. 70 have been
satisfied. If they are satisfied then a claim for
compensation can and must be entertained. In this
connection it is necessary to emphasise that what
s. 70 provides is that compensation has to be paid
in respect of the goods delivered or the work
done. The alternative to the compensation thus
provides is the restoration of the thing so
delivered or done. In the present case there has
been no dispute about the amount of compensation
but normally a claim for compensation made under
s. 70 may not mean the same things as a claim for
damages for breach of contract if a contract was
subsisting between the parties. Thus considered it
would, we think, not be reasonable to suggest that
in recognining the claim for compensation under
s.70 we are either directly or indirectly
nullifying the effect of s. 175 (3) of the Act or
treating as valid a contract which is invalid. The
fields covered by the two provisions are separate
and distinct, s. 175 (3) deals with contracts and
provides how they should be made. Section 70 deals
with cases where there is no valid contract and
provides for compensation to be paid in a case
where the three requisite conditions prescribed by
it are satisfied. We are
899
therefore, satisfied that there is no conflict
between the two provisions.
It is well-known that in the functioning of
the vast organisation represented by a modern
State Government officers have invariably to enter
into a variety of contracts which are often of a
petty nature. Sometimes they may have to act in
emergency, and on many occasions, in the pursuit
of the welfare policy of the State Government
officers may have to enter into contract orally or
through correspondence without strictly complying
with the provisions of s. 175(3) of the Act. If,
in all these cases, what is done in pursuance of
the contracts is for the benefit of the Government
and for their use and enjoyment and is otherwise
legitimate and proper s. 70 would step in and
support a claim for compensation made by the
contracting parties notwithstanding the fact that
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the contracts had not been made as required by s.
175(3). If it was held that s. 70 was inapplicable
in regard to such dealings by government officers
it would lead to extremely unreasonable
consequences and may even hamper, if not wholly
bring to a standstill the efficient working of the
Government from day to day. We are referring to
this aspect of the matter not with a view to
detract from the binding character of the
provisions of s. 175 (3) of the Act but to point
out that like ordinary citizens even the State
Government is subject to the provisions of s. 70,
and if it has accepted the things delivered to it
or enjoyed the work done for it, such acceptance
and enjoyment would afford a valid basis for
claims of compensation against it. Claims based on
a contract validly made under s. 175(3) must,
therefore, be distinguished from claims for
compensation made under s. 70, and if that
distinction is borne in mind there would be no
difficulty in rejecting the argument that s. 70
treats as valid the contravention of s. 175(3) of
the Act. In a sense it may be said that
900
s. 70 should be read as supplementing the
provisions of s. 175(3) of the Act.
There is one more argument which yet remains
to be considered. Mr. Sen ingeniously suggested
that the position of the appellant is like that of
a minor in the matter of its capacity to make a
contract, and he argues that just as a minor is
out side the purview of s. 70 so would be the
appellant. It is true as has been held by the
Privy Council in Mohori Bibee v. Dhurmodas
Ghose(1) that a minor, like a lunatic, is
incompetent, to contract, and so where he purports
to enter into a contract the alleged contract is
void and neither s. 64 nor s. 65 of the Contract
Act can apply to it. It is also true that s. 68 of
the Contract Act specifically provides that
certain claims for necessaries can be made against
a minor and so a minor cannot be sued for
compensation under s. 70 of the Contract Act
(Vide: Bankay Behari Prasad v. Mahendra Prasad
(2). Mr. Sen pressed into service the analogy of
the minor and contends that the result of a 175(3)
of the Act is to make the appellant incompetent to
enter into a contract unless the contract is made
as required by s. 175(3). In our opinion, this
argument is not well founded. Section 175(1)
provides for and recognises the power of the
Province to purchase or acquire property for the
purposes there specified and to make contracts. No
doubt s. 175(3) provides for the making of
contracts in the specified manner. We are not
satisfied that on reading s. 175 as a whole is
would be possible to entertain the argument that
the appellant is in the position of a minor for
the purpose of s. 70 of the Contract Act.
Incidentally, the minor is excluded from the
operation of s. 70 for the reason that his case
has been specifically provided for by s. 68. What
s. 70 prevents is unjust enrichment and it applies
as much to individuals as to corporations and
901
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Government. Therefore, we do not think it would be
possible to accept the very broad argument that
the State Government is outside the purview of s.
70. Besides, in the case of a minor, even the
voluntary acceptance of the benefit of work done
or thing delivered which is the foundation of the
claim under s. 70 would not be present, and so, on
principle s. 70 cannot be invoked against a minor.
The question about the scope and effect of
s.70 and its applicability to cases of invalid
contracts made by the Provincial Government or by
corporations has been the subject-matter of
several judicial decisions in this country; and it
may be stated broadly that the preponderance of
opinion is in favour of the view which we are
inclined to take (Vide: Mathura Mohan Saha v. Ram
Kumar Saha and Chittagong District Board; Abaji,
Sitaram Modak v. The Trimbak Municipality;
Pallonjee Eduljee & Sons, Bombay v. Lonavla Gity
Municipality; Municipal Committee, Gujranwala v.
Fazal Din; Ram Nagin Singh v. Governor-General in
Council; Union of India v. Ramnagina Singh; Union
of India v. New Marine Coal Co. (Bengal) Ltd.
Damodara Mudalar v. Secretary of State for India;
Corporation of Madras v. M. Kothandapani-Naidu
Yogambal Boyee Ammani Ammal v. Naina Pillai
Markayar; and, Ram Das v. Ram Babu. Sometimes a
note of dissent from this view has no doubt been
struok (Vide : Chedi Lal v. Bhawan Das; Radha
Kishana Das v. The Municipal Board of Benare Anath
Bandha Deb v. Dominion of India Punjabhai v.
Bhagawan Das Kisandas and G. R. Sanchuiti v. Pt.
R. K. Choudhari.
902
Before we part with this point we think it
would be useful to refer to the observations made
by Jenkins, C. J. in dealing with the scope of the
provisions of s. 70 in Suchand Ghosal v. Balaram
Mardana(1). "The terms of s.70", said Jenkins, C.
J., "are unquestionably wide, but applied with
discretion they enable the Courts to do
substantial justice in cases where it would be
difficult to impute to the persons concerned
relations actually created by contract. It is,
however, especially incumbent on final Courts of
fact to be guarded and circumspect in their
conclusions and not to countenance acts or
payments that are really officious."
Turning to the facts of this case it is clear
that both the Courts have found that the acts done
by the respondent were done in fact in pursuance
of the requests invalidly made by the relevent
officers of the appellant, and so they must be
deemed to have been done without a contract. It
was not disputed in the Courts below that the acts
done by the respondent have been accepted by the
appellant and the buildings constructed have been
used by it. In fact, both the learned judges of
the Appellate Court have expressly pointed out
that the appellant did not contest this part of
the respondent’s case. "I should mention", says S.
R. Das Gupta, J., "that the appellant did not
contest before us the quantum decreed in favour of
the plaintiff"; and Bachawat, J., has observed
that "the materials from the record also show that
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the Government urgently needed the work which was
done by the respondent and that the Government
accepted it as soon as it was done and used it for
its benefit". In fact the learned judge adds that
"the learned Advocate-General frankly confessed
that this is a case where the Province of Bengal
was under a moral obligation to pay the
respondent", and has further added
903
his comment that "an obligation of this kind which
is apart from the provisions of s. 70 of Indian
Contract Act a moral and natural obligation is by
the provision of that section convertd into a
legal obligation". Therefore once we reach the
conclusion that s. 70 can be invoked by the
respondent against the appellant on the findings
there is no doubt that the requisite conditions of
the said section have been satisfied. That being
so, the Courts below were right in decreeing the
respondent’s claim.
The result is the appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
SARKAR, J.-We also think that this appeal
should fail.
In 1944, the respondent, a firm of
contractors, had at the request of certain
officers of the Government of Bengal as it then
existed, done certain construction work for that
Government and the latter had taken the benefit of
that work. These officers, however, had not been
authorised by the Government to make the request
on its behalf and the respondent was aware of such
lack of authority all along. These facts are not
in controversy.
As the respondent did not receive payment for
the work, it filed a suit in the Original Side of
the High Court at Calcutta in 1949 against the
Province of West Bengal for a decree for moneys in
respect of the work. The High Court, both in the
original hearing and appeal, held that there was
no contract between the respondent and the
Government in respect of the work on which the
suit might be decreed but the respondent was
entitled to compensation under s. 70 of the
Contract Act and that the liability to pas the
compensation which was originally of the
Government of Bengal, had under the Indian
Independence (Rights, Properties and Liabilities)
Order, 1947, devolved on the Province West Bengal
(now the State
904
of West Bengal) which came into existence on the
partition of India. In the result the respondent
suit succeeded. The State of West Bengal has
appealed against the decision of the High Court.
The only question argued in this appeal is
whether the High Court was right in passing a
decree under s. 70 of the Contract Act. We think
it was.
Now s. 70 is in these terms:-
Section 70 "Where a person lawfully
does anything for another person, or delivers
anything to him, not intending to do so
gratuitously, and such other person enjoys
the benefit therefor, the latter is bound to
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make compensation to the former in respect
of, or to restore, the thing so done or
delivered."
G. K. Mitter, J., who heard the suit in the
first instance, observed in regard to s. 70 that,
"The requisites for entitling a person to
competion for work done are: (i) that it should be
lawfully done, (ii) that it should not be intended
to be done gratuitously and (iii) that the person
for whom the work is done should enjoy the benefit
thereof". We agree with this analysis of the
section and the view of the High Court that the
necessary requisites exist in the present case.
In this Court the case was argued on behalf
of the appellant on the basis that the High Court
was in error in holding that, relief under s. 70
can be granted where the Government has the
benefit of work done under a contract with it
which was not made in terms of s. 175(3) of the
Government of India Act, 1935, and was, therefore,
invalid. Various authorities, both English and
Indian, were cited in support of this argument. We
think it unnecessary to discuss them as the basis
on which the present contention is advanced does
not exist in this case. Nor do we think that the
High Court decided the case on that basis.
905
It is clear from the findings of the High
Court, to which we shall presently refer, that
there was in fact no agreement, valid or invalid,
between the respondent and the Government. It
follows that the work had not been done under any
agreement with the Government. No question,
therefore arises as to the validity or invalidity
of an agreement with the Government because of a
failure to comply with the terms of s. 175 (3) of
the Government of India Act nor as to the
applicability of s. 70 of the Contract Act for
granting compensation for work done under a
contract with the Government which is invalid
because it had not, been made in the manner
prescribed by s. 175(3).
The reason why we say that there was no
agreement whatever between the Government and the
respondent is that the agreement could in the
present case have been made only through the
officers but these officers did not to the
knowledge of the respondent possess the authority
of the Government to bind it by contract. That was
what the High Court held, as would appear from the
observations of the learned Judges which we will
now set out. G. K. Mitter, J., said, "The plantiff
never had any doubt about the fact that no
agreement of any kind had been entered into
between it and the province of Bengal" and "The
plantiff never right from the beginning, that the
officers who were requesting the plantiff to
proceed with the work had, no authority to enter
into a binding contract with the plantiff and that
they were awaiting sanction from higher officials
which they hoped to get." The learned Judges of
the appellate bench also took the same view.
Bachawat, J., observing, "Neither of these
officers had any authority from the Province of
Bengal to make the request to the plaintiff. There
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was no agreement either express or implied between
the plaintiff and
906
the Province of Bengal. There is, therefore, no
agreement which is void or which is discovered to
be void". The learned Judges no doubt referred to
s. 175(3) of the Government of India Act that was
obviously because arguments based on it had been
advanced before them. They distinguished the case
of Union of India v. Ramnagina Singh (1) in which
it had been held that s. 70 of the Contract Act
had no application where work was done under a
request which had resulted in a void agreement, on
the ground that in the present case there had been
no request from the Government as the persons
making the request had no authority to do so for
the Government and so no question of an agreement
with the Government, which was void, arose. It is
wrong, to contend, as the learned advocate for the
appellant did, that the learned Judges of the High
Court decided the case on the basis that s. 70 is
applicable where work is done for the Government
under an invalid contract with it. No doubt the
learned Judges dealt with certain cases dealing
with the question of work done under an invalid
contract but that was because those cases had been
cited at the bar.
We are not, therefore, called upon in the
present case to pronounce upon the question
whether compensation under s. 70 of the Contract
Act can be awarded where goods are delivered to,
or work done for, the Government under a contract
with it which is invalid for the reason that it
had not been made in the terms prescribed by s.
175(3) of the Government of India Act and we do
not do so.
Now, if the work was done at the request of
the officers of Government who had no authority to
make the request for Government and the respondent
was aware of this, it would follow that the work
had been done at the request made by the officers
in their personal capacity. In such a case it
seems to us
907
that if the request resulted in a contract between
the officer and the respondent under which the
officers were personally bound to pay the
respondent reasonable remuneration for the work,
then it would be a very debatable question whether
the respondent would have any claim against the
Government under s. 70. We say debatable because
we have grave doubts if the section was intended
to give a person in the position of the respondent
who had a remedy against the officers personally
under a contract with them, a remedy against the
Government for the same thing in addition to the
remedy under the contract. We, however, need say
no more on this aspect of the matter for we do not
think that any contract had in the present case
come into existence between the officers and the
respondent.
It is true that when one requests another to
do work for him a tacit promise to pay reasonable
remuneration for the work may be inferred in
certain circumstances and that promise may result
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in a contract when the work is done which may be
enforced. That may also be the case when the
request is to do the work for another’s benefit,
for consideration for the promise would in either
case be the detriment suffered by the promisee by
doing the work. The following illustration may be
given from Pollock on Contracts (13th edition) p.
9:- "The passenger who steps into ferry-boat
thereby requests the ferryman to take him over for
the usual fare". We should suppose the position
would be the same where a person expressly asks
the ferryman to carry him or another over without
saying anything about the remuneration to be paid
for the carriage; in each of these cases the
person making the request would be tacitly
promising to pay the ferryman his usual fare.
A tacit promise of this kind may however be
inferred only if the circumstances are such that
908
from them a man of business and experience would
consider it reasonable to infer. It is an
inference of fact and not which any law requires
to be made An interesting passage from Cheshire
and Fifoot’s Law of Contract (5th Edition) p. 30
may be quoted here: "It would be ludicrous to
suppose that businessmen couch there
communications in the form of a catechism of
reduce their negotiations to such a species of
interrogatory as was formulated in the Roman
stipulatio. The rules which the Judges have
elaborated from the promise of offer and
acceptance are neither the rigid deductions of
logic nor the inspiration of natural justice. They
are only presumption, drawn from experience, to be
applied in so far as they serve the ultimate
object of establishing the phenomena of
agreement....."
Now on the facts of this case we are entirely
unable to infer any tacit promise by the officers
to pay personally for the work done. As the High
Court pointed out, the officers made it clear, of
which indeed the respondent itself was fully
aware, that the payment would be by the
Government, and, therefore, that they themselves
would have no liability. They said the
respondent’s "estimates have been submitted to the
Deputy Director for formal sanction which when
received will be communicated to them. Meanwhile
they must not delay the work." The Deputy Director
presumably was the not officer authorised to grant
the sanction. He however was not one of the
officers who had made the request for the work.
The respondent was fully aware that the work was
needed for the Government and the officers had no
personal interest in it. And what is most
important is that the respondent never itself
thought that the officers had made any personal
promise to pay. Throughout, the respondent had
been requesting the Government to sanction the
orders placed by
909
the officers, submitting estimates for the work to
the Government and requesting the latter for
payment; not once did it look to the officers for
any liability in respect of the work done under
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their orders. The respondent had on previous
occasions done work for the Government on similar
requests and had never thought that the officers
had there by undertaken any personal liability. If
it itself did not get that impression, no other
person of experience could reasonably infer in the
same circumstances a tacit promise by the officers
to pay personally. It is of some interest to point
out that the learned advocate for the appellant
never even suggested there was such a contract. We
find it impossible in such circumstances to think
that there was any tacit promise by the officers
personally to pay for the work or any contract
between them and the respondent in respect of it.
It is also not possible to say on the
materials on the record that the officers promised
to the respondent that they would secure payment
for the work done. We think Bachawat, J., of the
appellate bench of the High Court correctly put
the position when he said:- "The work was
certainly done at the request of these officers
but it was done under circumstances in which it is
not possible to imply that the officers personally
promised to pay for the work done. There is,
therefore, no scope for any argument that the work
was done in course of performance of a contract
between the plaintiff and the officers who
requested him to do the work...... The materials
on the record clearly show that the plaintiff did
the work for the Province of Bengal. Credit was
given to the Province of Bengal and not to the
officers. It is impossible to say on the materials
on the record that work was done for the
officers." If the other learned Judges of the High
Court did not expressly refer to this aspect of
the case that was clearly because it was not
argued by the advocates; it was obviously not
910
a point which any advocate could reasonably
advance on the facts of this case.
We are, however, not to be understood as
saying that in no case can Government officers
undertake personal liability to contractors in the
position of the respondent. Each case must depend
on its own facts. Circumstances may conceivably
exist where it would be reasonable to infer a
personal undertaking by the officers to pay a
contractor doing work for the Government. All that
we decide is that such is not the present case.
The position then is that the respondent had
done the work for the Government without any
contract with anybody. The question is, are the
three requisites of s. 70, as very correctly
formulated by G. K. Mitter, J., satisfied ? We
think they are. There is no dispute that
Government had taken the benefit of the work. We
also feel no doubt that the respondent did not
intend to do the work gratuitously. It submitted
its estimate for the work and was very prompt in
submitting its bill after the work was done. It
had earlier in similar circumstances without
proper contract with the Government done work for
it at the request of its officers and received
payment from the Government. It was a firm of
contractors whose trade it was to carry out works
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of construction for payment and the Government was
aware of this. There is no reason to think that in
the present case it did the work gratuitously. On
its part the Government never thought that the
work had been done gratuitously for it raised
objections to the bill submitted by the respondent
on grounds of bad quality of the work and that it
had been done without proper sanction. The
Government urgently needed the work and no sooner
was it completed, it promptly put it to its use.
It was plainly fully aware that the work was done
for it by a party whose trade was to work for
remuneration
911
and who had previously done similar work and had
been paid for it by the Government.
The request by the officers does not affect
the question that arises in this case. It had no
compelling effect and no effect as a promise and
in fact no effect at all. Its practical use was to
inform the respondent that the Government needed
the work immediately and it would give a sanction
in respect of it in due course and pay for it when
done, an information on which the respondent
readily acted as it gave it a chance to do more
business. So the work was done by the respondent
really out of its free choice by way of its
business and with the intention of getting paid
for it.
We also feel no doubt that the work was done
lawfully. It was work which the Government badly
needed. We will assume for the present purpose, as
the learned advocate for the appellant said, that
work done under a contract with the Government
which is invalid in view of the provision of s.
175(3) of the Government of India Act, is work
unlawfully done. The learned advocate contended
that would be because thereby section 175 (3) of
the Government of India Act would be evaded which
is the same thing as doing that which the section
forbids. Assume that is so. But that section does
not say that if work is done for the Government
without any contract or agreement at all and
voluntarily, as was done in the present case, that
work would not have been lawfully done. Government
is free not to take the benefit of such work.
There is no law, and none has been pointed out to
us, which makes the doing of such work unlawful.
No other reason was given or strikes us for saying
that the work was not lawfully done. There is no
law, as Bachawat, J., said that Government cannot
take any work except under a contract in respect
of it made in terms of s. 175(3) of the Government
of India Act. That section may forbid a Government
to take work under a contract which is invalid
because
912
not in terms of it, but it does not make it
unlawful for the Government to take the benefit of
work done for it without any contract at all. We
should suppose that if the doing of the work was
unlawful the Government would not have accepted
the benefit of it. In the present case, the
Government needed the work badly and we do not see
how then the Government can say that the work was
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not done lawfully. We therefore think that the
work was done lawfully.
It was contended that the obligation under s.
70 of the Contract Act arises only in
circumstances in which English law would have
created an obligation on the basis of an implied
contract or a quasi-contract and that there could
be no implied contract or quasi-contract with the
Government because a contract could be made with
it only in accordance with s. 175(3) of the
Government of India Act. Now it has been
repeatedly held that a resort to English law is
not justified for deciding a question arising on
our statute unless the statute is such that it
cannot be reasonably understood without the
assistance of English law, indeed, there is good
authority for saying that s. 70 was framed in the
form in which it appears with a view to avoid the
niceties of English law on the subject, arising
largely from historical reasons and to make the
position simple and free from fictions of law and
consequent complications: see Pollock on Contracts
(13th ed.) p. 10. Furthermore, we do not see that
s. 175(3) in any way prevents a contract with the
Government being implied or a Government from
incurring an obligation under a quasi-contract. A
contract implied in law or a quasi-contract is not
a real contract or, as it is called, a consensual
contract and s. 175(3) is concerned only with such
contracts. The section says that "all contracts
made in the exercise of the executive authority of
the Federation or of a Province shall be
expressed" in a certain manner and
913
"shall be executed on behalf of the Governor-
General or Governor by such person and in such
manner as he may direct or authorise". It
therefore applies to consensual contracts which
the Government makes and not to something which is
also called a contract but which the law brings
into existence by a fiction irrespective of the
parties having agreed to it. Now, by its terms s.
70 of the Contract Act must be applied where its
requisites exist, if it is necessary to imply a
contract or to contemplate the existence of a
quasi-contract for applying the section that must
be done and we do not think that s. 175(3) of the
Government of India Act prevents that, nor are we
aware of any other impediment in this regard. This
argument must also fail.
We, therefore, feel that s. 70 of the
Contract Act applies to this case and the decree
of the High Court should be confirmed.
Appeal dismissed.