Indemnity and Guarantee Contract
Indemnity and Guarantee Contract
Indemnity and Guarantee Contract
Indemnity Contract: A contract where one party promises to save the other from any loss caused to him by the
conduct of promissor himself or any other person is called contract of indemnity, (Section 124) Indian Contract
Act, 1872.
Indemnity contract includes two parties namely; Indemnifier and Indemnity holder. The person who is
promising to pay compensation is called Indemnifier and the person who`s loss is compensated is called
Indemnity holder.
Example: There is a contract between X and Y according to which X has to Sell a tape recorder (which
is selected) to Y after three months. On the next day of their contract Z has come to X and has insisted on selling
the same tape recorder to him (Z). Here Z is promising to compensate X for any loss faced by X, due to selling
the tape recorder to Z. X has agreed. Now the contract which has got formed between X and Z is called
indemnity contract, where Z is indemnifier and X is indemnity holder.
Guarantee Contract: A contract to perform the obligation or to discharge the liability of a third party in case of
its default is called contract of guarantee, (Section 126) Indian Contract Act, 1872.
Guarantee contract includes three parties namely; Creditor, Principal Debtor and Surety. The person who is
granting the loan, the person who is utilizing the amount of loan is principal debtor and the person who is giving
guarantee is called surety or guarantor or favored debtor. In case of guarantee contract there will be two types of
liabilities namely; Primary liability and secondary liability. Primary liability will be with principal debtor and
Secondary liability goes to surety.
Example: Y is in need of Rs. 10000/-. Upon guarantee by Z, Y has got the amount from X. Here X, Y
and Z are creditor, principal debtor and surety respectively.
Difference between Indemnity Contract and Guarantee Contract
Number of Parties: Indemnity contract includes two parties namely, indemnifier and indemnity holder. But
guarantee contract includes three parties namely creditor, Principal debtor and surety.
Number of Contracts: In case of indemnity contract, as there are only two parties, there is possibility for
existence of one contract only. But a contract of guarantee includes three sub-contracts.
Nature: As indemnity contract includes two parties and one contract, it can be said that indemnity contract is
simple in nature. But guarantee contract includes three parties and three sub-contracts and hence be said that
guarantee contract is complex in nature.
Liability: In contract of guarantee there will be two types of liabilities namely; primary and secondary liabilities
which will be with principal debtor and surety respectively. But in contract of indemnity there is no
classification and sharing of liability where the absolute liability rests with indemnifier.
Recovery: In case of indemnity contract the indemnifier, after compensating indemnity holder`s loss, cannot
recover that amount from any person. But in contract of guarantee, if surety makes payment to creditor, he
(surety) can recover that amount from principal debtor.
Interest of parties: Indemnity contract gets formed upon indemnifier`s interest and guarantee contract gets
formed upon principal debtor`s interest.
Difference between Indemnity and Guarantee
Indemnity
Guarantee
other person
GUARANTY
> Contract between the guarantor and creditor
> In a broad sense, it includes pledge and mortgage because the purpose of guaranty may be accomplished not
only by securing the fulfillment of an obligation contracted by the principal debtor through the personal
guaranty of a third person but also by furnishing to the creditor for his
security, property with authority to collect the debt from the proceeds of the same in case of default.
CHARACTERISTICS OF A GUARANTY
1. Accessorybecause it is dependent for its existence upon the principal obligation guaranteed by it
2. Subsidiary and conditionalit takes effect only when the principal debtor fails in his obligation subject
to limitation
3. Unilateral
a. Gives rise only to the duty on the part of the guarantor in relation to the creditor and not vice
versa
b. It may be entered into even without the intervention of the principal debtor
4. Contract, which requires that the guarantor be a distinct person from the principal debtor because a
person cannot be the personal guarantor of himself
SURETYSHIP
In finance, a surety, surety bond or guaranty involves a promise by one party to assume responsibility for
the debt obligation of a borrower if that borrower defaults. The person or company providing this promise is also
known as a "surety" or as a "guarantor".
A surety most typically requires a guarantor when the ability of the primary obligor or principal to perform its
obligations to the obligee (counterparty) under a contract is in question, or when there is some public or private
interest which requires protection from the consequences of the principal's default or delinquency. In
most common-lawjurisdictions, a contract of suretyship is subject to the Statute of Frauds (or its equivalent local
laws) and is only enforceable if recorded in writing and signed by the surety and by the principal.
> A relation which exists where one person has undertaken an obligation and another person is also under a
direct and primary obligation or other duty to a third person, who is entitled to but one performance, and as
between the two who are bound, the one rather than the other should perform
> Contractual relation resulting from an agreement whereby one person, the surety, engages to be
answerable for a debt, default, miscarriage of another known as the principal
LAW APPLICABLE TO SURETYSHIP
> Second paragraph
> It covers OBLIGATIONS, DIFFERENT KINDS OF OBLIGATIONS, JOINT AND
SOLIDARY OBLIGATIONS, OBLIGATIONS AND CONTRACTS
> If a person binds himself solidarily with the principal debtor, the contract is called suretyship and the
guarantor is called the SURETY