What is a contract?
The Contracts or agreements between various parties are framed and validated by the Indian Contract Act. Contract Act is one of the most central laws that regulates and oversees all the business wherever a deal or an agreement is to be reached at. The following section will tell us what a contract is.
We will see how a contract is defined by The Indian Contract Act, 1872. We will also define the terms as per the Act and see what that means. In these topics, we will decipher all the vivid aspects of the Contract Act. Let us begin by understanding the concept of a contract.
Contract Act
The Indian Contract Act, 1872 defines the term “Contract” under its section 2 (h) as “An agreement enforceable by law”. In other words, we can say that a contract is anything that is an agreement and enforceable by the law of the land.
This definition has two major elements in it viz – “agreement” and “enforceable by law”. So in order to understand a contract in the light of The Indian Contract Act, 1872 we need to define and explain these two pivots in the definition of a contract.
Agreement
The Indian Contract Act, 1872 defines what we mean by “Agreement”. In its section 2 (e), the Act defines the term agreement as “every promise and every set of promises, forming the consideration for each other”.
Now that we know how the Act defines the term “agreement”, there may be some ambiguity in the definition of the term promise.
Promise
This ambiguity is removed by the Act itself in its section 2(b) which defines the term “promise” here as: “when the person to whom the proposal is made signifies his assent thereto, the proposal is said to be accepted. Proposal when accepted, becomes a promise”.
In other words, an agreement is an accepted promise, accepted by all the parties involved in the agreement or affected by it. This definition thus introduces a flow chart or a sequence of steps that need to be triggered in order to establish or draft a contract. The steps may be described as under:
(1) The definition requires a person to whom a certain proposal is made.
(2) The person (parties) in step one have to be in a position to fully understand all the aspects of a proposal.
(3) “signifies his assent thereto” – means that the person in point one accepts or agrees with the proposal after having fully understood it.
(4) Once the “person” accepts the proposal, the status of the proposal changes to “accepted proposal”.
(5) “accepted proposal” becomes a promise. Note that the proposal is not a promise. For the proposal to become a promise, it has to be accepted first.
Thus, in other words, an agreement is obtained from a proposal once the proposal, made by one or more of the participants affected by the proposal, is accepted by all the parties addressed by the agreement. To sum up, we can represent the above information below:
Agreement = Offer + Acceptance.
Enforceable By Law
Now let us try to understand this aspect of the definition as is present in the Act. Suppose you agree to sell a unicorn for ten magic beans with a friend. Can you have a contract for this?
Well if you follow the steps in the previous section, you will argue that once you and your friend agree on the promise, it becomes an agreement. But in order to be a contract as per the definition of the Act, the agreement has to be legally enforceable.
Thus we can say that for an agreement to change into a Contract as per the Act, it must give rise to or lead to legal obligations or in other words must be within the scope of the law. Thus we can summarize it as Contract = Accepted Proposal (Agreement) + Enforceable by law (defined within the law).
0 Comments
If you any doubts, Please let me know