Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAULA BUX
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/08/1969
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C. (CJ)
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C. (CJ)
RAMASWAMI, V.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1955 1970 SCR (1) 928
1969 SCC (2) 586
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1970 SC1986 (33)
F 1973 SC1098 (3,4)
ACT:
Indian Contract Act (9 of 1872), s. 74 Deposit of
money as guarantee for due performance of contract for
supply of goods-Breach of contract--Forfeiture of
deposit--Proof of loss suffered when necessary--Scope of
section--"Whether or not actual damage or loss is proved to
have been caused thereby", meaning of--Earnest money, what
is.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant entered into a contract with the
respondent to supply some goods and deposited a certain
amount as security for due performance of the contract. It
was stipulated that the amounts we’re to stand forfeited in
case the appellant neglected to perform his part of the con-
tract. When the appellant made defaults in the supply, the
respondent rescinded the contract and forfeited the amount
deposited. The appellant filed a suit for recovery of the
amount with interest. The trial court decreed the suit,
holding that the respondent was justified in rescinding the
contracts, but could not ’forfeit the deposit, for, it had
not suffered any loss in consequence of the default
committed by the appellant. The High Court modified the
decree and awarded the ’respondent a major portion of the
amount deposited as damages. The High Court took the view
that the forfeiture of a sum deposited by way of security
for due performance of a contract, where the amount
forfeited was not unreasonable s. 74 of the Contract Act had
no. application and that the deposits so made could be
regarded as earnest money.
HELD: The High Court was., in error in disallowing the
appellant’s claim.
(i) Earnest money is a deposit made by a purchaser to
be applied towards part payment of the price when the
contract is completed and till then as evidencing an
intention on the part of the purchaser to buy property or
goods. Forfeiture of earnest money under a contract for
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sale of property, if the amount is reasonable, does not
fall within s. 74 of the Contract Act. [933-D].
Kunwar Chiranjit Singh v. Har Swarup, A.I.R. 1926 P.C. 1,
relied on.
(ii) Where under the terms of the contract the party in
breach has undertaken to pay a sum of money or to forfeit a
sum of money which he has already paid to the party
complaining of a breach of contract, the undertaking is in
the nature of a penalty and, s. 74 applied thereto. [933 E-
F]
Fateh Chand v. Balkishan Dass, [1964] 1 S.C.R. 515, relied
on.
Contrary view in Natesa Aiyar v. Appavu Padayachi,
(1913) LL.R. 38 Mad. 178, Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Raja
Prosad, (1909) I.L.R. 36 Cal. 960 and Manian Patter v.
Madras Railway Company, (1906) I.L.R. 19 Mad. 188,
disapproved.
The expression "whether or not actual damage or loss is
proved to have been caused thereby" in s. 74 is intended to
cover different classes of contracts which come before the
courts. In ease of breach of some contracts. it may be
impossible for the court to assess compensation arising from
breach, while in other cases, compensation can be
calculated in
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accordance with established rules. Where the court is
unable to assess the compensation, the sum named by the
parties, if it be regarded as a genuine preestimate, may be
taken into consideration as the measure of reasonable
compensation, but not if the sum named is in the nature of a
penalty. [934 A-C]
In the present case it was possible for the respondent-
Government to lead evidence to prove the loss suffered but
it did not attempt to do so.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 851 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated December 20, 1963 of the Allahabad High Court, Lucknow
Bench in First Civil Appeal No. 28 of 1954.
Jagdish Swarup, Solicitor-General, Yogeshwar Prasad,
C.M. Kohli and G.R. Chopra, for the appellant.
L.M. Singhvi and S.P. Nayar, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, Ag. C.J. Maula Bux hereinafter called the
plaintiff entered into a contract No. C/74 with the
Government of India on February 20, 1947, to supply potatoes
at the Military Headquarters, U.P. Area, and deposited an
amount of Rs. 10,000 as security for due performance of the
contract. He entered into another contract with Government
of India on March 4, 1947 No. C/120 to supply at the same
place poultry, eggs and fish for one year and deposited an
amount of Rs. 8,500/- for due performance of the
contract. Clause 8 of the contract ran as follows:
"The officer sanctioning the contract
may rescind his contract by notice to me/us
in writing :--
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) If I/we decline, neglect or delay to
comply with any demand or requisition or in
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any other way fail to. perform or observe any
condition of the contract.
(v)
(vi)
In ease of such rescission, my/our security
deposit (or such portion thereof as the
officer sanctioning the contract shall
consider fit or adequate) shall stand
forfeited and be absolutely at the disposal of
Government, without prejudice to any other
remedy or action that the Government may have
to take.
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In the case of such rescission, the
Government shall be entitled to recover from
me/us on demand any extra expense the
Government may be put to in obtaining
supplies/services hereby agreed to be
supplied, from elsewhere in any manner
mentioned in clause 7(ii) hereof, for the
remainder of the period for which this
contract was entered into, without prejudice
to any other remedy the Government may have."
The plaintiff having made persistent default in making
"regular and full supplies" of the commodities agreed to be
supplied, the Government of India rescinded the contracts
the first on November 23, 1947, and the second on December
2,1947, and forfeited the amounts deposited by the
plaintiff. The plaintiff commenced an action against the
Union of India in the Court of the Civil Judge, Lucknow, for
a decree for Rs. 20,000/- being the amounts deposited with
the Government of India for due performance of the contracts
and interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum.
The Trial Court decreed the suit. The Court held that the
Government of India was justified in rescinding the
contracts, but they could not for left the amounts of
deposit, for they had not suffered any loss in consequence
of the default committed by the plaintiff. The High Court
of Allahabad in appeal modified the decree, and awarded Rs.
416.25 only with interest at the rate of 3 per cent from the
date of the suit. The plaintiff has appealed to this Court
with ’special leave.
The trial Court found in decreeing the plaintiff’s suit
that there was no evidence at all to prove that loss, if
any, was suffered by the Government of India in consequence
of the plaintiff’s default, and on that account amounts
deposited as security were not liable to be forfeited. In
the view of the High Court, to for feature of a sum
deposited by way of security for due performance of a
contract, where the amount forfeited is not unreasonable, s.
74 of the Contract Act has no application.The Court observed
that the decision of this Court in Fateh Chand v.
Balkishan Dass(1) did not purport to overrule the
previous "trend of authorities" to the effect that earnest
money deposited by way of security for the due performance
of a contract does not constitute penalty contemplated under
s. 74 of the Indian Contract Act, that even if it be held
that the security deposited in the case was a stipulation by
way of penalty, the Government was entitled to receive from
the plaintiff reasonable compensation not exceeding that
amount, whether or not actual damage or loss was proved to
have been caused, and that even in the absence of evidence
to prove the actual damage or loss caused to the Govern
[1964] 1 S.C.R. 515.
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ment "there were circumstances in the case with indicated
that the amount of Rs. 10,000 in the case of potato
contract and Rs. 8,500/- in the case of poultry contract may
be taken as not exceeding the reasonable compensation for
the breach of contract by the plaintiff." The High Court
further observed that the contract was for supply of large
quantities of potatoes, poultry and fish, which would not
ordinarily be available in the market, and "had to be
procured in case of breach of contract everyday with great
inconvenience," and in the circumstances the Court "could
take judicial notice of the fact that 1947-48 was the period
when the prices were rising and it would not have been easy
to procure the supplies at the rates contracted for". The
High Court concluded:
" ...... taking into consideration the
amount of inconvenience and the difficulties
and the rising rate of prices, it would not be
unfair if in case of such breach for the
supply of such huge amounts of potatoes and
poultry, we consider an amount of Rs.
18,500/.-by way of damages as being not
unreasonable."
Under the terms of the agreements the amounts deposited
by the plaintiff as security for due performance of the
contracts were to stand forfeited in case the plaintiff
neglected to perform his part of the contract. The High
Court observed that the deposits so made may be regarded as
earnest money. But that view cannot be accepted. According
to Earl Jowitt in "The Dictionary of English Law" at p.
689: "Giving an earnest or earnest-money is a mode of
signifying assent to a contract of sale or the like, by
giving to the vendor a nominal sum (e.g. a shilling) as
a token that the parties are in earnest or have made up
their minds." As observed by the Judicial Committee
in Kunwar Chiranjit Singh v. Har Swarup(1):
"Earnest money is part of the purchase price when the
transaction goes forward: it is forfeited when the
transaction falls through, by reason of the fault or failure
of the vandee."
In the present case the deposit was made not of a sum of
money by the purchaser to be applied towards part payment of
the price when the contract was completed and till then as
evidencing an intention on the part of the purchaser to buy
property or goods. Here the plaintiff had deposited the
amounts claimed as security for guaranteeing due performance
of the contracts.Such deposits cannot be regarded as earnest
money.
Section 74 of the Contract Act provides:
"When a contract has been broken, if a
sum is named in the contract as the amount to
be paid in case
(1) A.I.R. 1926 P.C. 1
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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 may be, the
penalty stipulated for.
..............................."
There is authority, no doubt coloured by the
view which was taken in English cases, that
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s. 74 of the Contract Act has no application
to cases of deposit for due performance of a
contract which is stipulated to be forfeited
for breach: Natesa Aiyar v. Appavu
Padayachi(1); Singer Manufacturing Company v.
Raja Prosad(2); Manian Patter v. The Madras
Railway Company(a). But this view is no longer
good law in view of the judgment of this Court
in Fateh Chand’s case(4). This Court observed
at p. 526:
"Section 74 of the Indian Contract Act
deals with the measure of damages in two
classes of cases (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. 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."
The Court also observed:
"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 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 whereupon 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" 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
(1) [1913] LL.R. 38 Mad. 178.
(2) [1909] I.L.R. 36 Cal. 960.
(3) [1906] I.L.R. 19 Mad. 188.
(4) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 515.
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only to award reasonable compensation
is statutorily imposed upon courts by s. 74.
In all cases,. there fore, 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 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.", and that,
"There is no. ground for holding that
the expression "contract contains any other
stipulation by way of penalty" is limited to
cases of 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
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the contract, which by the terms of the
contract expressly or by clear implication
are liable to be forfeited."
Forfeiture of earnest money under a contract for sale
of property-movable or immovable--if the amount is
reasonable, does not fall within s. 74. That has been
decided in several cases: Kunwar Chiranjit Singh v. Hat
Swarup (t); Roshan Lal v. The Delhi Cloth and General Mills
Company Ltd., Delhi(2); Muhammad Habibullah v. Muhammad
Shafi(3); Bishan Chand v. Radha Kishan Das(4); These cases
are easily explained, for forfeiture of a reasonable amount
paid as earnest money does not amount to. imposing a
penalty. But if forfeiture is of the nature of penalty, s.
74 applies. Where under the terms of the contract the party
in breach has undertaken to pay a sum of money or to forfeit
a sum of money which he has already paid to the party
complaining of a breach of contract, the undertaking is of
the nature of a penalty.
Counsel for the Union, however, urged that in the
present case Rs. 10,000/- in respect of the potato contract
and Rs. 8,500 in respect of the poultry contract were
genuine preestimates of damages which the Union was likely
to suffer as a result of breach of contract, and the
plaintiff was not entitled to any relief against forfeiture.
Reliance in support of this contention was placed upon the
expression (used in s. 74 of the Contract Act), "the party
complaining of the breach is entitled, whether or not actual
damage or loss is proved to have been caused there by, to
receive from the party who has broken the contract
reasonable compensation". It is true that in every case of
breach of contract the person aggrieved by the breach is not
required to prove actual loss or damage suffered by him
before he can claim a decree, and the Court is competent
to award reasonable compensation in
(1) A.I.R. 1926 P.C. 1. (2) I.L.R. 33 All. 166.
(3) I.L.R. 41 All. 324. (4) I.D. 19 All. 490.
934
case of breach even if no actual damage is proved to have
been suffered in consequence of the breach of contract. But
the expression "whether or not actual damage or loss is
proved to have been caused thereby" is intended to cover
different classes of contracts which come before the
Courts. In case of breach of some contracts it may be
impossible for the Court to assess compensation arising from
breach, while in other cases compensation can be calculated
in accordance with established rules. Where the Court is
unable to assess the compensation, the sum named by the
parties if it be regarded as a genuine preestimate may be
taken into consideration as the measure of reasonable
compensation, but not if the sum named is in the nature of a
penalty. Where loss in terms of money can be determined, the
party claiming compensation must prove the loss suffered by
him.
In the present case, it was possible for the Government
of India to lead evidence to prove the rates at which
potatoes, poultry, eggs and fish were purchased by them when
the plaintiff failed to deliver "regularly and fully" the
quantities stipulated under the terms of the contracts and
after the contracts were terminated. They could have
proved the rates at which they had to be purchased and
also the other incidental charges incurred by them in
procuring the goods contracted for. But no such attempt was
made.
Counsel for the Union, however, contended that in the
Trial Court the true position in law was not appreciated and
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the parties proceeded to trial on the question whether the
Government was entitled in the circumstances of the case to
forfeit under cl. 8 the terms of the contracts the deposits
made for securing due performance of the contracts. Since
there was no pleading and no issue on the question of
reasonable compensation, an opportunity should be given to
the parties to lead evidence on this point. But with the
suit out of which this appeal arises was tried another suit
filed by the plaintiff Maula Bux against the Union for a
decree for Rs. 53,000 odd being the price of goods supplied
under the terms of another contract with the Government of
India. In that suit the Union claimed that it had set off
the amount due to the plaintiff, amounts which the plaintiff
was liable to pay as compensation to the Union for loss
suffered because of the plaintiff’s failure to carry out the
terms of the contracts C/74 and C/120. The Trial Court held
in that case that the Union failed to prove that any loss
was suffered by it in consequence of the default by Maula
Bux to supply potatoes, poultry, eggs and fish as stipulated
by him. Against the judgment of that Court Appeal No. 2001
of 1966 is filed in this Court and is decided today. The
High Court of Allahabad having confirmed the decree
passed by the Trial Court, no useful purpose will be served
by directing a fresh enquiry into the question whether the
Union
935
of India is entitled to recover from the plaintiff any
reasonable compensation for breach of contracts and whether
that compensation is equal to or exceeds the amounts
deposited. Evidence on that question has already been led
and findings have been recorded. In dealing with the Appeal
No. 2001 of 1966 we have held that the Union has failed to
establish by evidence that any damage or loss was suffered
by them which arose out of the default committed by the
plaintiff. We decline therefore to afford another
opportunity for leading the evidence as to the loss suffered
by the Union on account of the failure on the part of the
plaintiff to carry out the contracts.
On the view taken by us it must be held that the High
Court was in error in disallowing the plaintiff’s case.
The High Court has held that the plaintiff is not
entitled to any interest prior to the date of the suit. No
argument has been advanced before us challenging that view.
Since interest was not recoverable under any contract or
usage or under the provisions of the Interest Act, 1838 the
High Court allowed interest at the rate of 3% per annum on
Rs. 416.25 from the date of the suit, the rate of interest
allowed on the claim decreed also should not exceed 3 per
cent per annum.
We set aside the decree passed by the High Court and
substitute the following decree:
"The Union of India do pay to the plaintiff Rs.
18,500/- with interest at the rate of 3% per annum from the
date of the suit till payment."
The plaintiff was guilty of breach of the contracts.
Considerable inconvenience was caused to the Military
authorities because of the failure on the part of the
plaintiff to supply the food-stuff contracted to be
supplied. Even though there is no evidence of the rates at
which the goods were purchased, we are of the view, having
regard to the circumstances of the case, that the fairest
order is that each party do bear its own costs throughout.
y.p. Appeal allowed.
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