Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIGAMBAR BALWANT KULKARNI
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/02/1979
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1339 1979 SCR (3) 188
1979 SCC (2) 217
ACT:
Contract-Stipulated time as essence of contract-Meaning
of-Right to rescind the contract-When accrues.
HEADNOTE:
Clause (2) of a works contract entered into by the
plaintiff (respondent) with the defendant (appellant)
stipulated that time was of the essence of the contract,
that time (of one year) allowed for carrying out the work
shall be strictly observed by the contractor, and that the
contractor shall pay compensation at a certain percentage
for every day when the work remained unfinished after the
proper dates. One of the three courses open to the defendant
under cl. (3) was to rescind the contract in case the
contractor rendered himself liable to pay compensation or
abandoned the work owing to serious illness or death of the
contractor or any other cause and in that event security
deposit of the contractor was to stand forfeited. It was
also provided in that clause that in the event of any of the
above courses being adopted by the defendant the contractor
shall have no claim to compensation for any loss sustained
by him.
The work remained unfinished beyond the stipulated
time. The defendant rejected the contractor’s request for
extension of time and eventually rescinded the contract
under cl. (3) and forfeited the security deposit.
In the plaintiff’s suit for refund of security deposit
and payment of certain other sums, the trial court, holding
that the forfeiture of security deposit was legal, granted a
decree for its refund.
On appeal the High Court held that the right to rescind
a contract being a right to put an end to it, it could not
exist after the date for its performance had expired and
that in this case the right of rescission having been
exercised after the expiry of the date of contract, the
impugned action of the defendant in rescinding the contract
was unjustified.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: 1. The rescission of the contract was well-
founded and the forfeiture of the security deposit was
justified. [193 F]
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2. Although cl. (2) specifically mentioned that time
was of the essence of the contract, all that was meant was
that in case the work was not completed within the
originally specified time, the plaintiff would be liable to
pay such compensation for delay in execution as was fixed
within the limits of that clause. This is clear not only
from clause (2) but also from clause (3). These two clauses
must be read together. So read, the contract was to continue
to be in force till the completion of the work or its
abandonment. Time was of the essence only in the sense that
if the plaintiff completed it within the original period of
one year, he would not be liable to pay any compensation but
in case he overstepped that limit he would have to
compensate for every day of delay and that the right
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to rescission would accrue only when compensation due
exceeded the amount of the security deposit or the plaintiff
abandoned the work. Till the time it was rescined, the
contract was in force. [193 A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2010 of
1969.
(From the Judgment and Decree dt. 11-7-68 of the Bombay
High Court in Appeal No. 534 of 1960).
Girish Chandra and M. N. Shroff for the appellant.
A. G. Ratnaparkhi for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KOSHAL, J. The facts giving rise to this appeal by the
two defendants (who are the State of Maharashtra and one of
its Executive Engineers) on certificate granted by the High
Court of Bombay against its judgment dated 11th July 1968
may be briefly stated. In the year 1955, defendant No. 1
decided to construct an aqueduct over Kulthi Nala situated
in Malegaon Sub-Division of Nasik district. The Executive
Engineer, Nasik Irrigation Division, invited tenders for the
work which was entrusted to the plaintiff in acceptance of
his tender on conditions reduced to writing in the form of
exhibit 66. The estimated cost of the work was Rs.
1,55,854.00 and it was to be completed within 12 months from
the date of the written order to commence it which happened
to be the 16th of May 1955. The plaintiff paid a sum of Rs.
1558/- as earnest money and another of Rs. 3896/- as
security deposit to defendant No. 1. Clauses (2) and (3) of
the contract in accordance with which the work was to be
executed provided as follows:-
"(2): The time allowed for carrying out the work
as entered in the tender shall be strictly observed by
the contractor xx xx The work shall throughout the
stipulated period of the contract be proceeded with all
due diligence (time being deemed to be of the essence
of the contract on the part of the contractor) and the
contractor shall pay as compensation an amount equal to
one per cent or such smaller amount as the
Superintending Engineer xx xx xx may decide xx for
every day that the work remains uncommenced, or
unfinished after the proper dates. And further to
ensure good progress during the execution of the work,
the contractor shall be bound, in all cases in which
the time allowed for any work exceeds one month, to
complete
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in 1/4 of time 1/10 of the work,
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in 1/2 of time 4/10 of the work,
in 3/4 of time 8/10 of the work
xx xx xx xx xx xx"
"(3): In any case in which under any clause or
clauses of this contract the contractor shall have
rendered himself liable to pay compensation amounting
to the whole of his security deposit xx xx xx xx or in
the case of abandonment of the work owing to serious
illness or death of the contractor or any other cause,
the Executive Engineer xx xx xx shall have power to
adopt any of the following courses:-
(a) to rescind the contract (of which rescission
notice in writing to the contractor under the hand of
the Executive Engineer shall be conclusive evidence)
and in that case the security deposit of the contractor
shall stand forfeited and be absolutely at the disposal
of the Government.
(b) xx xx xx xx xx xx
(c) xx xx xx xx xx xx
In the event of any of the above courses being
adopted by the Executive Engineer, the contractor shall
have no claim to compensation for any loss sustained by
him."
Clauses (4) and (5) of the contract related to action
to be taken when the progress of any particular portion of
the work was found unsatisfactory. Provision was made in the
contract for interim payments of running bills submitted by
the plaintiff and for final payment to him against a
certificate of completion of the work. Clause (6) of the
contract provided for extension of time during which the
work was to be completed, in pursuance of applications to be
made by the plaintiff. A provision was made in clause (14)
of the contract for extension of time as a consequence of
additions to or alteration in the work.
The plaintiff started executing the work and by
December 1955, running payments amounting to Rs. 13,967/- in
all had been made to him against bills submitted by him. In
the month of March 1956, Shri Y. A. Shinde, defendant No. 2,
came to occupy the post of Executive Engineer in Nasik
Irrigation Division and called upon the plaintiff to speed
up the execution of the work as the progress thereof was not
satisfactory. However, the work continued to be executed at
a snail’s pace and on May 9, 1956 the plaintiff made an
application
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(exhibit 54) for extension of the time fixed for completion
of the work by a period of six months. That application was
rejected by defendant No. 2 who informed the plaintiff
accordingly through a letter dated June 15, 1956 (exhibit
55) which stated inter alia that the reasons put forth by
the plaintiff for extension of the time-limit were not
convincing, that the application had not been received
within the time prescribed in that behalf by clause (6) of
the contract and that the proportion of the work executed
did not conform to the condition contained in clause (2) of
the contract, the value of the work executed till then being
only Rs. 25,000/-. The letter further informed the plaintiff
that he had become liable to pay compensation under clause
(2) of the contract and called upon him to show cause why
action should not be taken against him under clause (3)
thereof. Ultimately, by letter dated October 30, 1956
(exhibit 48) the plaintiff was informed that it had been
decided to burden him with compensation at the rate of Rs.
5/- per day for the entire period commencing on the 16th of
May 1956 and ending with the completion of the work and that
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if the plaintiff failed to show satisfactory progress within
a month of the date of the letter, defendant No. 2 would be
compelled to increase the rate of compensation and take
suitable penal action against the plaintiff. The work not
having made much progress and the plaintiff having stopped
its execution, he was informed by a letter dated January 17,
1957 (exhibit 49) that the contract stood rescinded under
clause (3) thereof. The defendants also forfeited the
security deposit which had by then swelled, presumably on
account of the addition of interest, to Rs. 4679/- (although
this amount has been erroneously described by the High Court
as consisting of the earnest money of Rs. 1558/- and the
security deposit of Rs. 3896/-).
In his suit, the plaintiff claimed a refund of the said
amount of Rs. 4679/-, another sum of Rs. 2500/- on account
of the balance due to him for part execution of the work and
still another sum of Rs. 4000/- by way of damages.
The trial court found that the plaintiff had failed to
prove that any sum was due to him for execution of the work
or by way of damages, but further held that the forfeiture
of the security deposit was illegal. It therefore granted a
decree to the plaintiff for the sum of Rs. 4679/- only with
interest at 3 per cent per annum from the date of the suit
till realisation and also proportionate costs of the suit.
Aggrieved by the decree passed by the trial court, the
defendants went up in appeal to the High Court and the
plaintiff filed his cross objections to the decree appealed
from which was maintained by the
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High Court in its entirety. The High Court agreed with the
findings of the trial court and on the question of
rescission of the contract observed as follows:-
"In our view in law the contract could not be
rescinded subsequent to the expiry of the due date for
the performance thereof. The right to rescind a
contract is the right to put it to an end and such
right cannot exist after due date for the performance
expires. The right to rescind the contract is the right
to accept anticipatory breach thereof by the promissor,
i.e., prior to the expiry of the date of the
performance of the contract. This right arises in
favour of the promisee under section 39 of the Contract
Act. A contract cannot be abandoned by either side
either by a promissor or a promisee after the expiry of
the due date for performance thereof. For the above
reasons in our view the abandonment of the work of the
contract as mentioned in sub-clause (a) of the clause
relate to (anticipatory) breach of the contract by the
contractor before the due date for the performance
thereof. In this case the Executive Engineer purported
to rescind the contract which had become dead some time
in August 1956. He purported to do so on the ground
that the contractor had abandoned the contract some
time in October 1956. The Executive Engineer in our
view, had no power under clause (3) to rescind the
contract having regard to the facts and circumstances
which we have already pointed out above. The forfeiture
of the security deposit on the footing that the
contract was validly rescinded must be held to be
unjustified and untenable."
It was on the basis of this conclusion that the trial
court’s decree for Rs. 4679/- passed in favour of the
plaintiff was affirmed. On the 9th of June 1969 however, the
High Court certified the case to be a fit one for appeal by
the defendants to the Supreme Court under sub-clause (c) of
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clause (1) of article 133 of the Constitution of India. At
that stage defendant No. 1 agreed to pay the costs of the
respondent in the proceedings before the Supreme Court.
2. Learned counsel for the appellants has challenged
the correctness of the observations made by the High Court
and reproduced above. Those observations, according to him,
run counter to the tenor of clauses (2) and (3) of the
contract governing the execution of the work and we are of
the opinion that his criticism thereof is justified.
Although in clause (2) of the contract it was specifically
mentioned that time was of the essence of the agreement
between the parties, all
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that was meant was that in case the work was not completed
within the time originally specified in that behalf, the
plaintiff would be liable to pay such compensation for delay
in execution as was fixed by the Superintending Engineer
within the limits laid down in the clause. This becomes
clear not only from the provision appearing in clause (2)
and stating that "the contractor shall pay as compensation
an amount equal to 1 per cent or such smaller amount as the
Superintending Engineer may decide for every day that the
work remains uncommenced, or unfinished after the proper
dates" but also from the contents of clause (3) of the
contract, which would become operative only if the plaintiff
renders himself liable to pay compensation [in accordance
with clause (2)] or abandons the work either on account of
serious illness or death or for any other cause and it is
then that the contract would become liable to rescission.
Clauses (2) and (3) have to be read together and interpreted
with reference to each other and their provisions, read as
one single whole, clearly mean that the contract was to
continue to be in force till the completion of the work or
its abandonment. The time was of the essence of the contract
only in the sense that if the plaintiff completed it within
the original period of one year, he would not be liable to
pay any compensation but that in case he overstepped the
said time-limit he would have to compensate the defendants
for every day of the delay in completing the work and that
the right to rescission would accrue to the defendant No. 2
only when the compensation due exceeded the amount of the
security deposit or the plaintiff abandoned the work. Till
the time the contract was rescinded therefore, it was fully
in force and the rescission was consequently well-founded,
being squarely covered by clause (3) of the contract, sub-
clause (a) of which conferred on the Executive Engineer the
right to forfeit the security deposit Far from being
illegal, the forfeiture was fully justified and the High
Court’s finding to the contrary is liable to be reversed.
3. In the result the appeal succeeds and is accepted,
the decree of the High Court is set aside and the suit of
the plaintiff is dismissed in its entirety. In accordance
with the undertaking given by defendant No. 1 on the 9th
June 1969 to the High Court when it certified the case to be
a fit one for appeal to this Court, the plaintiff shall be
entitled to the costs incurred by him in this Court. In
respect of costs in the two courts below, we make no order.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
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