Legal Validity of Minors Contract
Legal Validity of Minors Contract
Legal Validity of Minors Contract
PROJECT
Legal validity of minor’s contract
Introduction
Section 3 of the INDIAN MAJORITY ACT, 1875 provides about the age of
majority. It states that a person is deemed to have attained the age of
majority when he completes the age of 18 years, except in the following
cases a person continues to be a minor until he completes the age of 21
years.
Minor’s contract
A minor is one who has not attained the age of 18, and for every contract,
the majority is a condition precedent. By looking at the Indian law, minor’s
agreement is a void one, meaning thereby that it has no value in the eye
of the law, and it is null and void as it cannot be enforced by either party
to the contract. And even after he attains majority, the same agreement
could not be ratified by him. Here, the difference is that minor’s contract
is void/null, but is not illegal as there is no statutory provision upon this.
The case goes back to the year 1903 in which, for the first time, the Privy
Council held that a minor’s contract is void-ab-initio that it is void from the
beginning.
The court held that unless the parties have competence under Section 11
of the Act, no agreement is a contract.
Effects of minor’s agreement
For providing protection to a minor, his agreement is void. But there are
certain exceptions as well.
As per Section 26 of the Act, a minor can draw, endorse, and negotiate
and he can bind everybody except himself. Every person who is capable
of contracting according to the law to which he is subject may bind
himself and be bound by the making, drawing, accepting, delivery and
negotiation of a promissory note, cheque or a bill of exchange.
CONCLUSION
The Indian contract act 1872, has also granted privileged position to a
minor with regard to agreements made by him. In any agreement he does
not incur personal liability. He is allowed to get benefit in an agreement
entered into by him. Not only this, but entire judicial mechanism helps
him, judges are their councellors, jury are their servants and law is their
guardian. But at the same time, it is ensured that while protecting interest
of minor, unnecessary hardships should not be created for the persons
who deal with a minor.