Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MADDALA THATHIAH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/05/1963
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
SUBBARAO, K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1724 1964 SCR (3) 774
ACT:
Contract-Construction--Agreement for supply-Tender-
Acceptance Formal order for supply-Stipulation in the
contract for cancellation at any stage-If effective even
after formal order for supply had been made.
HEADNOTE:
The General Manager of a Railway invited tenders for the
supply of jaggery to the railway grain shops. Paragraph 2
of the tender set out the quantity required and described
dates of delivery. There was a note in that para that "the
Administration reserved the right to cancel the contract at
any stage during the tenure of the contract without calling
up the outstanding on the unexpired portion of the contract.
" Under para 8 the successful tenderer was required to pay
security deposit towards proper fulfillment of the contract.
Paragraph 9 stated that a formal order for supply would be
placed after the security deposit referred to in para 8 was
made. The respondent submitted his tender for the supply of
14000 maunds as mentioned in the tender, and by the letter
dated January 29, 1948, the Deputy General Manager accepted
the tender stating that the official order would be placed
on the respondent on receipt of the remittance of security.
In his letter dated February 16, 1948, the Deputy General
Manager reiterated the acceptance of the tender subject to
the respondents’ acceptance of the terms and conditions
printed on the reverse of that letter, under which 3500
maunds each were to be delivered on March 1,
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March 22, April 5 and April 21, 1948 respectively. At the
end of the terms and conditions was a note that the adminis-
tration reserved the right to cancel the contract at any
stage during the tenure of the contract without calling upon
the outstanding on the unexpired portion of the contract.
By his letter dated March 8, 1948, the Deputy General
Manager informed the respondent that the balance quantity of
jaggery outstanding on date against the order dated February
16, 1948, be treated as cancelled and the contract closed.
In the suit instituted by the respondent for the recovery of
damages resulting from breach of contract, the appellant
relied, by way of defence, on the stipulation in the
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contract that the appellant was at livery to terminate the
contract at any stage.
Held that, on the true construction of the contract, the
condition mentioned in the note 2 of the tender or in the
letter dated February 16, 1948 referred to a right in the
appellant to cancel the agreement for such supply of jaggery
about which no formal order had been passed by the Deputy
General Manager with the respondent and did not apply to
such supplies of jaggery about which a formal order had been
placed specifying definite amount of jaggery to be supplied
and the definite date or definite short period for its
actual delivery. Once the order was placed for such supply
on such dates, that order amounted to a binding contract
making it incumbent on the respondent to supply jaggery in
accordance with the terms of the order and also making it
incumbent on the Deputy General Manager to accept the
jaggery delivered in pursuance of that order.
Chatturbhuj Vithaldas Jasani v. Moneshwar Parashram, [1954]
S.C.R. 817, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 53 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
August 9, 1956 of the Madras High Court in O.S. Appeal No.
64 of 1952.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, K. L.
Gosain and P. D. Xenon, for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and M. S. K. Sastri, for the
respondent.
776
1963. May 9. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAGHUBAR DAYAL J.-The facts giving rise to this appeal, by
special leave, are these :
The Dominion of India, as the owner of the Madras and
Southern Mahratta Railway, represented by the General
Manager of that railway, invited tenders for the supply of
jaggery to the railway grain shops. The respondent
submitted his tender for the supply of 14,000 imperial
maunds of cane jaggery during the months of February and
March 1948. The tender form contained a note in paragraph 2
which was meant for the quantity required and the described
dates of delivery. This note was :
"This Administration reserves the right to
cancel the contract at any stage during the
tenure of the contract without calling up the
outstandings on the unexpired portion of the
contract."
The Deputy General Manager of the Railways, by his letter
dated January 29, 1948, accepted this tender. The letter
asked the respondent to remit a sum of Rs. 7,900/-for
security and said that on receipt of the remittance,
official order would be placed with the respondent. In his
letter dated February 16, 1948, the Deputy General Manager
reiterated the acceptance of the tender subject to the
respondent’s acceptance of the terms and conditions printed
on the reverse of that letter. Among these terms, the terms
of delivery stated : Programme of delivery to be 3,600
maunds on March 1, 1948 ; 3,500 maunds on March 22, 1948;
3,500 on April 5, 1948; and 3,500 maunds on April 21, 1948.
At the end of the terms and conditions was a note that the
administration reserved the right to cancel the contract at
any stage during the tenure of the
777
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contract without calling up the outstandings on the
unexpired portion of the contract. The date for the
delivery of the four installments were slightly changed by a
subsequent letter dated February 28, 1948.
By his letter dated March 8, 1948, the Deputy General
Manager informed the respondent that the balance quantity of
jaggery outstanding on date against the order dated February
16, 1948, be treated as cancelled and the contract closed.
The protests of the respondent were of no avail as the
railway administration took its stand against the
stipulation that the right to cancel the contract at any
stage was reserved to it. Ultimately, the respondent
instituted the suit against the Union of India for
recovering damages resulting from breach of contract. The
trial Court dismissed the suit holding that the railway
administration could cancel the contract without giving any
reason whenever it liked, without making itself liable to
pay any damages. The High Court held that the clause
reserving the right in the appellant to cancel the contract
was void and in view of the trial Court having not decided
the issue about damages, remanded the suit for disposal
after dealing with that matter. It is against this decree
that the Union of India has filed this appeal after obtain-
ing special leave.
The contentions raised for the appellant are two. One is
that on a proper construction of the terms of the contract,
the appellant had agreed to but only such quantity of
jaggery as it might require, up to a maximum of 14,000
maunds and therefore there was no enforceable obligation to
purchase the entire quantity. The other contention is that
the respondent had expressly agreed to the impugned clause
and that therefore the appellant was at liberty to terminate
the contract at any stage of the duration of the contract
with respect to the outstanding obligations under it. The
stipulation is valid and binding
778
on the parties and it amounted to a provision in the
contract itself for its discharge or determination. On the
other hand it is contended for the respondent that the
contract was a complete contract of the supply of a definite
quantity of jaggery viz., 14,000 maunds, on the dates
mentioned in the order dated February 16, 1948, to start
with, and ultimately on the dates mentioned in the
subsequent letter dated February 28, and that the
stipulation relied on was repugnant to the contract and,
even if valid, the appellant could rescind the contract only
for good and reasonable ground and not arbitrarily.
To decide the contentions raised it is necessary to construe
the true nature of the contract between the parties which
has given rise to these proceedings. The relevant
conditions of tender are described in paragraphs 2, 8 and 9
and are set out below :
"2. Quantity required and described dates of
delivery.-14,000 imperial maunds of cane
jaggery are required for the months of Decem-
ber 1947 and January 1948 and should be deli-
vered in equal lots of 1,750 imperial maunds
each commencing from 10th December 1947 and
completed on 31st January 1948.
Note : This Administration reserves the right
to cancel the contract at any stage during the
tenure of the contract without calling up the
outstandings on the unexpired portion of the
contract.
8. Security deposit.-Five percent of the
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tender value will be required to be paid by
the successful tenderer as security deposit
towards proper fulfilment of the contract.
This amount will carry no interest. This
should be paid in cash in addition to the
earnest money already paid to the Paymaster
and Cashier of this Rail-way,
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Madras, and his official receipt obtained
therefor. Cheques and drafts will not be
accepted in payment of security deposit. In
the case of contracts or the supply of
gingelly oil, the security deposit will be
arranged only after 90 days have elapsed from
the date of the last supply against the order.
9. Placing of order.-A formal order for
supply will be placed on the successful
tenderer only on the undersigned being
furnished with the receipt issued by the
Paymaster and Cashier of this Railway for the
security deposit referred to in paragraph 8."
Paragraph 12 provides for the rejection of supplies if they
be of unacceptable quality. Paragraph 13 deals with
penalties and reads thus :
"13. Penalties.-When supplies arc not
effected on the dates as laid down in the
Official Order or when acceptable replacement
of the whole or part of any consignment which
is rejected in accordance with paragraph 12 is
not made within the time prescribed the
administration will take penal action against
the supplier in one or more of the following
ways
(a) Purchase in the open market at the risk
and expenses of the supplier goods of quality
contracted for, to the extent due ;
(b) Cancel any outstandings on the contract
and ;
(c) Forfeit the security deposit."
The respondent made an offer to supply the necessary
quantity of jaggery during the period it was wanted and
expressed its readiness to abide by
780
the terms and conditions of the tender. He agreed to supply
the jaggery at the rate mentioned in his letter. This
tender was accepted by the letter dated January 29, 1948.
So far, the offer of a supply of a definite quantity of
jaggery during a specified period at a certain rate and the
acceptance of the offer would constitute an agreement, but
would fall short of amounting to a legal contract inasmuch
as the date of delivery of the jaggery was not specified.
Only the period was mentioned. The agreement arrived at
therefore could be said, as urged for the appellant, to be a
contract in a popular sense with respect to the terms which
would govern the order for supply of jaggery. The
acceptance of the tender did not amount to the placing of
the order for any definite quantity of jaggery on a definite
date. Paragraph 9 of the tender referred to the placing of a
formal order for the supply of jaggery, after the respondent
had not only made a security deposit as required by the
provisions of paragraph 8 but had also furnished a receipt
issued for that deposit to the Deputy General Manager, Grain
Shops. So construed, the note in paragraph 2 of the tender
would refer to cancel this agreement, loosely called a con-
tract, at any stage during the tenure of that agreement
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without calling up the outstandings on the unexpired portion
of the contract.
The various expressions used in this note point to the same
conclusion. The expression ’tenure of the contract’
contemplates the contract being of a continuing nature. It
is only a contract with a sort of a tenure. The contract is
to be cancelled at any stage during such a tenure, that is,
it could be cancelled during the period between the
acceptance of the tender and March 31, 1948, the last date
for the delivery of the jaggery under the contract. The
note further provided that as a result of the cancellation,
the appellant will not call up the outstandings on the
unexpired portion of the contract. This
781
expression can only mean "without ordering the supply of
jaggery which was to be delivered within the remaining
period of the contract", that is, the period between the
date of cancellation and March 31, 1948.
Paragraph 13 dealing with penalties draws a distinction
between outstandings on the contract and the purchase of the
goods to the extent not supplied by the respondent. The
provision about penalty comes into operation when the
supplies are not effected on the dates laid down in the
official order, or when acceptable replacement of the whole
or part of any consignment which is rejected is not made
within the time prescribed. Clause (a) of para 13 contem-
plates penal action by purchasing in the open market at the
risk and expenses of the supplier, goods of the quality
contracted for to the extent due, either due to the failure
to supply or due to failure to replace rejected goods which
had been supplied in compliance of an order. Clause (b) of
para 13 contemplates a further penal action in the form of
cancellation of any outstandings on the contract. Such a
cancellation could only be of the balance of the supplies
agreed upon but not yet supplied. If this expression was
meant to cover the goods for which order had been placed but
whose date of delivery had not arrived, a different
expressing would have been more appropriately used.
The appellant’s letter dated,January 29, 1948 which conveyed
the acceptance of the tender, directed the respondent to
remit a certain sum for the security deposit and stated that
on receipt of advice of remittance official order would be
placed. This is the order contemplated by para 9 of the
tender.
By his letter dated February 16, 1948, the Deputy General
Manager repeated in paragraph 1 of the letter that the
tender dated January 27, 1948,
782
was accepted for the supply of jaggery, only subject to the
respondent’s acceptance of the terms and conditions printed
on the reverse. The tender had already been accepted.
There was no occasion to reopen the question of the
acceptance of the tender or to reinform the respondent about
the acceptance of the tender or to obtain a second,
acceptance of the respondent to the terms and conditions of
the tender. No occasion could have arisen for imposing any
fresh conditions for the acceptance of the tender which had
been accepted earlier.
Paragraph 2 of the letter contains a definite order for
dispatching and delivering of the consignment to the
Assistant Controller of Grain Shops. The details given in
the letter provided for the entire supply of 14,000 maunds
to be in four equal instalments, each instalment to be
delivered on a particular date. The only other condition or
term in this letter is
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"This administration reserves the right to
cancel the contract at any stage during the
tenure of the contract without calling up the
outstandings on the unexpired portion of the
contract."
This is identical in terms with the note in paragraph 2 of
the tender and can bear the same construction with respect
to that portion of the goods to be supplied for which no
formal order had been placed. If this note had a particular
reference to the cancellation of the orders, if that was
possible in law, its language would have been different. It
would have referred to the right to cancel the orders about
the delivery of the consignments and would have provided
that the orders for such supplies which were to be made on
dates subsequent to the date of cancellation would stand
cancelled or that the appellant would not be bound to take
delivery of such
783
consignments which were to be delivered on dates subsequent
to the cancellation of the orders. There is nothing in this
letter that the formal order placed is subject to this
condition. The condition governed the acceptance of the
tender according to the content of para 1 of this letter.
It appears that the order has been placed on a printed form
which could be used also for placing an order for delivery
of part of the commodity which the tenderer has agreed to
supply. That seems to be the reason why that particular
recital appears in the letter. It cannot possibly have any
bearing on a case like the present where the railway
administration has definitely placed an order for the supply
of the entire quantity of the commodity for which a tender
had been called.
In this connection we may refer to the language of the
letter of the Deputy General Manager dated March 8, 1948,
which informed the respondent about the cancellation of the
contract. The letter states that the balance quantity of
jaggery outstanding on date against the above order, i.e.,
the order dated February 16, 1948, is treated as cancelled
and the contract closed. This letter itself draws a dis-
tinction between the order and the contract. The contract
has a reference to the agreement consisting of the offer of
supply of jaggery and acceptance of the offer by the Deputy
General Manager.
We are therefore of the view that the condition mentioned in
the note to para 2 of the tender or in the letter dated
February 16, 1948, refers to a right in the appellant to
cancel the agreement for such supply of jaggery about which
no formal order had been placed by the Deputy General
Manager with the respondent.and does not apply to such
supplies of jaggery about which a formal order had been
placed specifying definite amount of jaggery to be
784
supplied and the definite date or definite short period for
its actual delivery. Once the order is placed for such
supply on such dates., that order amounts to a binding
contract making it incumbent on the respondent to supply
jaggery in accordance with the terms of the order and also
making it incumbent on the Deputy General Manager to accept
the jaggery delivered in pursuance of that order.
We may refer to what was said by this Court in Chatturbhuj
Vithaldas Jasani v. Moreshwar Parashram (1), in connection
with an arrangement arrived at between the Central
Government and a firm of bidi manufacturers, Moolji Sickka &
Company. The arrangement under which the firm was to sell
and the Government was to buy from the firm from time to
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time two brands of bidis manufactured by it. The contention
raised before the Court was that this arrangement amounted
to a contract for the supply of goods within the meaning of
that section. The contract was said to be embodied in four
letters. This Court said :
"But except for this the letters merely set
out the terms on which the parties were ready
to do business with each other if and when
orders were placed and executed. As soon as
an order was placed and accepted a contract
arose. It is true this contract would be
governed by the term set out in the letters
but until an order was placed and accepted
there was no contract."
Reference may also be made to what is said in
’Law of Contract’, by Cheshire & Fifoot (5th
Edition) at p. 36.
"There is no doubt, of course, that the tender
is an offer. The question, however, is
whether its acceptance’ by the corporation is
an acceptance in the legal sense so as to
produce a
(2) [1954] S.C.R. 817.
785
binding contract. This can be answered only
by examining the language of the original
invitation to tender. There are at least two
possible cases. First, the corporation may
have stated that it will definitely require a
specified quantity of goods, no more and no
less, as, for instance, where it advertises
for 1,000 tons of coal to be supplied during
the period January 1st to December 31st. Here
the "acceptance’ of the tender is an
acceptance in the legal sense, and it creates
an obligation. The trader is bound to
deliver, the corporation is bound to accept,
1,000 tons, and the fact that delivery is to
be by instalments as and when demanded does
not disturb, the existence of the obligation."
On the basis of this note, the acceptance of the res-
pondent’s tender by the Deputy General Manager may even
amount to a contract in the strict sense of the term, but we
do not consider it in that sense in view of the provisions
of paragraphs 8 and 9 of the tender requiring a deposit of
security and the placing of the formal order.
The other case illustrated by Cheshire and Fifoot is :
"Secondly, the corporation advertises that it
may require articles of a specified
description up to a maximum amount, as, for
instance, where it invites tenders for the
supply during the coming year of coal not
exceeding 1,000 tons altogether, deliveries to
be made if and when demanded, the effect of
the so-called acceptance’ of the tender is
very different. The trader has made what
is called a standing offer. Until revocation
he stands ready and willing to deliver coal up
to 1,000 tons at the agreed price when the
corporation from time to time demands a
precise quantity. The
786
’acceptance’ of the tender, however, does not
convert the offer into a binding contract, for
a contract of sale implies that the buyer has
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agreed to accept the goods. In the present
case the corporation has not agreed to take
1,000 tons, or indeed any quantity of coal.
It has merely stated that it may require sup.
plies up to a maximum limit."
"In this latter case the standing offer may be
revoked at any time provided that it has not
been accepted in the legal sense; and accep-
tance in the legal sense is complete as soon
as a requisition for a definite quantity of
goods is made. Each requisition by the
offeree is an individual act of acceptance
which creates a separate contract."
We construe the contract between the parties in the instant
case to be of the second type.- The note below para 2 of the
tender form, reserving a right to cancel an outstanding
contract is then consistent with the nature of the agreement
between the parties as a result of the offer of the
respondent accepted by the appellant and a similar note in
the formal order dated February 16, 1948, had no reference
to the actual orders but could refer only to such
contemplated supplies of goods for which no orders had been
placed,
In view of the construction we have placed on the contract
between the parties it is not necessary to decide the other
contention urged for the appellant that the stipulation in
the not amounted to a term in the contract itself for the
discharge of the contract and therefore was valid, a
contention to which the reply of the respondent is that any
such term in a contract which destroys the contract itself
according to the earlier terms is void as in that case there
would be nothing in the alleged contract which would have
been binding on the appellant. -
787
We are of opinion that the order of the High Court is
correct and therefore dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed.